DSCR Calculator:
Debt Service Coverage Ratio Formula, Commercial Loan Sizing from NOI, Maximum Loan Amount, and Lender Requirements by Property Type
A $2,500,000 commercial office building generating $151,200 in NOI supports a maximum loan of $1,425,548 at a 7.00% rate, 25-year amortization, and 1.25x DSCR requirement — the DSCR constraint limits the loan to 57.0% LTV, more restrictive than most lenders’ maximum 70-75% LTV cap. The maximum loan is calculated using the debt constant: NOI divided by the minimum DSCR equals the maximum annual debt service ($120,960), which divided by the 25-year debt constant at 7.00% (0.7073%) yields the loan ceiling. Understanding this reverse-engineering of loan size from income is the foundation of all commercial real estate underwriting.
The Debt Service Coverage Ratio is the primary underwriting metric in commercial real estate lending — more important than loan-to-value in most transactions because the property’s income, not its market value, determines its capacity to repay debt. While residential mortgages are underwritten primarily on the borrower’s personal income and credit score, commercial real estate loans are underwritten primarily on the property’s NOI relative to the proposed debt service. A $2,500,000 office building that commands a $1,500,000 purchase offer from a creditworthy borrower will not support that loan if the property’s income cannot meet the lender’s DSCR requirement — and no amount of borrower net worth compensates for inadequate property income in commercial underwriting.
The DSCR formula is the inverse of the debt coverage concept: DSCR = NOI / Annual Debt Service. But the more analytically powerful direction is the reverse: working backward from the minimum DSCR to determine the maximum supportable loan. Maximum Annual Debt Service = NOI / Minimum DSCR. Maximum Loan = Maximum Annual Debt Service / Annual Debt Constant. This loan sizing calculation is how commercial loan officers size loans before any conversation about LTV — they calculate the debt capacity of the property and then check whether the resulting loan satisfies the LTV constraint as a secondary test. When the DSCR constraint produces a lower loan than the LTV constraint would allow (as in the 57% LTV example above), the DSCR is the binding constraint, and no amount of additional collateral value overrides it.
Four DSCR Formulas: DSCR, Maximum Debt Service, Debt Constant, and Maximum Loan
1. DSCR (COVERAGE CALCULATION)
2. MAXIMUM ANNUAL DEBT SERVICE (FROM NOI AND DSCR REQUIREMENT)
3 & 4. DEBT CONSTANT AND MAXIMUM LOAN
The debt constant (k) deserves careful attention because it is the mathematical bridge between monthly debt service and loan principal. The debt constant expresses how much monthly payment is required per dollar of loan: at 7.00% and 25-year amortization, each $1,000 of loan requires $7.073 per month, or each $1 requires $0.007073. Dividing the maximum monthly debt service by the debt constant produces the maximum loan. The debt constant is also useful for quickly comparing loan terms: a 30-year amortization at 7.00% has a lower debt constant ($6.653/thousand) than a 25-year amortization ($7.073/thousand), meaning the same NOI can support a larger loan at 30 years. This is why some commercial borrowers seek 30-year amortization to maximize loan proceeds, while conservative lenders prefer 25-year amortization to maintain higher DSCR buffers.
Four DSCR Scenarios: Coverage, Loan Sizing, Property Type Requirements, and Sensitivity
The fourth card’s sensitivity analysis reveals how thin the margin is between qualifying and not qualifying for commercial loans. The property’s NOI of $151,200 supports the $1,425,548 loan at exactly 1.25x DSCR — but if NOI drops by just 4.8% (from $151,200 to $144,000), the DSCR falls below the 1.25x minimum and the loan no longer qualifies at this size. This sensitivity explains why commercial lenders apply a stressed NOI in underwriting (typically 90-95% of actual or stabilized NOI): even before the first loan payment is due, the underwriting must show adequate coverage at a reduced income assumption. The stressed DSCR on this property at 95% NOI: $143,640 / $120,948 = 1.19x — which fails the 1.25x minimum, meaning this loan would likely be sized smaller by a conservative lender even if actual NOI is $151,200.
