Income support
Documented demand
Actual bookings, market rent tools, and rent schedules may be reviewed.
Short-term rental guide
Short-term rental DSCR scenarios can be attractive for investors, but they often require cleaner income support, realistic expense assumptions, and careful review of seasonality and local rules.
Income support
Actual bookings, market rent tools, and rent schedules may be reviewed.
Main risk
Average monthly income should account for slow months and vacancy.
Investor check
STR permits, HOA restrictions, and licensing can affect eligibility.
Traditional rental scenarios often use a long-term lease or market rent schedule. Short-term rentals may rely on actual booking history, third-party market rent projections, appraisal rent schedules, or lender-specific income methods.
Because nightly-rental income can fluctuate, lenders may review vacancy, operating history, location, management, furnishing costs, and local short-term rental restrictions more closely.
Short-term rentals often have higher operating expenses than long-term rentals. Utilities, cleaning, supplies, platform costs, repairs, furnishings, and professional management should be reflected before reviewing DSCR.
If the property has clean income support, legal short-term rental use, and a DSCR that remains positive under conservative assumptions, a broker review can help compare available lender options.
Questions investors ask
Some lender programs may consider short-term rental income, but requirements vary. Income support, property eligibility, and local rules are important.
Use conservative monthly income and include realistic short-term rental expenses. Gross revenue without operating costs can overstate DSCR.
This site is for business-purpose investment property scenarios only, not owner-occupied or second-home consumer-purpose requests.
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