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ArticleJune 27, 20267 min read

Bridge-to-DSCR Refinance: The Complete Timeline for Investors in 2026

Sphinx Capital

Use a bridge loan to acquire and stabilize a rental property, then refinance into a long-term DSCR loan. Here is the exact timeline, documents, and ratios you need.

A borrower bought a 4-unit property with a bridge loan, completed $85K of renovations, signed leases, and stabilized the rent roll. Six months after purchase, they refinanced into a 30-year DSCR loan at a lower rate and pulled most of their cash back out. The property now cash-flows $2,100 per month after the new debt payment.

That is the bridge-to-DSCR lifecycle. It is one of the most common paths serious investors use in 2026, and it only works if you plan the exit before you close the bridge loan.

Why Investors Combine Bridge and DSCR Loans

Bridge loans solve speed. DSCR loans solve permanence. Together they let you:

  • Close on a property in 10 days instead of 45.
  • Renovate or lease up without qualifying on personal income.
  • Refinance into a 30-year fixed loan once the property is stable.
  • Repeat the process without trapping capital in every deal.

The key is knowing the handoff point. A bridge loan is expensive to hold long term. A DSCR loan is slow to close on a transitional asset. The right sequence is bridge first, DSCR second.

The Numbers: Bridge vs. DSCR Side by Side

FactorBridge LoanDSCR Loan
PurposeAcquire, renovate, or stabilizeLong-term hold or cash-out refi
Max LTC/LTV90% LTC / 75% LTV75% LTV on stabilized value
RatesStart at 9.50%Start at 8.75%
Term6 to 24 months30-year fixed, ARM, or 40-year fixed
Prepayment penaltyNone3 to 5 years typical
Close time10 days from full file14 to 21 days from full file
Income docs requiredNoNo
Qualifying factorDeal and exit strategyProperty cash flow

The bridge loan gets you in the door. The DSCR loan lets you stay and cash flow.

The Full Timeline: From Contract to Long-Term Loan

graph LR A[Day 0: Property Under Contract] --> B[Day 10: Close Bridge Loan] B --> C[Months 0 to 6: Renovate & Lease] C --> D[Month 6: Stabilize Rent Roll] D --> E[Month 6 to 7: Apply for DSCR Refi] E --> F[Month 7 to 8: Close DSCR Loan]
PhaseTimelineWhat Must Happen
AcquireDay 0 to 10Bridge loan closes on the purchase
StabilizeMonth 0 to 6Renovations complete, leases signed, rents collected
SeasonMonth 3 to 6Bank statements show consistent rent deposits
Refinance applyMonth 6Submit DSCR refi with stabilized financials
Appraisal & underwriteMonth 6 to 7Appraisal confirms value, DSCR verified
Close DSCRMonth 7 to 8Bridge loan paid off, long-term loan in place

Some DSCR programs allow refinancing as soon as 3 months after purchase if the property is fully leased. Others require 6 to 12 months of seasoning. Know the rule before you commit to the bridge loan.

What You Need Before Applying for the DSCR Refinance

The refinance is easier than a purchase refinance if you have the right documentation. Here is the checklist:

DocumentWhy It Matters
Current rent rollProves stabilized occupancy and income
3 to 6 months bank statementsShows rent deposits hitting the account
Operating statement / P&LDocuments NOI and expenses
Certificate of occupancy (if rehab)Proves the property is legally rentable
Bridge loan payoff statementDefines exact amount needed to close
Insurance policyMust remain current and adequate
AppraisalConfirms stabilized value
Entity docsConfirms same borrowing structure or new structure

The most common delay is missing bank statements that tie to the rent roll. Deposit every rent payment into a dedicated account. Mixed personal and rental deposits slow underwriting.

How Lenders Calculate DSCR on a Refinance

The formula is the same as a purchase DSCR loan:

DSCR = Monthly Gross Rent / Monthly Debt Payment

But the inputs change after stabilization. On a refinance, the lender uses:

  • Actual contracted rent, not market estimates.
  • Actual expenses, or a standard expense ratio if you do not provide a P&L.
  • The new DSCR loan payment, not the bridge payment.

A property that qualifies on paper may not qualify in practice if the rent roll is month-to-month, tenants are late, or expenses are underreported. Get leases signed for at least 12 months if possible.

Hidden Costs That Blow Up the Refinance

Hidden CostWhat It Looks LikeHow to Avoid It
Bridge loan extensionRenovations take longer than plannedBudget 20% contingency and a realistic lease-up timeline
Appraisal gapRefi value comes in below pro formaUse actual comps, not best-case projections
Seasoning surpriseLender requires 12 months, not 6Confirm seasoning requirement before taking the bridge loan
Rate lock timingDSCR rate rises during underwritingLock early if rates are volatile
Prepayment mismatchDSCR prepay term does not match hold planMatch the prepayment penalty to your expected hold period
Cash trappedRefi LTV leaves less cash out than expectedUnderwrite to 70% LTV conservative, not 75% best case

The cheapest way to avoid these costs is to ask the bridge lender and the DSCR lender the same questions before you close the purchase.

Quick Answers to Real Questions

How long do I have to hold a bridge loan before refinancing into DSCR? As little as 3 months for some programs, 6 to 12 months for others. The property must be leased and showing consistent income. The seasoning requirement matters more than the calendar.

Can I pull cash out with the DSCR refinance? Yes, up to 75% LTV on the stabilized value in most cases. If the property appreciated or your renovation forced appreciation, the refi can return a large portion of your invested capital.

Do I need to refinance with the same lender who gave me the bridge loan? No. Bridge loans and DSCR loans are separate products. You can use Sphinx Capital for either or both.

What if my DSCR is below 1.25? You may still qualify, but pricing changes. A 1.00 DSCR usually requires a larger down payment or higher rate. A ratio below 1.00 often needs additional qualifying income or a lower LTV.

Should I start the DSCR refinance before the bridge loan closes? No. Wait until the property is leased and you have 1 to 3 months of bank statements showing rent deposits. Starting early wastes time because the file cannot underwrite until stabilization is documented.

What happens if I cannot refinance out of the bridge loan? You either extend the bridge loan, sell the property, or bring in additional capital. This is why the exit strategy is the most important part of the bridge loan application.

When This Strategy Works and When It Does Not

Works when:

  • The property has clear value-add potential or is already income-producing.
  • You have a realistic stabilization timeline.
  • You keep 6 to 12 months of interest and expense reserves.
  • The rent roll will support the DSCR payment after refinance.

Does not work when:

  • You are speculating on appreciation with no cash flow.
  • The renovation scope is undefined.
  • You cannot document rents and expenses.
  • The market rent is too low to cover the DSCR payment at 75% LTV.

The 2026 Market Reality

Interest rates are higher than 2021 but have stabilized. The investors who are building portfolios in 2026 are not buying at a 3% cap rate and hoping for appreciation. They are buying cash-flowing assets, forcing value through light renovation, and refinancing into long-term DSCR debt to recycle capital.

The bridge-to-DSCR lifecycle rewards planning. The investors who get hurt are the ones who treat the bridge loan as permanent financing. Bridge debt is meant to be temporary. If your exit is DSCR refinancing, confirm the seasoning, the DSCR, and the stabilized value before you close the bridge.

If you have a property under contract and a clear plan to stabilize it, start with a bridge loan. If you already have a stabilized rental, review our DSCR loan guide to confirm the long-term fit.

Next Step

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