Rental income is the foundation of DSCR underwriting, but lenders do not simply accept the number an investor provides. They verify income through specific tools, most notably the DSCR rent schedule and market rent analysis included in the appraisal. Understanding how these tools work helps investors anticipate what the lender will see and how it could affect the loan.
What a Rent Schedule Is #
A rent schedule, sometimes referred to as a Form 1007 for single-family properties or a similar appraisal addendum for multifamily, is a document completed by the licensed appraiser as part of the property appraisal. It provides:
- The appraiser’s estimate of market rent for the subject property
- Comparable rental properties used to support that estimate
- A range of rents in the local market for similar units
The DSCR rent schedule is an independent, third-party assessment of what the property could reasonably rent for on the open market.
How Market Rent Is Used in the DSCR Calculation #
Once the rent schedule is completed, lenders typically use the lower of two figures:
- The actual lease amount if the property is currently occupied
- The appraiser’s market rent estimate
This conservative approach protects the lender from overestimating income on a property where the lease may be above market or where the current rent is not sustainable. For vacant properties, the appraiser’s market rent is the only available figure and becomes the basis for the income calculation alongside the DSCR rent schedule findings.
What Happens When Actual Rent Exceeds Market Rent #
If a property has a signed lease at a rent that is above the appraiser’s market rent estimate, the lender will generally use the market rent figure rather than the lease amount. This means:
- A higher-than-market lease does not improve the DSCR calculation
- The effective income used for underwriting may be lower than what the investor is actually collecting
- The gap between actual rent and market rent can affect loan sizing
Investors should be aware that above-market leases do not always translate directly into a higher approvable loan amount, even if the DSCR rent schedule suggests otherwise.
Short-Term Rental Properties #
For properties operating as short-term rentals, the income picture is more complex. Lenders handle this in different ways:
- Some use the appraiser’s long-term market rent as a conservative baseline regardless of short-term performance
- Others accept a percentage of documented short-term gross revenue from platform histories
- Some programs do not accept short-term rental income at all
Investors using short-term rental platforms should confirm how their lender treats that income before relying on it in their DSCR rent schedule projections.
Why the Appraiser’s Role Matters #
Because the rent schedule is completed by an independent appraiser rather than the investor or lender, it carries significant weight in the underwriting process. A rent estimate that comes in lower than expected can affect the DSCR and, by extension, the loan amount or approval outcome calculated using the DSCR rent schedule criteria.
Investors cannot control the appraiser’s conclusion, but they can:
- Provide the appraiser with relevant rental comps in the area
- Ensure the property is in good condition prior to the appraisal
- Have a current lease in place when possible
Summary #
Lenders rely on appraisal-based rent schedules and market rent analyses to verify the income used in DSCR calculations. The income figure used is typically the lower of the actual lease or the appraiser’s market rent estimate, which means above-market leases do not always improve the loan outcome. For vacant properties, the appraiser’s estimate is the sole basis for income.
Understanding how the DSCR rent schedule factors into underwriting helps investors build more accurate projections and avoid surprises when the appraisal comes back. AHL’s underwriting process follows standard rent schedule practices, and the team can help you understand what to expect before your appraisal is ordered.