Complete Guide
Published by Pinnacle Funding Network | Updated March 2026
Short-term rental investing has matured from a side hustle into a serious asset class. And the financing has finally caught up.
If you're buying an Airbnb, VRBO, or vacation rental property, you need a lender who understands how STR income works - because most don't. Traditional banks underwrite on long-term lease income or your personal W-2. Neither captures the real economics of a short-term rental.
DSCR loans designed for STR properties change the equation. This guide explains how they work, how income is calculated, what lenders look for, and how to structure your deal.
A long-term rental has predictable income: a signed lease for $2,500/month means $2,500/month. Simple.
Short-term rentals don't work that way. Income is seasonal, variable, and dependent on factors like location, management, listing quality, and occupancy rates. A property might earn $8,000/month in peak season and $2,000 in the off-season.
This creates two problems with traditional financing:
STR-specific DSCR programs solve both problems by using projected or actual short-term rental income to qualify the loan.
Lenders use one of three methods to determine rental income for an STR-focused DSCR loan:
AirDNA is a data platform that analyzes short-term rental performance by market. Lenders use AirDNA's revenue projections to estimate what a property will earn.
How it works:
Pros: Available for any property, even before you've listed it. No operating history required.
Cons: Projections can be optimistic. Some lenders discount AirDNA numbers by 25%.
If you already operate the property as an STR, lenders can use your actual booking history.
Documentation needed:
Pros: Based on real performance, not projections. More credible to underwriters.
Cons: Requires operating history. Doesn't work for new acquisitions unless the seller provides their data.
Some lenders only accept long-term rental comps - the standard Form 1007/1025 market rent analysis. This is the most conservative approach and often undervalues STR properties.
When this happens: If the lender doesn't have an STR-specific program, they'll default to long-term rent. This means your $6,000/month Airbnb gets underwritten at $2,500/month market rent.
The lesson: Work with a lender who has actual STR programs, not one who's trying to fit your Airbnb into a conventional box.
The formula is the same as any DSCR loan - the income source is just different:
DSCR = Monthly STR Income (net of platform fees) ÷ Monthly PITIA
Annual STR Revenue (AirDNA): $72,000
Less Platform Fees (15%): -$10,800
Net Annual Income: $61,200
Monthly Net Income: $5,100
Monthly PITIA:
Principal & Interest: $2,800
Property Tax: $400
Insurance: $250
HOA: $350
Total PITIA: $3,800
DSCR = $5,100 ÷ $3,800 = 1.34x
Result: Strong qualification. Best rate tier.
| Requirement | Typical Range |
|---|---|
| Credit Score | 680+ (some at 660 with higher rate) |
| Down Payment | 20-25% |
| DSCR | 1.00x minimum using STR income |
| Reserves | 6-12 months PITIA |
| Loan Amount | $55,000 - $3,000,000 |
| Property Type | SFR, condo, townhome, 2-4 unit |
| STR Permitted | Must verify local STR regulations allow it |
| Rate | Typically 0.25-0.50% higher than standard DSCR |
The best STR markets balance three factors: strong tourism demand, favorable regulations, and reasonable acquisition costs. Markets to research include coastal destinations, mountain towns, cities with major event venues or universities, and areas with year-round tourism.
Do your own market analysis using AirDNA, Mashvisor, or similar platforms. Look at average daily rate, occupancy rate, and annual revenue relative to property prices.
Key metrics to evaluate:
Regulatory risk. Cities can change STR rules. What's legal today might require a permit or be banned entirely next year. Always research the current regulatory environment AND the political trend.
Seasonal income volatility. Your DSCR might be 1.5x in July and 0.6x in January. Lenders look at annualized income, but you need cash reserves to cover low months.
Management intensity. STRs require more active management than long-term rentals - cleaning, guest communication, pricing optimization, maintenance. Factor management costs (20-30%) into your cash flow analysis.
Platform dependency. Airbnb, VRBO, and Booking.com control your distribution. Algorithm changes, review issues, or policy shifts can impact bookings. Diversify across platforms.
Higher insurance costs. STR insurance is more expensive than standard landlord policies. Budget $2,000-5,000/year depending on the property.
The BRRRR method works exceptionally well for STR properties:
The refinance step is where the magic happens. A property you bought for $300K might appraise at $350K after improvements, and the STR income qualifies you for a higher loan amount than long-term rent would. You pull out more equity, which funds your next acquisition.
If you're looking at a short-term rental property - or already own one and want to refinance - we can run the numbers using either AirDNA projections or your actual booking history. We work with lenders who have dedicated STR programs, not ones trying to fit Airbnb into a conventional box.
James Loffredo, Principal
Pinnacle Funding Network
214-846-8602
james@pinnaclefundingnetwork.com
pinnaclefundingnetwork.com
Pinnacle Funding Network is a mortgage broker. PFN does not make loans or credit decisions. Loans are originated through PFN's lending partners. Rates, terms, and programs are subject to change. All loan applications are subject to credit review, property appraisal, and underwriting approval.