A DSCR cash-out refinance lets you pull tax-deferred equity from a rental property based on its income — no W-2s, no tax returns. Here's how it works, what LTV to expect, and how investors use it to scale.
A DSCR cash-out refinance replaces your existing loan with a larger one and gives you the difference in cash, qualifying on the property's rental income rather than your personal income. Most DSCR cash-out programs go up to about 75% LTV (versus up to 80% on a purchase or rate-and-term refi). The cash is yours to use — commonly to fund the down payment on the next acquisition.
Cash-out is the single most common DSCR transaction. LendingStreet places DSCR cash-out across its 30+ capital sources, including larger-balance and sub-1.0 situations that single lenders often won't touch.
You refinance the property for more than you currently owe, pay off the existing loan, and pocket the difference. Qualification is based on the debt service coverage ratio — the property's rental income against the new (larger) payment — not your personal income or tax returns. As long as the property still covers the new payment at the lender's minimum ratio, the cash-out works.
| Factor | Typical DSCR Cash-Out |
|---|---|
| Maximum LTV | Up to 75% (vs up to 80% on purchase) |
| Minimum DSCR | 1.0 standard at the new payment; sub-1.0 via specialty sources |
| Seasoning | Varies; some programs allow cash-out with little or no seasoning |
| Use of funds | Unrestricted — commonly next down payment, rehab, or reserves |
| Entity | LLC vesting standard |
One important note: because cash-out raises your loan balance and payment, it lowers your DSCR ratio. A property at 1.4 DSCR before cash-out might sit at 1.1 after. You need the post-cash-out ratio to still clear the lender's minimum — which is where having sub-1.0-capable sources matters if you're pulling aggressive equity.
DSCR cash-out is the engine of the BRRRR strategy and portfolio growth generally: buy, stabilize, refinance to pull your capital back out, and redeploy it into the next deal — without triggering the income documentation a conventional cash-out would require. Done repeatedly, it lets investors recycle the same capital across many properties.
An investor had built equity in a stabilized rental and wanted to pull it out to fund the down payment on their next purchase — without documenting personal income. A DSCR cash-out refinance let them tap the equity based purely on the property's rental income. The freed-up capital became the down payment on the next deal, keeping their acquisition momentum going. This recycle-and-redeploy pattern is exactly what DSCR cash-out is built for.
Most DSCR cash-out programs go up to about 75% LTV, compared to up to 80% on a purchase or rate-and-term refinance. The exact cap depends on credit, DSCR ratio, and property type.
No. A DSCR cash-out qualifies on the property's rental income against the new payment — no W-2s, tax returns, or employment verification. Your credit still matters for pricing.
Cash-out increases your loan balance and payment, which lowers your DSCR. A property at 1.4 DSCR might drop to 1.1 after cash-out. The post-cash-out ratio must still clear the lender's minimum, which is where sub-1.0-capable sources help on aggressive pulls.
It varies by lender. Some programs allow cash-out with little or no seasoning, which makes DSCR well suited to the BRRRR strategy. LendingStreet can match you to sources whose seasoning rules fit your timeline.
The funds are generally unrestricted — investors most commonly use them for the down payment on the next acquisition, rehab capital, or reserves. It's the core mechanism for recycling capital across a growing portfolio.
DSCR cash-out refinance placed across 30+ capital sources, qualifying on rental income alone. See how much you can pull.
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