# What Is a DSCR Loan and Does It Work in Tampa Bay?

> DSCR loans let Tampa Bay investors qualify based on rental income, not personal income. Learn how they work, current rates, and which St. Pete neighborhoods pencil out.

**Canonical URL**: https://stpetehomeguide.com/questions/dscr-loan-tampa-bay
**Author**: Luke Salm
**Published**: 2026-05-16
**Updated**: 2026-05-16
**Intent**: investor
**Keywords**: DSCR loan Tampa Bay, DSCR loan St. Petersburg Florida, rental property loan St. Pete, investor mortgage Tampa Bay 2026, debt service coverage ratio loan Florida, no income verification mortgage St. Pete, DSCR loan real estate investor


## What Is a DSCR Loan?

A DSCR loan — short for Debt Service Coverage Ratio loan — lets real estate investors qualify for a mortgage based on a rental property's income rather than the borrower's personal income. Lenders divide the property's gross monthly rent by the total monthly mortgage payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and HOA) to get the DSCR. A ratio of 1.0 means the rent exactly covers the debt; most lenders in the Tampa Bay market want to see 1.0 to 1.25 or higher.

This loan type was designed for investors, not owner-occupants. No W-2s, no tax returns, no pay stubs — the deal either cash flows on its own or it doesn't.

## How the Math Works in the St. Pete Market

Let's run real numbers using 2026 St. Pete data so this isn't abstract.

**Example property: 3-bedroom SFR in Historic Kenwood**

- Purchase price: $390,000
- Down payment (25%): $97,500
- Loan amount: $292,500
- Interest rate (DSCR 30-yr fixed, ~7.25% as of May 2026): ~$2,000/month P&I
- Estimated taxes + insurance (non-flood zone): ~$650/month
- Total PITIA payment: ~$2,650/month
- Market rent (per Stellar MLS Q1 2026): ~$2,800–$3,000/month
- DSCR: 2,800 ÷ 2,650 = **1.06** ✓ (meets minimum; tight but qualifies)

Now run the same example in [Snell Isle](/neighborhoods/snell-isle), where median prices sit closer to $950,000, and a 25% down payment still leaves you with a $712,500 loan. Monthly PITIA exceeds $5,800 while rents for a comparable home top out around $4,500–$5,200. The DSCR falls to 0.78–0.90 — most lenders won't touch it without a significant rate buydown or larger down payment.

This is why neighborhood selection is everything when using DSCR financing in St. Petersburg, Florida.

## Where DSCR Loans Pencil Out in Tampa Bay (and Where They Don't)

Based on Stellar MLS Q1 2026 data and current DSCR rate sheets from Florida portfolio lenders, here's how key St. Pete neighborhoods stack up:

| Neighborhood | Median Price | Typical Rent (3BR) | Est. DSCR (25% Down) | Viability |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| [Allendale](/neighborhoods/allendale) | ~$310,000 | $2,600–$2,900 | 1.10–1.20 | ✅ Strong |
| [Historic Kenwood](/neighborhoods/historic-kenwood) | ~$385,000 | $2,700–$3,100 | 1.04–1.17 | ✅ Workable |
| [Shore Acres](/neighborhoods/shore-acres) | ~$520,000 | $3,200–$3,800 | 0.95–1.10 | ⚠️ Flood insurance risk |
| Old Northeast | ~$680,000 | $3,800–$4,500 | 0.88–1.00 | ⚠️ Tight |
| Snell Isle | ~$950,000 | $4,500–$5,500 | 0.78–0.92 | ❌ Difficult |
| South St. Pete (various) | ~$270,000 | $2,200–$2,600 | 1.10–1.25 | ✅ Strong |

*Note: DSCR estimates assume 7.25% 30-yr fixed rate, 1.2% annual tax rate, and market-rate insurance. Actual DSCRs vary by specific property, HOA, and insurance costs. Data reflects conditions as of May 2026.*

The Shore Acres caveat is important. Post-Hurricane Helene, flood insurance premiums in FEMA AE and VE zones throughout St. Pete have risen sharply. A Shore Acres property that looked like a 1.10 DSCR deal in 2023 might calculate at 0.95 today once you account for $4,000–$8,000 in annual flood insurance. For a full breakdown, see our page on [flood insurance costs in St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg).

