Free CRE calculator

DSCR Calculator

Check whether NOI covers debt service — the first test every lender runs.

Check whether the property's income covers its loan payment — the first test every lender runs. Required: NOI and the annual debt service (enter it directly, or derive it from loan amount, rate, and amortization).

Debt Service Coverage
<1.0 won't fund1.0–1.25 tight1.25+ healthy

Enter NOI and annual debt service to see whether this deal covers its loan.

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How it's calculated

DSCR = NOI ÷ annual debt service. Most lenders want ≥ 1.20–1.25×. Below 1.0× the property can't cover its loan from operations. Annual debt service can be derived from loan amount, rate, and amortization, or entered directly. The full UpsideIQ underwrite models it at both interest-only and P&I.

Pre-filled with a worked example — edit any field to run your own deal.

Built by LFO Capital's institutional CRE underwriting team · computed, not guessed — deterministic math, not an AI estimate · how we calculate →

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What DSCR measures

The Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) is the first test a commercial lender runs on a deal: it asks whether the property's income covers its loan payments, and by how much. It is the cushion between what a building earns and what it owes — the margin that keeps a loan current when a tenant leaves or expenses spike.

The formula: DSCR = Net Operating Income (NOI) ÷ Annual Debt Service. If a property produces $300,000 of NOI and the annual mortgage payment (principal + interest) is $240,000, the DSCR is 1.25× — the property earns $1.25 for every $1.00 of debt service. NOI is income after operating expenses but before debt service; debt service is the full annual principal + interest (test the fully-amortizing payment, not an interest-only teaser).

How lenders read it

A DSCR of 1.0× is break-even: every dollar of income goes straight to the loan, leaving nothing for surprises. Most commercial lenders require a minimum of 1.20× to 1.25× to fund, and many size the loan down until the deal clears that threshold. Below 1.0× the property cannot service its debt from operations — the owner is feeding the mortgage out of pocket, which is how deals default. Agency multifamily lenders often want 1.25×; bank and bridge debt varies with the borrower and the business plan.

Three worked examples

The math is the same across asset classes — what changes is where the NOI comes from and the coverage a lender expects.

1. ~50-unit multifamily. 50 units at $1,400/mo = $840,000 gross potential rent; less 6% vacancy and a 42% expense ratio leaves roughly $458,000 NOI. A $6,000,000 loan at 6.5% over 30 years costs about $455,000/yr in debt service. DSCR = $458,000 ÷ $455,000 = 1.01× — the deal technically covers but sits far below the 1.25× agency floor, so the lender sizes the loan down (or you bring more equity) until it clears.

2. Industrial (single-tenant). An 80,000 SF building leased at $9.00/SF NNN = $720,000 of nearly-net income; a landlord-cost reserve trims NOI to about $690,000. A $7,000,000 loan at 6.75% over 25 years runs roughly $580,000/yr. DSCR = $690,000 ÷ $580,000 = 1.19× — just under a typical 1.20× bank minimum; a long-term, credit-tenant lease can earn an exception, a short remaining term will not.

3. IOS (industrial outdoor storage). A 5-acre yard at $8,000/acre/month = $480,000 gross; net of the carry a covered-land owner bears, call it $430,000 NOI. A $4,000,000 loan at 7.25% over 25 years costs about $347,000/yr. DSCR = $430,000 ÷ $347,000 = 1.24× — financeable, but IOS lenders scrutinize lease term and tenant quality because the income is easier to displace than a building's.

Minimum DSCR by asset class

There is no universal floor — lenders set it by how stable the income is. As a rough frame:

Asset / loan typeTypical minimum DSCR
Multifamily (agency / stabilized)1.20–1.25×
Industrial / single-tenant net lease1.20–1.40× (credit-dependent)
Retail / office (multi-tenant)1.25–1.40×
Hotels / self-storage1.40–1.50×
SBA 7(a) / 504~1.15×

The pattern is risk: durable, diversified income (stabilized apartments) clears at a lower ratio; volatile, operations-heavy income (hotels) needs a thicker cushion.

