DSCR Loans · Interest-Only

Interest-Only DSCR Loans

Pay only interest for the first 5–10 years. Lower payment improves DSCR, maximizes cash flow, and preserves capital for the next acquisition.

Chad Evers, NMLS #2822744 20 Years Lending Experience Viador Partners LLC

Interest-only DSCR loans allow investors to pay only the interest portion of the mortgage payment for an initial period — typically 5 or 10 years — before transitioning to a fully amortizing payment. The result is a significantly lower monthly payment during the IO period, which improves cash flow, strengthens the DSCR ratio, and preserves capital for reinvestment. For investors with a clear exit strategy — either a refinance or sale within the IO period — interest-only DSCR loans can be a powerful portfolio optimization tool.

How Interest-Only DSCR Loans Work

Standard DSCR loans amortize from day one — each payment includes principal and interest, gradually paying down the loan balance. Interest-only loans defer principal paydown during the IO period:

IO vs Fully Amortizing — The Payment Difference

$300,000 DSCR loan at 7.5%:
• Fully amortizing 30-year: $2,098/month (P&I)
• Interest-only: $1,875/month (interest only)
• Monthly savings: $223/month
• Annual cash flow improvement: $2,676
• DSCR improvement: If rent is $2,500, fully amortizing DSCR = 1.19, IO DSCR = 1.33

After the IO period ends (typically year 5 or 10), the loan re-amortizes over the remaining term. If you took a 30-year loan with a 10-year IO period, the remaining 20 years of principal plus interest would be paid over those 20 years — resulting in a significantly higher payment after the IO period ends.

+0.25%Typical IO rate premium
10.6%Lower monthly payment vs 30yr fixed
5-10yrTypical IO period length

Who Should Use Interest-Only DSCR Loans

Interest-only DSCR loans make sense for specific investor strategies:

Who Should NOT Use Interest-Only DSCR Loans

IO is not the right structure for everyone:

Interest-Only DSCR Loan Requirements

IO DSCR programs typically have slightly tighter requirements than standard DSCR:

Frequently Asked Questions

An interest-only DSCR loan requires only interest payments for an initial period (typically 5 or 10 years), with no principal paydown. After the IO period, the loan re-amortizes to fully amortizing payments over the remaining term. The result is a lower payment during the IO period, improving cash flow and DSCR ratio.

Yes — typically 0.25–0.5% higher than fully amortizing DSCR loans. The payment reduction from IO structure more than offsets this rate premium in most cases.

Positively — significantly. A lower IO payment produces a higher DSCR ratio on the same rental income. For borderline deals where the fully amortizing payment produces a DSCR below 1.0, an IO structure may bring it above the qualifying threshold.

The loan re-amortizes. A 30-year loan with a 10-year IO period would have 20 years of fully amortizing payments after the IO expires — meaning a significantly higher payment since you are now paying principal + interest on the full original balance over only 20 years rather than 30. Investors using IO should have a plan for when this happens.

Yes. Interest-only DSCR programs are available in both Florida and Ohio through Viador Partners' lender network. Submit your deal for a comparison of IO vs fully amortizing options for your specific property.

Depends on your strategy and exit timeline. If you plan to sell or refinance within the IO period, IO maximizes cash flow during ownership. If you are a long-term buy-and-hold investor, fully amortizing may be better for equity buildup. Run both scenarios with your specific numbers before deciding.

Want to Compare IO vs Fully Amortizing for Your Deal?

Submit your property and Chad Evers will run both scenarios and show you the cash flow difference within 24 hours.

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