The short answer: DSCR loans are for buy-and-hold investors; hard money loans are for fix-and-flip deals. Both are non-QM products that don't require income documentation, but they serve completely different time horizons and strategies. Using hard money to hold a rental property long-term is an expensive mistake. Using a DSCR loan to fund a 90-day renovation is just as wrong. This guide makes the distinction clear so you use the right tool for your Florida investment strategy.
I'm Joe Pistone, Originating Branch Manager at CrossCountry Mortgage (NMLS# 2087918), based in Tampa. I originate DSCR loans across all 67 Florida counties for buy-and-hold investors. I also work with investors who use hard money on the front end before transitioning to long-term DSCR financing. Understanding both products is essential to making smart financing decisions in today's Florida market.
The Fundamental Difference: Time Horizon
Before diving into rates and terms, understand the core structural difference between these two products:
Short-term bridge financing — typically 6 to 24 months. Designed for acquisition, rehab, and exit (sell or refinance). High rates reflect the short holding period and collateral-based underwriting.
Long-term buy-and-hold financing — 30-year fixed or adjustable. Designed for income-producing rental properties. Qualification based on the property's rent-to-payment ratio, not personal income.
This structural difference drives every other aspect of how these loans work. See the DSCR loan requirements for Florida for full qualification details on the long-term product.
How Hard Money Loans Work in Florida
Hard money lenders in Florida are typically private lending companies or individual investors who lend based primarily on the value of the collateral — the property — rather than your personal financial profile. The exit strategy (how you plan to repay) is central to their approval decision.
Key features of hard money loans in Florida:
- Rates: 10–14% (some lenders higher for distressed assets)
- Terms: 6–24 months; some bridge lenders go to 36 months
- Origination points: 2–4 points at closing
- LTV: Up to 70–75% of after-repair value (ARV) for fix-and-flip; up to 90% of purchase price for some programs
- Closing timeline: 3–7 business days for experienced borrowers
- Credit: Typically 600+ minimum, but collateral is primary
- No income verification required
- Construction draws available for rehab projects
- No prepayment penalty — you pay it off when the project is done
Hard money is the dominant financing tool for Florida fix-and-flip investors in markets like Tampa, Jacksonville, and Orlando's older neighborhoods, where distressed inventory can be acquired at significant discounts to ARV. The high rate is offset by the short hold period — on a 6-month flip, 13% annualized is manageable when you're making 20–30% on the deal.
How DSCR Loans Work in Florida
A DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) loan qualifies a property based on whether its gross monthly rent covers the monthly principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and HOA (PITIA). No W-2s, no tax returns, no personal income documentation required. For Florida buy-and-hold investors — especially in markets like Tampa, Orlando, and Miami — DSCR is the primary tool for scaling a rental portfolio without income documentation headaches.
Key features of DSCR loans in Florida:
- Rates: 7–8.5% (30-year fixed) in 2026, depending on LTV and credit score
- Terms: 30-year fixed, 5/1 ARM, 7/1 ARM, 40-year IO options
- Down payment: 20–25% minimum
- Loan amounts: Up to $3 million
- DSCR minimum: 1.0 (property income covers payment)
- Credit: 620–680 minimum depending on lender
- LLC-eligible — title can be in entity name
- No cap on number of financed investment properties
- Closing timeline: 18–25 days typical
- Prepayment penalty: Common — step-down structure over 3–5 years
Use the DSCR calculator to check whether a specific Florida property qualifies before running numbers with any lender.
Side-by-Side Comparison: DSCR vs Hard Money
| Feature | DSCR Loan | Hard Money Loan |
|---|---|---|
| Primary Use Case | Long-term buy-and-hold rentals | Fix-and-flip, bridge, short-term |
| Interest Rate | 7–8.5% (2026) | 10–14% |
| Loan Term | 30 years (fixed or ARM) | 6–24 months |
| Origination Points | 0.5–2 points | 2–4 points |
| Down Payment / LTV | 20–25% down (75–80% LTV) | Up to 90% LTV purchase; 70–75% ARV |
| Closing Speed | 18–25 days | 3–7 business days |
| Income Verification | None | None |
| Qualification Basis | Property DSCR (rent ÷ PITIA) | Collateral value + exit strategy |
| Credit Score Minimum | 620–680 | ~600 (asset-based) |
| LLC-Compatible | Yes | Yes |
| Prepayment Penalty | Yes (3–5 year step-down) | No |
| Construction Draws | No | Yes (for rehab projects) |
| Max Loan Amount | Up to $3 million | Varies by lender (often $5M+) |
| Regulatory Oversight | State-licensed lender, NMLS | Varies — some less regulated |
Rate and Cost Comparison: The Real Numbers
Let's look at what the rate difference actually means for a Tampa investor purchasing a $350,000 single-family rental:
DSCR Loan (30-year hold):
- Loan amount: $280,000 (20% down)
- Rate: 7.875% (30-year fixed)
- Monthly P&I: $2,037
- Total interest over 30 years: ~$453,000
- Origination cost: ~$2,800 (1 point)
Hard Money (held 12 months — catastrophic for a rental):
- Loan amount: $280,000
- Rate: 12%
- Monthly interest-only payment: $2,800
- Interest cost over 12 months: $33,600
- Origination cost: ~$8,400 (3 points)
- Total 12-month financing cost: ~$42,000
If you held that hard money loan for 5 years on a rental property, your financing cost would exceed $210,000 in interest alone — before considering the origination points. This is why hard money is designed for short exits, not rental holds. Compare DSCR to conventional loans for a different angle on buy-and-hold financing options.