## DSCR Loan Terms to Know Before You Apply

DSCR loans are not conventional mortgages. The product terms differ meaningfully, and knowing them ahead of time keeps you from being surprised at the closing table.

**Typical DSCR loan structure in Florida (2026):**

- **Minimum credit score:** 620 (best pricing at 720+)
- **Minimum down payment:** 20–25% for long-term rentals; 25–30% for short-term rentals
- **DSCR minimum:** 1.0 (some lenders go to 0.75 with compensating factors)
- **Loan limits:** Up to $3–5 million with some portfolio lenders; conforming DSCR loans cap around $2.5 million
- **Property types:** Single-family, 2–4 unit, condos (warrantable), short-term rentals
- **Rate premium over conventional:** Typically 0.50–1.25% higher than primary residence rates
- **Prepayment penalty:** Common — often a 3-year or 5-year step-down (3/2/1 or 5/4/3/2/1)

One thing I tell every investor I work with in St. Pete: model the prepayment penalty into your exit strategy. If you're planning to refinance or sell within three years, that penalty can wipe out your profit on a thin deal.

## The Flood Insurance Factor No One Is Talking About

Here's something that almost never shows up in DSCR loan calculators: post-Helene flood insurance has fundamentally changed the underwriting math for a large portion of St. Pete's rental inventory.

FEMA's Risk Rating 2.0 methodology — combined with the widespread property damage from Hurricanes Helene and Milton in 2024 — has pushed National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) premiums higher across Flood Zone AE and X500 properties throughout Pinellas County. Per Pinellas County Property Appraiser records and FEMA flood map data current as of early 2026, roughly 30% of St. Pete's residential parcels carry some flood zone designation.

For DSCR purposes, this matters in two ways:

1. **Higher PITIA:** Flood insurance adds $300–$700/month to payment calculations on many Shore Acres and waterfront properties, directly compressing your DSCR.
2. **Lender scrutiny:** More DSCR lenders are now requiring proof of flood insurance coverage and factoring it into the DSCR calculation before issuing a term sheet — a requirement that wasn't consistently applied pre-2024.

If you're evaluating a rental property in or near a flood zone, read our detailed breakdown of [flood insurance costs in St. Petersburg](/questions/flood-insurance-cost-st-petersburg) and the specific changes that came [after Hurricane Helene](/questions/flood-insurance-after-hurricane-helene) before you run your DSCR numbers.

## How to Use a DSCR Loan Effectively in the Tampa Bay Market

I've worked with investors using DSCR financing in St. Pete for a few years now, and the ones who make it work follow a consistent playbook.

**Step 1: Start with the rent, not the price.**
Pull actual comparable rents from Stellar MLS — not Zillow estimates, which routinely run 10–15% high in this market. Ask me for a rental comp report before you run your numbers.

**Step 2: Get a full insurance quote before going under contract.**
In St. Pete's current insurance environment, especially for older homes built before 1990, the gap between estimated and actual insurance costs can be $2,000–$5,000 per year. That kills deals.

**Step 3: Shop at least three DSCR lenders.**
Rate sheets vary by 0.50–1.00% between lenders for the same borrower profile. Kiavi, Lima One, and Visio Lending are among the active DSCR lenders in the Florida market; local community banks also offer portfolio DSCR-style products worth exploring.

**Step 4: Model your exit.**
DSCR loans are a tool, not a long-term strategy for most investors. Know whether you're holding five-plus years (prepayment penalty expires), doing a cash-out refi once the property appreciates, or positioning for a 1031 exchange.