Calculate DSCR, Maximum Loan from NOI, and Stressed Coverage Analysis
Enter your property’s NOI, loan terms (rate and amortization), and lender’s minimum DSCR requirement to calculate the property DSCR, maximum supportable loan amount using the debt constant formula, stressed DSCR at 90% and 95% of NOI, maximum LTV implied by DSCR, and the NOI needed to support any specific loan amount.
Open the DSCR CalculatorComplete DSCR Loan Sizing: $2,500,000 Office Building
The data block illustrates the critical difference between actual and stressed DSCR underwriting. Using actual NOI ($151,200) produces a maximum loan of $1,425,548 (57% LTV). Applying the 95% stress factor reduces the underwriting NOI to $143,640, which produces a maximum loan of only $1,354,271 (54.2% LTV) — a difference of $71,277 in maximum loan proceeds. This $71,277 gap represents the lender’s cushion against NOI volatility: at the stressed loan of $1,354,271, the actual DSCR (using actual $151,200 NOI) is 1.31x — providing a 5-percentage-point buffer above the 1.25x minimum before any income decline threatens loan coverage. Conservative commercial lenders (especially life insurance companies and CMBS platforms) routinely apply 90-95% stress factors precisely to build this type of structural cushion into commercial loan underwriting.
Maximum Loan by NOI and DSCR Requirement at 7.00%, 25-Year Amortization
| Annual NOI | At 1.20x DSCR | At 1.25x DSCR | At 1.30x DSCR | At 1.40x DSCR | Cap Rate (if $2.5M value) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| $100,000 | $942,553 | $904,850 | $869,119 | $807,189 | 4.0% |
| $125,000 | $1,178,191 | $1,131,063 | $1,086,399 | $1,008,986 | 5.0% |
| $151,200 | $1,425,060 | $1,368,337 | $1,313,939 | $1,220,408 | 6.05% |
| $175,000 | $1,648,969 | $1,583,250 | $1,522,119 | $1,413,831 | 7.0% |
| $200,000 | $1,884,898 | $1,809,503 | $1,740,084 | $1,615,813 | 8.0% |
| $250,000 | $2,356,122 | $2,261,879 | $2,175,105 | $2,019,766 | 10.0% |
| Maximum Loan = (NOI / Min DSCR / 12) / Debt Constant. Debt Constant at 7.00%, 25-year amortization: k = 0.007073 per dollar per month (or $7.073 per $1,000/month). Each additional 0.05x in DSCR requirement reduces maximum loan by approximately $47,000-$125,000 depending on NOI level. The $151,200 NOI row corresponds to the $2,500,000 office building example — highlighted in blue. Cap rate column assumes $2,500,000 property value regardless of NOI to show the cap rate these NOI levels represent. At 6.05% cap rate (NOI $151,200 on $2.5M), the DSCR-constrained loan is 54-57% LTV — well below the 65-70% LTV a $2.5M property might otherwise support, confirming that income (not value) is the binding constraint for this asset. | |||||
The maximum loan table’s most important pattern is how significantly the DSCR requirement reduces loan proceeds compared to a pure LTV analysis. At $151,200 NOI with a 1.40x DSCR requirement (hotel/hospitality level), the maximum loan is only $1,220,408 — just 48.8% LTV on a $2,500,000 property that a standard commercial lender might fund at 70% ($1,750,000) based on LTV alone. The income constraint forces the lender and borrower to negotiate either a lower purchase price (improving the cap rate), a larger equity contribution (accepting lower leverage), or a negotiated reduction in the DSCR requirement (accepting more risk). Commercial real estate brokers and borrowers who fail to run DSCR analysis before signing purchase contracts frequently discover during underwriting that the property’s income does not support the assumed financing — creating deal-breaking surprises that delay or kill transactions.