When to Use Hard Money in Florida
Hard money makes sense in very specific scenarios:
1. Fix-and-flip projects. You acquire a distressed property, renovate, and sell within 6–12 months. The holding period is short enough that the high rate is manageable relative to your profit margin. Florida markets like Jacksonville's Riverside neighborhood, Tampa's Ybor City, and Orlando's Parramore have active fix-and-flip opportunities.
2. Auction purchases requiring fast closes. Court auctions and foreclosure sales often require payment within 24–72 hours. No conventional or DSCR lender can move that fast. Hard money is the only institutional capital source with that timeline.
3. Bridge financing before DSCR. If you're executing a BRRRR strategy — Buy, Rehab, Rent, Refinance, Repeat — hard money funds the acquisition and renovation. Once the property is stabilized with a tenant and a new appraisal supports a higher value, you refinance into a 30-year DSCR loan. This is a common and effective strategy across Florida.
4. Properties that don't qualify for DSCR yet. A vacant property with no rental history doesn't qualify for DSCR financing. Hard money or a bridge loan gets you through the acquisition and stabilization phase until the property generates rental income that supports a DSCR qualification.
When to Use DSCR in Florida
DSCR is the right call for:
1. Long-term rental holds. Any property you plan to keep as a rental for 5+ years should be financed with a 30-year DSCR loan. The 30-year amortization and competitive rates make monthly cash flow manageable in a way that hard money never can. Check DSCR for Airbnb properties if you're considering short-term rental income.
2. Self-employed investors building a portfolio. If your personal income is complex, reduced, or you run it through pass-through entities, DSCR bypasses personal income entirely. Your fifth, tenth, and twentieth rental property can all be financed based on each property's rent-to-payment ratio.
3. LLC-structured portfolios. DSCR loans are LLC-compatible, which matters for asset protection. Hard money lenders also allow LLC title, but for long-term holdings you want the stability of a 30-year DSCR note — not a 12-month loan that needs to be extended or refinanced annually. Investors in Sarasota and Naples frequently use LLCs for portfolio organization.
4. Scaling beyond 10 properties. Fannie Mae caps conventional loans at 10 financed properties. DSCR has no such cap, making it the natural home for serious portfolio builders.
Which Should You Choose? Recommendation by Borrower Type
DSCR vs Hard Money: Pros and Cons
DSCR Loan
- 30-year fixed term — payment stability
- Rates 7–8.5% — dramatically lower than hard money
- No income documentation
- LLC-compatible for asset protection
- No cap on number of properties
- Regulated lender — consumer protections apply
- Requires 1.0+ DSCR (property must cover payment)
- 20–25% minimum down payment
- 18–25 day closing — not instant
- Prepayment penalty (3–5 years typical)
- No construction draws for rehab
Hard Money Loan
- Closes in 3–7 business days
- Higher LTV available (up to 90% purchase)
- Funds rehab draws for renovation projects
- No prepayment penalty
- Extremely flexible underwriting
- Rates 10–14% — very expensive to carry
- Terms 6–24 months — must exit or refi
- 2–4 points upfront — high origination cost
- Less regulatory oversight than licensed lenders
- Catastrophic for long-term holds
Frequently Asked Questions
Ready to Finance Your Florida Rental?
If you're buying to hold, a DSCR loan at 7–8.5% on a 30-year term is almost certainly the right tool. If you're flipping or bridging, let's talk through your timeline and exit strategy so we can plan the right sequence. I work with Florida investors every day on exactly this kind of analysis.
Check My DSCR Eligibility →⏱️ Apply now with the official CCM application — click here — and Joe will call you within 60 seconds, guaranteed.
Or call / text Joe: (941) 260-3051