The 30-year fixed mortgage averaged 6.37 percent in the first week of May 2026, with the MBA Weekly Applications Survey clocking it at 6.45 percent, the highest in a month.[1][2] Long-term financing at those numbers is not the cost basis serious portfolio investors want to lock in for 30 years. So they are not. They are using a bridge loan real estate strategy to acquire and stabilize now, with a DSCR refinance built into the plan from day one. The asset gets bought at today’s price. The permanent debt gets priced when the property is stabilized and the rate environment has had time to move.
Why the Bridge Loan Real Estate Move Makes Sense Right Now
The Rate Environment in May 2026
The Federal Open Market Committee held the benchmark funds rate at 3.5 to 3.75 percent at its April 2026 meeting, with an 8-4 vote that signaled the deepest dissent on a Fed decision since 1992.[3] Markets are pricing in limited movement through the rest of the year, but the dot plot itself shows a wide range of paths from rate hikes to cuts. That uncertainty is the case for not locking in a 30-year rate today. It is also the case for getting capital into the ground now, before the next cycle of buyers does.
Why Refinance Demand Is Falling
Refinance demand is responding to the same signal. The MBA Refinance Index dropped 5 percent in the week ending May 1, 2026, with the refinance share of total applications falling to 42 percent, the lowest level since August 2025.[2] Borrowers who already have permanent debt are not refinancing into today’s rate sheet. Investors buying new inventory are responding the same way: they are taking the asset down on short-term capital and waiting on the takeout.
How the Bridge to DSCR Sequence Actually Works
The structure is three moves. Acquire on a bridge loan. Stabilize the property. Refinance into a DSCR loan once the income supports it.
Step One: Acquire on the Bridge Loan
A bridge loan funds the purchase, plus light rehab or repositioning capital where needed. Terms typically run 12 to 24 months. Underwriting is asset-based: the lender qualifies the deal on property value and exit, not on personal tax returns. Closings happen in days, not weeks, which is what investors need when they are competing against cash offers on inventory that is not sitting on market long.
Step Two: Stabilize the Property
The property gets to a state where it cash flows: rehab complete, tenants in place at market rent, operating expenses dialed in. For a single-family rental, that might mean three to six months. For a multifamily reposition, it might mean 12 to 18 months of releasing units, raising rents to market, and stabilizing occupancy at 90 percent plus.
Step Three: Refinance Into DSCR
The DSCR loan replaces the bridge with permanent, long-term debt qualified on the property’s income. There is no personal income verification. The underwriter divides the stabilized rental income by the proposed monthly debt service. If the ratio clears the threshold (usually 1.0 minimum, often 1.20 to 1.25 for better pricing), the deal qualifies. The bridge gets paid off. The investor holds the asset on long-term debt sized to the income the property actually produces.
This is the bridge loan to DSCR refinance strategy in its cleanest form. It is the same logic that drives BRRRR strategy financing, applied to a rate environment where investors specifically want to delay locking long-term debt. How the BRRRR framework breaks down into buy, rehab, rent, refinance, repeat.
Structuring the Bridge Loan With the DSCR Exit in Mind
Investors who run this sequence well treat the bridge loan and the DSCR refi as one financing decision, not two. The bridge gets sized to leave room for the DSCR refinance to clear underwriting at the back end. Three numbers matter most.
Bridge LTV Against a Realistic Stabilized Value
If the bridge is sized aggressively against an optimistic ARV, the DSCR refi may not generate enough proceeds to clear the bridge balance plus closing costs. Conservative inputs at acquisition keep the takeout math clean.
Projected DSCR Ratio at Stabilization
The DSCR refinance will look at the property’s stabilized rental income divided by the proposed payment at the refi rate. If projected rents barely cover the new debt service at today’s pricing, the refinance is fragile. Investors who build in cushion at acquisition (lower bridge balance, higher rent assumptions tested against conservative comps) refinance cleanly when the time comes.
Term Length on the Bridge
A 12-month bridge on a 12-month stabilization plan leaves zero margin. A 24-month bridge on the same plan leaves room for the unexpected: a permit delay, a slower lease-up, a rate environment that needs another quarter to settle. Build the slack in upfront.
One Conversation, Not Two
The investor who walks into the bridge conversation already talking about the DSCR exit gets a better-structured bridge. The lender who underwrites both products in the same shop can size the bridge to clear the refi, instead of two disconnected lenders each optimizing their own loan.
When the Bridge Loan to DSCR Sequence Works (and When It Breaks)
Where the Sequence Works
The sequence works on assets with clear paths to stabilized cash flow. Single-family rentals in markets with rent growth. Two-to-four unit properties with light reposition opportunity. Multifamily assets with value-add cosmetic work and rent-to-market lift. Short-term rentals where the income model is documented. Any asset where the underwriter can model rental income with confidence and the borrower can execute on the operational lift.
Where the Sequence Breaks
It breaks on a few predictable failure modes. Properties bought at inflated ARVs that do not appraise on the back end. Submarkets where projected rents do not show up at lease-up. Stabilization timelines that run past the bridge term without a contingency in place. Borrowers who structure the bridge with no operational plan for getting the property to DSCR-qualifying cash flow.
A Note for Multifamily Investors
For multifamily investors, the bridge to multifamily DSCR loan sequence has an additional underwriting layer: the DSCR refi will aggregate income across all units, so the operational stabilization, releasing, raising rents, hitting occupancy, is what unlocks the exit. The numbers either show up at the property level by the end of the bridge, or the refinance gets delayed. Where multifamily investing is headed and what investors are watching.
What Conventus Underwrites on Both Loans
One Roof for the Bridge and the DSCR Exit
Conventus underwrites bridge loans and DSCR loans under one roof. That matters because the takeout is not a hypothetical at acquisition. It is a product the same lender already prices and approves. When the bridge gets structured, the DSCR exit is already modeled. When the property stabilizes, the refinance does not start from scratch with a new underwriting team that has never seen the deal.
Scale, Speed, and No Income Verification
We’ve funded over $9 billion across 44 states. We close bridge loans in days, not weeks. Our DSCR program qualifies on property income with no personal income verification required. The full bridge loan with planned DSCR exit gets built into a single financing conversation. See how Conventus structures the three core financing strategies investors are running in 2026.
Ready to model the bridge and the DSCR refi as one deal? Get a quote from Conventus.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long do investors typically hold a bridge loan before refinancing into DSCR?
Most bridge loans on a planned DSCR exit run six to 18 months, depending on the asset. Single-family rentals with light rehab often stabilize and refinance inside six to nine months. Multifamily repositions typically run 12 to 24 months because the operational lift (releasing, raising rents, hitting occupancy targets) takes longer to complete.
What happens if mortgage rates drop while the bridge is outstanding?
The investor benefits. The DSCR refinance prices off the rate environment at the time of refi, not at acquisition. If rates move lower during the stabilization window, the long-term debt locks in at the lower number. This is one of the structural reasons the bridge to DSCR sequence is attractive in an uncertain rate environment: the takeout pricing is decided later, with more information.
Can a bridge loan for investment property be used on a property already owned?
Yes. A bridge loan can refinance an existing position to pull equity for the next acquisition, fund a value-add repositioning, or restructure existing debt with a DSCR refi planned at stabilization. The same three-step logic applies: bridge funds the move, the property stabilizes, DSCR replaces the bridge as permanent debt.
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