Debt Constant by Rate and Amortization: Key to Loan Sizing
The debt constant determines how much monthly payment is required per dollar of loan. Knowing the debt constant allows instant loan sizing from any maximum monthly debt service figure: Maximum Loan = Max Monthly Debt Service / Debt Constant.
| Rate | 20-Year Constant | 25-Year Constant | 30-Year Constant | Max Loan at 0,080/mo (20yr) | Max Loan at 0,080/mo (25yr) | Max Loan at 0,080/mo (30yr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 5.50% | 0.006874 | 0.006141 | 0.005678 | ,466,050 | ,641,429 | ,775,625 |
| 6.00% | 0.007164 | 0.006443 | 0.005996 | ,407,100 | ,564,767 | ,680,960 |
| 6.50% | 0.007458 | 0.006752 | 0.006321 | ,351,706 | ,492,908 | ,594,682 |
| 7.00% | 0.007753 | 0.007073 | 0.006653 | ,299,884 | ,425,548 | ,515,113 |
| 7.50% | 0.008056 | 0.007390 | 0.006992 | ,250,682 | ,363,870 | ,441,649 |
| 8.00% | 0.008364 | 0.007718 | 0.007338 | ,205,179 | ,305,786 | ,373,816 |
| 8.50% | 0.008678 | 0.008052 | 0.007689 | ,161,560 | ,251,864 | ,310,963 |
| Debt Constant = r x (1+r)^n / ((1+r)^n – 1) where r = monthly rate (annual rate/12) and n = amortization months (20yr=240, 25yr=300, 30yr=360). Maximum Loan = Max Monthly Debt Service / Debt Constant. 0,080 maximum monthly debt service corresponds to the 51,200 NOI example at 1.25x DSCR minimum. The 7.00% 25-year row (highlighted) matches the base case example: 0,080 / 0.007073 = ,425,548. Key insights: (1) Moving from 25-year to 30-year amortization at 7.00% increases maximum loan from ,425,548 to ,515,113 — an additional 9,565 in proceeds. (2) A 1.50% rate decrease (8.50% to 7.00%) at 25-year increases maximum loan from ,251,864 to ,425,548 — 73,684 more. Lower rates and longer amortization both maximize DSCR-constrained loan proceeds. | ||||||
The debt constant table makes visible the two levers that maximize loan proceeds within a DSCR constraint: lower interest rate and longer amortization. At fixed 0,080 maximum monthly debt service (NOI 51,200 at 1.25x DSCR), the maximum loan ranges from ,161,560 (8.50%, 20yr) to ,775,625 (5.50%, 30yr) — a 14,065 difference from the same property income. This range explains why commercial borrowers pursue aggressive rate negotiation and maximum amortization, and why rising interest rates from 2022-2024 caused such significant reductions in commercial real estate financing availability: the same property income supports dramatically less debt at 7.50-8.50% than at 5.50-6.00%.
DSCR Sensitivity by Loan Amount: $2,500,000 Office at $151,200 NOI
The growth bars make the DSCR constraint’s enforcement visible: moving the loan from $1,425,548 (the maximum at 1.25x DSCR) to $1,500,000 (seemingly modest 5% increase) drops the DSCR from 1.25x to 1.19x — below the lender minimum, disqualifying the loan entirely. This precipice effect — where a modest increase in loan size crosses a binary qualification threshold — is why borrowers and brokers must calculate DSCR before negotiating purchase price. Overpaying by 5% on a commercial property (e.g., paying $2,500,000 instead of $2,380,000) can change the financing from approval to denial if the resulting NOI falls short of the debt service required at the higher price and intended leverage.
Stressed NOI and Global DSCR: How Lenders Enhance the Analysis
Stressed NOI Underwriting: Why Lenders Haircut Actual NOI Before Calculating DSCR
Commercial real estate lenders do not use the current or trailing 12-month NOI directly in DSCR calculations. They apply a stressed (or “underwriting”) NOI that is typically 90-95% of actual or stabilized NOI, adjusted for: (1) Market vacancy normalization — if the property is currently 100% occupied but the market vacancy rate is 10%, the lender applies a 10% vacancy factor regardless of current occupancy. (2) Management fee normalization — if the owner self-manages with no management fee in the trailing NOI, the lender adds a market-rate management fee (5-8% of EGI). (3) Capital reserve allocation — lenders typically add $0.10-$0.25/SF in reserves for multifamily or a percentage of EGI for commercial properties. (4) Expense floor testing — if expenses appear below market norms, lenders apply minimum expense assumptions. The combined effect of these adjustments often reduces the underwriting NOI by 5-15% below the actual trailing NOI. A property with actual NOI of $160,000 and a 1.25x DSCR at the proposed loan amount may produce only a 1.10x stressed DSCR after these adjustments — triggering a loan reduction or denial despite apparent cash flow adequacy.
