Reserves are the most misunderstood part of DSCR underwriting. Investors obsess over DSCR ratios and LTV percentages but get blindsided at the closing table when they discover they don’t have enough liquid assets to satisfy the reserve requirement — on top of the down payment they already committed.
Understanding reserve requirements before you make an offer saves deals. This is the complete breakdown.
Disclaimer: This article is educational and for informational purposes only. All figures and scenarios are hypothetical examples. Reserve requirements vary by lender, loan amount, DSCR ratio, and borrower profile. Consult a licensed mortgage professional for guidance specific to your situation.
What Reserves Actually Are
Reserves are liquid assets you must hold after closing — not assets you spend at closing. They represent your financial cushion to keep making loan payments if the property generates no income (vacancy, major repair, eviction process).
The reserve requirement is typically expressed in months of PITIA — principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and any HOA/association dues. If your total monthly PITIA is $2,500 and the lender requires 6 months of reserves, you need $15,000 in verified liquid accounts after your down payment and closing costs are paid.
This distinction — after closing, not before — is critical. Many investors calculate reserves against their total account balance, then find out they’re short after the down payment and costs are gone.
Typical Reserve Amounts by Program
Reserve requirements vary based on several factors. Here’s a general map of the landscape:
Standard DSCR Programs (1.0+ Ratio)
Sub-1.0 DSCR Programs
No-Ratio Programs
Larger Loan Amounts ($1M+)
Portfolio Seasoning Requirements
How the Calculation Works
Have a deal you’re evaluating? Run your numbers through our DSCR Calculator to see where you stand instantly. Or if you want to talk through a specific scenario — no obligation — reach out here or call directly.
Let’s walk through a concrete hypothetical:
Hypothetical property scenario:
If closing costs run $7,000, total funds needed at closing: $87,500 + $7,000 = $94,500. Plus $13,080 in reserves that must remain in your account after closing. Total liquid position needed going into closing: approximately $107,580.
If you walk in with $100,000 in the bank, you pass the down payment and closing cost test but fail the reserves test. The deal dies — or needs to be restructured.
What Counts as Reserves
Full Value (100% of balance)
Partial Value
What Does NOT Count
Larger Loan Amount Requirements
As loan amounts grow, reserve requirements generally scale up — and sometimes the calculation method changes entirely.
$1M–$2M Loan Range
$2M+ Loans
Multi-Property Portfolios
If you’re financing your fourth or fifth DSCR loan simultaneously, some lenders apply an aggregate reserve calculation. Instead of just verifying reserves for the new property, they want to see you have adequate reserves across all your financed investment properties. This catches investors who are technically qualified on paper for each individual deal but are dangerously thin on liquidity overall.
Sourcing and Seasoning Rules
It’s not enough to just have the reserves — lenders verify where they came from and how long they’ve been there.
Seasoning
Most DSCR lenders want to see funds in your accounts for 60–90 days minimum. Large deposits that appeared recently will require documentation. A $50,000 wire that hit your account last week will require a full paper trail explaining the source.
Acceptable Sources for Large Deposits
Red Flags
Can You Use Cash-Out Proceeds for Reserves?
Yes — and this is one of the most underutilized strategies in DSCR lending. If you have equity in an existing property, a DSCR cash-out refinance can generate the liquid reserves you need for your next acquisition.
Here’s why it works: once cash-out proceeds hit your bank account, they’re seasoned immediately in most lenders’ calculations (some require 30–60 days; verify with your lender). You’ve converted illiquid equity into verified liquid reserves.
Hypothetical example: You own a rental free and clear worth $500,000. A DSCR cash-out refinance at 70% LTV generates $350,000. After loan costs, you have $340,000 in your account. That more than covers reserves for multiple new acquisitions.
The math must work: the cash-out refi creates new PITIA that reduces your own cash flow. Make sure the refinanced property still qualifies, and factor the new payment into your monthly burn rate.
Strategies to Meet Reserve Requirements
Bottom Line
Reserve requirements are a hard stop in DSCR underwriting. You can have the perfect DSCR, perfect credit, and 25% down — and still get denied if you don’t have the required liquid assets after closing. Calculate your reserve requirement before you make an offer, verify what counts in your specific situation, and plan your asset position at least 90 days in advance. Reserves aren’t just a lending requirement; they’re the financial cushion that keeps a good investment from becoming a forced sale when the unexpected hits.
Let’s Talk About Your Deal
Every rental property is different, and DSCR qualification depends on the specific property, market rents, and your investment goals. If you’re exploring a purchase or refinance and want to understand whether DSCR is the right fit — no obligation, just a straightforward conversation about what your deal looks like and what options are available.
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Tim Popp | timpopploans.com | NMLS #2039627
This is educational content only. Loan products and availability are subject to change. Not a commitment to lend. Equal Housing Opportunity.