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Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) in Commercial Mortgage Lending
What Is DSCR?
Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) measures a property’s ability to generate enough income to cover its annual loan payments.
In simple terms, DSCR answers one critical lender question:
Does this property produce enough cash flow to safely pay the mortgage?
DSCR is one of the most important underwriting metrics in commercial real estate lending and is used to:
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Approve or decline loans
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Size loan amounts
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Price interest rates
-
Assess risk
The DSCR Formula
Definitions:
-
NOI (Net Operating Income):
Property income after operating expenses, before debt service and taxes -
Annual Debt Service:
Total principal + interest payments required in one year
How to Interpret DSCR
| DSCR | Meaning |
|---|---|
| 1.00x | Break-even (no margin for error) |
| 1.10x | Very tight, high risk |
| 1.20x | Marginal but acceptable for some lenders |
| 1.25x | Common bank & agency minimum |
| 1.35x+ | Strong coverage, lower risk |
Example:
-
DSCR of 1.25x means the property generates 25% more income than required to cover debt payments.
Real DSCR Example (Underwriting Math)
Property Financials
-
Underwritten NOI: $400,000
Loan Terms
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Loan amount: $4,500,000
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Interest rate: 6.50%
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Amortization: 30 years
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Annual debt service: ~$342,000
DSCR Calculation
Result:
❌ Does NOT meet a 1.25x DSCR requirement
The lender will not approve this loan at the requested amount.
How Lenders Use DSCR to Size Loans
Lenders often work backward from DSCR to determine the maximum loan amount.
Example:
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Required DSCR: 1.25x
-
NOI: $400,000
The loan amount is then sized so annual payments do not exceed $320,000.
This is why strong NOI is more important than property value in commercial lending.
Typical DSCR Requirements by Lender Type
| Lender Type | Typical DSCR |
|---|---|
| Banks / Credit Unions | 1.20x – 1.30x |
| Agency (Fannie / Freddie) | ~1.25x |
| CMBS | 1.25x+ |
| Life Companies | 1.30x+ |
| Private / Bridge | 1.00x – 1.15x |
| Debt Funds | Case-by-case |
NOI vs DSCR (Common Broker Mistake)
-
NOI measures property performance
-
DSCR measures loan safety
A property can have strong NOI but still fail DSCR if:
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The loan amount is too high
-
Interest rates increase
-
Amortization is too short
How Interest Rates Affect DSCR
As rates increase:
-
Debt service increases
-
DSCR decreases
Example:
-
NOI: $400,000
| Rate | Annual Debt | DSCR |
|---|---|---|
| 6.00% | $310,000 | 1.29x |
| 7.25% | $355,000 | 1.13x |
Many deals fail DSCR not because of bad properties, but because of rate movement.
Interest-Only Periods & DSCR
Interest-only (IO) payments reduce annual debt service, which:
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Improves DSCR
-
Allows higher leverage
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Increases lender risk
Some lenders:
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Underwrite DSCR to amortizing payments, even if IO is offered
-
Allow IO only if DSCR remains acceptable after IO ends
DSCR vs Loan-to-Value (LTV)
Commercial loans are constrained by both:
| Metric | Measures |
|---|---|
| DSCR | Cash flow strength |
| LTV | Collateral risk |
A loan must typically satisfy both:
-
Minimum DSCR
-
Maximum LTV
Whichever is more restrictive controls the loan size.
Common DSCR Red Flags for Brokers
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DSCR only works on seller-provided NOI
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DSCR relies on pro forma rent increases
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DSCR fails under realistic interest rates
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DSCR barely clears lender minimums
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DSCR collapses after normalization
Best Practices for Commercial Mortgage Brokers
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Always calculate DSCR before submitting to lenders
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Use underwritten NOI, not seller NOI
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Stress-test DSCR at higher rates
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Understand each lender’s DSCR tolerance
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Explain DSCR limitations to borrowers early
Broker Rule of Thumb
If the deal only works at today’s rate and perfect assumptions, it’s not a financeable deal.