Global (portfolio) DSCR — what lenders look at beyond one property

A single-property DSCR can clear while the borrower still fails the test. A global DSCR pools all of an entity's (or guarantor's) income and all of its debt service — every property, plus personal or corporate obligations — into one ratio. Banks underwriting a relationship, an SBA loan, or a recourse borrower routinely require a global DSCR (often around 1.15–1.25×) in addition to the property-level number, because a portfolio carrying several thin deals is fragile even if no single asset is underwater. If you own multiple assets, model the pooled ratio, not just the deal in front of you.

How to use the result

If your DSCR comes in under the lender's floor, you have three levers: raise NOI (push rents, cut expenses, or fix an understated income line), lower the loan amount (more equity, lower LTV), or lower the rate or extend amortization to shrink the annual payment. Watch the amortization assumption closely — an interest-only period flatters DSCR today but the number tightens when the loan begins amortizing. A healthy going-in DSCR with room above the minimum is what gives a deal the resilience to survive a soft year without a capital call.

DSCR by scenario

Go deeper on the situation you're in: the Commercial DSCR Calculator (all asset classes + global DSCR), the Multifamily DSCR Calculator (agency 1.25× framing), and DSCR at Refinance / Stress Test (will the deal still pass at today's rates).

DSCR is one number — underwrite the whole deal

Coverage tells you whether the loan is safe today; it says nothing about the exit, reserves, IRR, or where the return actually comes from. Underwrite the whole deal in UpsideIQ — a full 10-year DCF, reserves, refinance and exit, modeled at both interest-only and P&I, with a graded deal score. See pricing.

Frequently asked questions

What is a good DSCR?

Most commercial lenders want at least 1.20x to 1.25x. Above 1.25x is comfortable; 1.0–1.20x covers the debt but with a thin cushion; below 1.0x means operations do not cover the loan and the owner must fund the shortfall.

How is DSCR calculated?

Divide annual Net Operating Income by annual debt service (principal + interest). For example, $300,000 NOI ÷ $240,000 of payments = 1.25x DSCR.

Does DSCR use NOI before or after the mortgage?

Before. NOI is income after operating expenses but before debt service; DSCR then compares that NOI to the debt service. Using a number that already subtracts the mortgage would double-count the loan.

Why does my DSCR change with the amortization period?

A longer amortization (or an interest-only period) lowers the annual payment, which raises DSCR. That can make a deal look safer than it is once the loan begins amortizing, so test the fully-amortizing payment, not just the IO period.

What is a good DSCR by asset class?

Stabilized multifamily typically needs 1.20–1.25x; multi-tenant retail and office 1.25–1.40x; hotels and self-storage 1.40–1.50x because their income is more volatile; SBA loans can go as low as ~1.15x. The riskier and more operations-dependent the income, the thicker the coverage cushion a lender wants.

What is the difference between DSCR and interest coverage (ICR)?

DSCR divides NOI by total debt service — principal AND interest — so it tests whether the property can cover a fully-amortizing payment. Interest coverage (ICR) divides NOI (or EBIT) by interest only, ignoring principal. ICR always looks higher; DSCR is the stricter, more realistic test because real loans amortize. Do not confuse DSCR with rent coverage either, which measures a tenant's EBITDAR against its rent, not the property against its loan.

Do lenders stress-test DSCR?

Yes. Underwriters routinely re-run DSCR at a higher (stressed) interest rate, a haircut to NOI, or both — and for floating-rate or near-term-maturity loans they test the rate you would actually refinance into, not today's pay rate. A deal that clears at the going-in rate can fail at a stressed refi rate, which is exactly the risk in the 2026 maturity wall. Run the refinance / stress scenario before you assume the loan is safe.

Does DSCR include reserves, and is it different for industrial or multifamily?

DSCR is NOI ÷ debt service. Whether replacement reserves are netted depends on the basis: a conservative (true) NOI subtracts reserves and lowers DSCR versus a broker NOI that omits them — know which you are quoting. The formula is identical across asset types; what changes is the lender's minimum (multifamily ~1.20–1.25x, industrial 1.20–1.40x by tenant credit). On single-tenant industrial, also check the tenant's rent coverage, a separate test of the tenant's ability to pay.

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