Global DSCR: Combining Personal Income with Property Income for Commercial Underwriting
Global DSCR analyzes the borrower’s total income (personal income plus property income) against all debt obligations (personal debts plus the proposed commercial mortgage). While property DSCR measures whether the specific property can cover its own debt, global DSCR assesses whether the borrower’s entire financial picture supports the debt. Global DSCR = (All Income Sources) / (All Debt Service Obligations). Commercial lenders, SBA lenders, and community banks frequently require global DSCR of 1.15-1.25x in addition to the individual property DSCR. Example: borrower’s personal income $120,000. Personal debts (car, student loans): $24,000/yr. Property NOI: $151,200. Property debt service: $120,948. Global DSCR = ($120,000 + $151,200) / ($24,000 + $120,948) = $271,200 / $144,948 = 1.87x. In this case, the global DSCR is strong because the borrower has substantial personal income cushioning the commercial loan. For investors who rely entirely on the property income with no personal income (full-time investors), the global DSCR equals the property DSCR, making the property underwriting the only relevant metric.
DSCR Loans for Investors: Qualifying on Rental Income Without Personal Income
DSCR Loans: The Non-QM Investor Mortgage That Qualifies on Property Income Alone
DSCR loans (also called “investor cash flow loans” or “debt service ratio loans”) are a specific non-QM mortgage product designed for real estate investors who want to qualify for financing based on the rental property’s income rather than their personal income documentation. Key features: qualification based on the property’s DSCR (typically 1.0-1.25x minimum), no personal income verification (no W2s, tax returns, or pay stubs required), higher interest rates than standard investment property loans (typically +0.5-1.5%), minimum credit scores of 620-680+, and down payments of 20-25%+. DSCR calculation for 1-4 unit residential DSCR loans: DSCR = Monthly Market Rent / Total Monthly PITIA (Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance, HOA if any). Some lenders use DSCR above 1.25x as “fully amortizing” (no income documentation whatsoever) while DSCR of 1.0-1.25x may require some documentation. DSCR below 1.0 (negative cash flow) typically requires compensating factors such as larger down payment, higher reserves, or higher credit score. DSCR loans are particularly useful for: self-employed investors with complex tax returns showing minimal W2 income, investors with portfolios large enough to create DTI challenges on conventional loans, and investors who move quickly in competitive markets where rapid qualification is necessary.
Commercial DSCR Underwriting Checklist
Frequently Asked Questions: DSCR Calculator
What is the DSCR formula?+
DSCR = NOI / Annual Debt Service. NOI = EGI – Operating Expenses (mortgage payments excluded). Annual Debt Service = monthly payment x 12. Commercial office example: NOI $151,200, loan $1,425,000 at 7.00% 25yr. Monthly payment = $10,079. Annual DS = $120,948. DSCR = $151,200/$120,948 = 1.25x. Interpretation: $1.25 in property income for every $1.00 of debt service. DSCR below 1.0 = negative cash flow. Lender minimum: typically 1.20-1.35x depending on property type. DSCR measures the property’s income sustainability against its debt obligations — the higher the DSCR, the more cushion before income declines threaten loan payments.
What is a good DSCR for commercial real estate?+
Minimum DSCR by property type: Multifamily/apartments: 1.20-1.25x. Industrial: 1.20-1.25x. NNN net lease: 1.20-1.30x. Grocery-anchored retail: 1.25-1.30x. Office (suburban): 1.25-1.35x. Hotel/hospitality: 1.30-1.45x. SBA loans: 1.25x minimum. DSCR above 1.50x is considered very strong — the property can sustain 33%+ revenue decline before debt service is threatened. DSCR of 1.0-1.10 is technically positive but too thin for most lenders. Higher DSCR requirements reflect greater income volatility risk: hospitality income fluctuates daily; multifamily is more stable. Lender type also matters: life insurance companies (1.30-1.40x) are more conservative than bank lenders (1.20-1.25x) and CMBS (1.25x standard).