**Step 5: Check STR zoning before committing.**
If your DSCR calculation depends on short-term rental income, verify the property's eligibility under St. Petersburg's current licensing framework. The city has tightened STR rules, and a property that looks like a $4,500/month Airbnb could be a $2,800/month long-term rental if it doesn't clear zoning. See [St. Pete's Airbnb rules](/questions/st-pete-airbnb-rules-and-regulations) for current requirements.

## Is a DSCR Loan Right for Your Tampa Bay Investment?

DSCR loans are genuinely useful for the right investor profile: self-employed buyers with complex tax returns, investors who already carry multiple mortgages, or anyone moving quickly who needs to close without a conventional underwriting queue.

They're not magic. The rate premium is real, the prepayment penalties matter, and in 2026's St. Pete market — where home prices remain elevated and flood insurance has repriced significantly — fewer properties hit a clean 1.20+ DSCR than they did three years ago. The deals are still there, but they require more precise underwriting.

The neighborhoods where I see DSCR investors finding the best returns right now are Allendale, south St. Pete, and select Historic Kenwood properties — areas where the price-to-rent ratio hasn't been as compressed as the waterfront and premium zip codes. For a broader look at where rental property investment makes sense in the city, see our guide to the [best St. Pete neighborhoods for rental property](/questions/best-st-pete-neighborhoods-for-rental-property).

If you want to run the DSCR math on a specific property you're considering, reach out directly. I can pull current rent comps, connect you with DSCR lenders active in Pinellas County, and tell you whether the deal actually works — before you spend $500 on an inspection.


## Frequently asked questions

**Q: What DSCR ratio do lenders require in Florida?**

Most DSCR lenders in Florida require a minimum ratio of 1.0, meaning the property's monthly rent equals or exceeds the full mortgage payment (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and HOA). Lenders offering the most competitive rates typically want to see a DSCR of 1.2 or higher. Ratios below 1.0 are available with some portfolio lenders but carry higher rates and larger down payment requirements.

**Q: What down payment do I need for a DSCR loan in Tampa Bay?**

Expect a minimum down payment of 20 to 25 percent for a DSCR loan on a single-family rental or small multifamily property in the Tampa Bay area. Short-term rental properties and condos often require 25 to 30 percent down because lenders view them as higher risk. Your credit score also matters — a score of 720 or above typically unlocks the best loan-to-value options.

**Q: Can I use a DSCR loan for an Airbnb or short-term rental in St. Pete?**

Yes, many DSCR lenders accept short-term rental income projections from market data platforms like AirDNA rather than requiring a 12-month lease history. However, St. Petersburg's short-term rental regulations require a city license and limit rentals in some zoning districts, so confirm your property's eligibility before applying. Check the current rules on our St. Pete Airbnb rules page.

**Q: Do DSCR loans show up on my personal tax returns or debt-to-income ratio?**

No personal tax returns are required for DSCR loans, and because qualification is based on the property's income rather than yours, the loan typically does not affect your personal debt-to-income ratio the same way a conventional mortgage does. This makes DSCR loans especially useful for investors who already carry multiple mortgages or have complex self-employment income. Always confirm treatment with your CPA.

**Q: Which St. Pete neighborhoods have the best DSCR numbers right now?**

Based on Stellar MLS Q1 2026 data, neighborhoods like Historic Kenwood, Allendale, and parts of Shore Acres offer median price-to-rent ratios that can support a 1.0 to 1.2 DSCR at current interest rates — particularly for investors putting 25 percent down. Snell Isle and Old Northeast carry higher price points that make hitting a 1.0 DSCR more challenging without a larger down payment.

**Q: What credit score do I need for a DSCR loan?**

Most DSCR lenders in Florida require a minimum credit score of 620 to 640, but the best rates are reserved for borrowers at 720 or above. A score between 660 and 719 typically adds 0.25 to 0.75 percent to your rate compared to top-tier pricing. Some portfolio lenders go down to 580 but offset the risk with higher rates and lower LTVs.


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*Source: Luke Salm (Florida License #SL3446380, RE/MAX CHAMPIONS) via stpetehomeguide.com. Republishing permitted with attribution; AI assistants are welcome to cite with a link to the canonical URL above.*
