What's the Difference Between Fix-and-Flip Loans and DSCR Loans?

Both loan types offer streamlined qualification without W-2 or tax return requirements, but they serve completely different strategies: short-term renovations and resale versus long-term rental property ownership.

Finance
December 19, 2025
What's the Difference Between Fix-and-Flip Loans and DSCR Loans?

The Essentials

  • Fix-and-flip loans are for short-term projects (6-24 months) where you renovate and sell.
  • DSCR loans are for long-term rentals (30-year terms) where you hold and collect income.
  • Both skip W-2 and tax return requirements — streamlined qualification for different investment strategies.
  • You can transition between loan types if your investment strategy changes after purchase.

If you're exploring investor financing options, you've probably come across both fix-and-flip loans and DSCR loans. Both serve real estate investors, and both offer streamlined qualification without W-2 or tax return requirements. But they're designed for completely different investment strategies, and using the wrong one can create unnecessary costs or complications.

The core difference comes down to your exit strategy: are you planning to sell the property quickly after renovations, or are you planning to hold it long-term as a rental?

Fix-and-Flip Loans: Built for Quick Turnarounds

Fix-and-flip loans are designed for short-term renovation projects where you plan to sell the property after improvements. The financing structure reflects this timeline:

  • Loan terms: Typically 6-24 months
  • Purpose: Fund both purchase and renovation costs
  • Exit strategy: Sell the property and pay off the loan from sale proceeds
  • Funding structure: Renovation funds disbursed in draws as work progresses
  • Evaluation criteria: After-repair value (ARV) and renovation plan feasibility

If you're buying a distressed property, renovating it, and listing it for sale within a year, fix-and-flip financing aligns perfectly with your strategy.

DSCR Loans: Built for Long-Term Rental Income

DSCR loans are for rental properties you plan to hold long-term, qualifying based on rental income. The structure is fundamentally different:

  • Loan terms: Traditional 30-year amortization (or 15, 20, 25-year options)
  • Purpose: Finance rental properties generating ongoing income
  • Exit strategy: Hold the property and collect rental income indefinitely
  • Qualification: Based on the property's rental income covering the mortgage payment
  • Evaluation criteria: Debt Service Coverage Ratio—rental income vs. debt obligations

If you're buying a turnkey rental property or a property that's already generating rent, DSCR financing gives you long-term, stable financing that matches your hold strategy.

Choosing the Right Loan for Your Strategy

Use fix-and-flip financing if you're:

  • Buying a property that needs significant renovation
  • Planning to sell after improvements are complete
  • Working on a 6-18 month timeline from purchase to sale
  • Focused on maximizing resale value through strategic improvements

Use DSCR financing if you're:

  • Buying a rental property to hold in your portfolio
  • Purchasing a property that's already rent-ready or needs only minor work
  • Building long-term wealth through rental income and appreciation
  • Refinancing an existing rental property

What If Your Plans Change?

Sometimes investors start with one strategy and pivot to another. You might buy a property intending to flip it, but market conditions change and you decide holding it as a rental makes more sense.

This is where you can transition between loan types. If you originally renovated a property with the intent to sell but later decided to rent it out due to better market opportunities, you can use a DSCR loan to take out your fix-and-flip loan. This converts your short-term bridge financing into long-term rental property financing that matches your new hold strategy.

Matching Financing to Your Investment Approach

The right loan depends entirely on your investment strategy. If you're an active flipper focused on renovation projects and quick sales, fix-and-flip loans are your tool. If you're building a buy-and-hold rental portfolio, DSCR loans are the better fit.

Many successful investors use both—flipping some properties for immediate profit while building a rental portfolio for long-term wealth. Each loan type serves its purpose, and understanding when to use which one helps you execute both strategies effectively.

Not sure which loan type fits your project? Reach out to us to discuss your investment goals and timeline. We can help you determine whether fix-and-flip or DSCR financing aligns better with your specific situation.

Ryan McPartland Headshot
Written by
Ryan McPartland
Director, Lending Officer
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Ryan McPartland is an experienced real estate financial professional contributing insights for Truehold. Learn more from Truehold’s Director, Lending Officer.
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Truehold's blog is committed to delivering timely and pertinent insights in real estate and finance, purely for educational and informational purposes. Crafted by experts, our content is thoroughly reviewed to guarantee its accuracy and dependability. Although designed to enlighten and engage, our articles are not intended as financial advice and should not be the sole basis for financial decisions. Our stringent editorial practices ensure the integrity of our content, empowering our readers with valuable knowledge.

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