How do you calculate the maximum loan from DSCR?+
Step 1: Max Annual DS = NOI / Min DSCR. Step 2: Max Monthly DS = Annual / 12. Step 3: Debt Constant = r x (1+r)^n / ((1+r)^n – 1) where r = monthly rate, n = months. Step 4: Max Loan = Max Monthly DS / Debt Constant. Example: NOI $151,200, DSCR min 1.25x, 7.00% 25yr. Max Annual DS = $151,200/1.25 = $120,960. Max Monthly = $10,080. Debt constant (7.00%, 25yr): r = 0.005833; (1.005833)^300 = 5.725; k = 0.005833 x 5.725/4.725 = 0.007073. Max Loan = $10,080/0.007073 = $1,425,548. LTV: $1,425,548/$2,500,000 = 57.0%. DSCR constraint (57% LTV) is more restrictive than most lenders’ LTV cap (70-75%). NOI — not value — sizes the commercial loan.
What is the difference between DSCR and cash-on-cash return?+
DSCR = NOI / Annual Debt Service — lender underwriting metric measuring property income coverage of debt. Cash-on-cash = Annual Cash Flow / Equity Invested — investor return metric measuring income yield on equity. Cash flow = NOI – Debt Service. Example: NOI $151,200, debt service $120,948, DSCR 1.25x. Cash flow = $30,252. Equity = $2,500,000 – $1,425,548 = $1,074,452. Cash-on-cash = $30,252/$1,074,452 = 2.81%. The 1.25x DSCR translates to only 2.81% cash-on-cash because significant equity is required (43% LTV). A property with DSCR 1.50x may have higher or lower cash-on-cash depending on leverage — more debt (higher leverage) produces lower DSCR but can produce higher cash-on-cash if the cap rate exceeds the debt constant. DSCR is the lender’s test; cash-on-cash is the investor’s test of current income return.
What is stressed NOI in commercial real estate underwriting?+
Stressed NOI = Actual NOI x Stress Factor (typically 90-95%) after adjustments. Lenders apply stress to: (1) normalize vacancy to market rate (not current occupancy), (2) add management fee if owner self-manages, (3) add capital reserve allocation, (4) adjust any below-market expenses to normalized levels. Example: Actual NOI $160,000. Lender adjustments: normalize vacancy (+$5,000 deduction), add management fee (+$8,000 deduction), add reserves (+$5,000 deduction). Adjusted NOI: $142,000. Stress factor 95%: $134,900. Stressed DSCR on $1.425M loan: $134,900/$120,948 = 1.12x (fails 1.25x minimum). Loan would be reduced despite 1.32x actual DSCR. Why lenders stress: sellers present best-case NOI; lenders underwite for normalized, sustainable income over the loan term, not peak conditions.
What is a DSCR loan?+
A DSCR loan (investor cash flow loan) qualifies 1-4 unit investment properties on rental income DSCR rather than borrower personal income. No W2s, tax returns, or pay stubs required. DSCR calculation: monthly market rent / monthly PITIA. Minimum DSCR: typically 1.0-1.25x (lender specific). Rates: 0.5-1.5% above standard investment property loans. Down payment: 20-25%+. Best for: self-employed investors with complex taxes, investors scaling portfolios rapidly, investors with high personal DTI. DSCR below 1.0 may qualify at some lenders with compensating factors (higher credit score, larger down payment, strong reserves). DSCR loans are not available for primary residences — investment property only. Compare to standard investment loans: DSCR loans are slightly more expensive in rate but far easier to qualify for investors without traditional W2 income documentation.
What is global DSCR analysis?+
Global DSCR = (All Income Sources) / (All Debt Service Obligations). Combines personal income + property income against personal debts + commercial mortgage. Example: personal income $120,000, personal debts $24,000/yr. Property NOI $151,200, property debt service $120,948. Global DSCR = ($120,000 + $151,200) / ($24,000 + $120,948) = $271,200/$144,948 = 1.87x. Community banks and SBA lenders require global DSCR (typically 1.15-1.25x minimum) in addition to property DSCR. For investors with strong personal income, global DSCR helps offset marginal property DSCR. For full-time investors with no W2 income, global DSCR equals property DSCR. Prepare a global DSCR package for commercial loan applications: personal financial statement, list of all income sources, list of all existing monthly debt payments — not just property-related.
