DSCR Loans in Miami, Florida
Miami is a condo market first, and that single fact shapes nearly every DSCR file written here. Investors who underwrite a Miami rental the way they would a single-family home in the rest of Florida are routinely surprised at closing — by association dues that compress the coverage ratio, by warrantability questions that narrow the lender list, and by short-term-rental rules that change block to block. This page covers what is specific to financing a Miami investment property on its rental cash flow. For the full mechanics of how DSCR underwriting works, see the DSCR loan program overview.
Alpha Equity Lending is a Florida mortgage broker (NMLS #1855083) working Miami-Dade investor files across multiple non-QM capital sources — which matters more here than in most Florida markets, because condo and short-term-rental tolerances vary widely between sources.
The Miami Investor Market
Miami-Dade rental demand is driven by a population that rents at a high rate, sustained in-migration, and a large international ownership base. For a DSCR investor that produces a market with strong gross rents but a cost structure — association dues, insurance, and special assessments — that the ratio has to absorb. The relevant question is rarely whether a Miami property rents; it is whether it covers its full obligation once the condo carrying costs are in the payment.
Submarket behavior varies meaningfully. Brickell and Downtown skew toward high-rise condo rentals with strong nominal rents and correspondingly high dues. Edgewater and the Arts/Entertainment district mix newer towers with investor-heavy ownership. Wynwood and Little River trend toward smaller multifamily and adaptive product. Coconut Grove and the mainland single-family pockets behave more like conventional DSCR files. A property's submarket is a useful first signal of how its file will underwrite.
Miami Property Types and How They Underwrite
| Property type | Miami reality | DSCR consideration |
|---|---|---|
| High-rise condo (Brickell, Edgewater, Downtown) | The dominant investor product | Association dues are part of PITIA — high dues can move a strong-rent unit to break-even or sub-1 |
| Non-warrantable condo | Common in newer, investor-heavy, or short-term-friendly buildings | Narrows the capital-source list; financeable with the right source, not all |
| Condo-hotel / branded residence | A distinct Miami niche | Specialized treatment; many standard DSCR sources exclude it entirely |
| Small multifamily (Wynwood, Little Havana, Little River) | 2–4 units and small apartment product | Often a cleaner DSCR file than a high-due condo; larger assets may fit small-balance multifamily |
| Mainland single-family (Coconut Grove edges, suburban Miami-Dade) | Lower-density rental pockets | Behaves most like a standard DSCR file; insurance still material |
The practical takeaway: in Miami the building matters as much as the unit. Two identical-rent condos in different towers can underwrite very differently based on warrantability, owner-occupancy ratio, litigation, reserve adequacy, and post-2021 Florida structural-reserve compliance.
Localized Underwriting Considerations
- Association dues are in the ratio. Miami high-rise dues are among the highest in Florida. Because DSCR divides rent by full PITIA, a $900–$1,500/month dues figure directly compresses coverage — model it before contract, not at underwriting.
- The condo questionnaire is front-of-file. Owner-occupancy ratio, pending litigation, reserve studies, and structural-reserve status determine warrantability and which capital sources will engage. In Miami this is a first-week item, not a closing-table formality.
- Insurance and assessments. Coastal wind exposure plus building-level insurance and the post-Surfside assessment environment can raise carrying costs sharply between offer and closing. A current dues-and-assessment letter protects the ratio.
- Short-term-rental legality is hyper-local. Miami Beach, the City of Miami, and unincorporated Miami-Dade treat vacation rentals very differently, and individual buildings impose their own minimum-lease rules. Projected STR income is only usable if the specific address may legally and contractually operate that way.
Foreign-investor files are common in Miami and intersect with DSCR frequently — a non-resident buying a cash-flowing condo can often qualify on the property rather than personal income. The Miami-specific foreign-buyer mechanics (entity, wires, reserves, closing) are covered on the foreign national loans in Miami page; the underwriting framework itself sits on the foreign national program.
Miami Investor Behavior and Seasonality
Miami rental performance is seasonal in a way most Florida markets are not. Winter season demand — roughly November through April — pulls in seasonal residents, relocations, and international tenants, and many investor-owned condos achieve their strongest occupancy and rents in that window. A DSCR file underwritten on annual-equivalent rent should reflect that pattern rather than a single peak-season lease, and a long-term annual lease is generally treated more predictably than a season-weighted projection.
Investor behavior here also differs from inland Florida. A large share of Miami condo buyers hold title in an entity, purchase with substantial equity or all cash and later refinance, and treat the property as a combined investment and personal-use asset. That last point matters for DSCR: a unit used personally for part of the year is still financeable as an investment property, but occupancy representation must be accurate, and a true second-home/vacation use is underwritten differently than a pure rental. Confirming intended use up front prevents a mid-process reclassification.
Because so many Miami files involve entity ownership and non-resident buyers, the cleanest path is usually to confirm the structure — entity, intended occupancy, and the building's warrantability and rental rules — before an offer is written, not after inspection.
Miami DSCR — Frequently Asked Questions
Why do Miami condos underwrite differently than other Florida DSCR properties?
Can I get a DSCR loan on a non-warrantable Miami condo?
Does a Brickell or Edgewater high-rise qualify for DSCR financing?
How do Miami short-term-rental rules affect a DSCR file?
Are condo-hotel or branded-residence units eligible?
How does the post-Surfside assessment environment impact my loan?
Can a foreign national buy a Miami rental with a DSCR loan?
Is small multifamily a better DSCR option than a condo in Miami?
Underwriting a Miami investment property?
Send the building and the unit. We pre-screen the condo questionnaire and the coverage ratio together — the two things that decide a Miami DSCR file — typically within 24 hours.

