Strategy

Long-Term Rental (LTR)

A property leased to a tenant on a long-term lease (typically 12 months), generating steady monthly rent. The classic buy-and-hold asset, financed with 30-year DSCR loans and valued on stable cash flow.

A long-term rental (LTR) is a property leased to a tenant under a long-term lease — typically 12 months or more — producing steady, predictable monthly rent. It's the classic buy-and-hold real estate asset and the bread and butter of DSCR lending: stable income, lower volatility, and straightforward financing.

What defines a long-term rental

  • Lease length: usually annual (sometimes month-to-month after an initial term), versus the nightly/weekly stays of a short-term rental.
  • Tenant-occupied: the tenant lives there as their home and pays monthly rent.
  • Income basis: the lease rent (or appraiser's market rent) is the qualifying income, fed into DSCR as gross rent over PITIA.

Why long-term rentals are the financing default

Lenders favor LTRs because their income is stable and easy to verify:

  • Predictable cash flow — a signed annual lease is far more reliable than fluctuating nightly bookings.
  • Lower management intensity — one tenant for a year vs. constant turnover.
  • No regulatory cliff — LTRs aren't exposed to the short-term-rental bans and licensing many cities impose.

This is why standard 30-year DSCR loans are designed around long-term rental income, often with the best rates and highest LTV of the investor-loan menu.

How LTRs are analyzed

The long-term rental is valued and underwritten on its steady income:

Long-term vs. short-term rental

Long-term rental Short-term rental
Lease 12+ months Nightly/weekly
Income stability High Lower (seasonal)
Gross income Usually lower Often higher
Management Light Intensive
Regulatory risk Low High
Financing Standard DSCR, best terms STR loan, more conservative

Where LTRs fit in strategy

Long-term rentals are the hold in buy-and-hold and the destination of the BRRRR strategy — you buy, rehab, rent to a long-term tenant, and refinance into a 30-year DSCR loan to keep the property cash-flowing in your portfolio. They're the lower-volatility, more passive complement to active strategies like flipping.

Practical takeaway

The long-term rental is the foundation of most rental portfolios precisely because it's stable and financeable. Underwrite it honestly — realistic operating expenses, a vacancy allowance, and a DSCR that clears with cushion — and it delivers durable cash flow plus the slow-build wealth of appreciation and loan paydown. It won't out-earn a well-run STR on gross income, but it trades that upside for predictability and the best loan terms available to investors.

Frequently asked questions

How is a long-term rental financed?

Most commonly with a 30-year DSCR loan, which qualifies the property on its lease rent (gross monthly rent divided by PITIA) rather than your personal income. Because long-term rental income is stable and easy to verify, these loans often carry the best rates and highest LTV among investor loan products.

What's the difference between a long-term and short-term rental?

A long-term rental is leased for 12+ months to a tenant who lives there, producing steady monthly rent with low volatility and low regulatory risk. A short-term rental hosts nightly or weekly guests, often grossing more but with seasonal swings, intensive management, and significant local regulatory risk.

Why do lenders prefer long-term rentals?

Because their income is stable and verifiable. A signed annual lease is far more predictable than fluctuating short-term bookings, management is lighter, and there's no exposure to the short-term-rental bans and licensing many cities impose. That reliability is why standard DSCR loans are built around long-term rental income.

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