What is the debt constant in commercial real estate?+
Debt constant (k) = monthly payment per dollar of loan = r x (1+r)^n / ((1+r)^n – 1). It represents how much monthly debt service is required per dollar borrowed. Useful for: (1) quickly calculating maximum loan from max monthly DS, (2) comparing loan structures without full amortization. Common debt constants: 7.00%, 25yr: k = 0.007073 ($7.073/month per $1,000 loan). 7.00%, 30yr: k = 0.006653 ($6.653/K). 7.50%, 25yr: k = 0.007390 ($7.390/K). 7.50%, 30yr: k = 0.006992 ($6.992/K). To find max loan: Max Loan = Max Monthly DS / k. At $10,080/month max DS: 7.00% 25yr: $10,080/0.007073 = $1,425,548. 7.00% 30yr: $10,080/0.006653 = $1,515,113. 30-year amortization produces $89,565 more loan at the same payment ($10,080) vs 25-year — this is why borrowers prefer longer amortization for commercial loans.
How does interest rate affect DSCR?+
Higher interest rate = higher debt service = lower DSCR (all else equal). And inversely: higher rate = lower maximum loan at the same NOI and DSCR requirement. Example: NOI $151,200, DSCR 1.25x, 25yr amortization. At 6.00%: k = 0.006443. Max Loan = $10,080/0.006443 = $1,564,767. At 7.00%: k = 0.007073. Max Loan = $1,425,548. At 8.00%: k = 0.007718. Max Loan = $1,305,786. Rate change from 6% to 8% (2%): reduces maximum loan by $258,981 on the same property income. This is the fundamental mechanism of the 2022-2024 commercial real estate distress: properties purchased at low-rate cap rates (5-6%) supported large loans at 4% interest rates. At 7-8% rates, the same NOI supports $200,000-$400,000 less in loan proceeds — creating equity gaps and refinancing challenges for owners whose loans matured into a higher-rate environment.
Key Takeaways
The Debt Service Coverage Ratio formula (DSCR = NOI / Annual Debt Service) operates in both a diagnostic direction (what is the DSCR on a proposed loan?) and a prescriptive direction (what is the maximum loan this NOI can support?). In commercial real estate underwriting, the prescriptive direction is primary: Maximum Annual Debt Service = NOI / Minimum DSCR, Maximum Monthly DS = Annual / 12, Maximum Loan = Maximum Monthly DS / Debt Constant. On $151,200 in NOI with a 1.25x DSCR requirement and 7.00% 25-year amortization, the maximum loan is $1,425,548 — a 57% LTV that is more restrictive than the typical 70-75% LTV cap for commercial properties, confirming that income (not value) is the binding constraint in this deal.
The three most critical DSCR underwriting principles are: calculate DSCR before signing any purchase agreement (discovering a DSCR shortfall after signing wastes earnest money and negotiating position), always apply a 90-95% stress factor to actual NOI before calculating the maximum loan (lenders will apply this stress and present a lower loan amount at commitment if not preemptively applied), and understand that DSCR requirements vary by property type and lender (hotel/hospitality lenders requiring 1.40x produce dramatically different loan sizing outcomes than multifamily lenders at 1.20x on the same NOI). Commercial real estate financing is fundamentally an income-driven underwriting exercise — maximum loan proceeds flow from the property’s ability to generate sustainable, verifiable, stress-tested income against a defined coverage multiple.
Calculate DSCR, Maximum Loan from NOI, Debt Constant, and Stressed Coverage
Our DSCR Calculator computes property DSCR from NOI and debt service, maximum loan amount from NOI and minimum DSCR requirement using the debt constant formula, stressed DSCR at 90% and 95% of NOI, DSCR at alternative loan amounts, and the NOI required to support any specific loan at a given DSCR threshold.
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