Prepayment penalties are one of the most misunderstood features of DSCR loans — and one of the most important to understand before closing. Unlike conventional mortgages, which rarely carry prepayment penalties today, most DSCR loans include a prepayment penalty provision that charges the borrower a fee for paying off the loan early. Understanding exactly how your specific prepayment penalty works before you close is essential for accurate exit planning.
The Three Types of DSCR Prepayment Penalties
DSCR loans typically use one of three prepayment penalty structures:
Step-Down Prepayment Penalty (Most Common)
The most common DSCR structure. The penalty percentage decreases over time. A typical 5-4-3-2-1 structure means: if you pay off in year 1, you pay 5% of the loan balance; year 2 = 4%; year 3 = 3%; year 4 = 2%; year 5 = 1%; year 6+ = no penalty.
Example: $300,000 loan paid off in year 2 = $12,000 prepayment penalty.
Fixed Percentage Penalty
A flat percentage of the outstanding balance for a defined period. Less common than step-down. Example: 3% of loan balance for the first 3 years, then no penalty.
Yield Maintenance
The most expensive structure. The borrower compensates the lender for the interest income they would have earned over the remaining term, discounted to present value. Primarily seen on commercial loans — rare in residential DSCR but exists in some programs.
How Prepayment Penalties Affect Your Exit Strategy
Prepayment penalties directly affect your profitability on sale or refinance. Always factor the penalty into your deal analysis:
- Selling the property — If you sell before the penalty period ends, the prepayment penalty is paid from sale proceeds. On a $300,000 loan in year 1 with a 5-4-3-2-1 structure, that is $15,000 off your net proceeds.
- Refinancing — If you refinance into a different loan before the penalty period, the payoff triggers the prepayment penalty. This matters significantly for BRRRR investors who plan to refinance after rehab stabilization.
- Hold period alignment — Choose your prepayment penalty structure based on your planned hold period. If you plan to sell in 3 years, a 3-2-1 penalty structure is better than a 5-4-3-2-1.
How to Minimize Prepayment Penalty Impact
Strategies to reduce prepayment penalty exposure:
- Match penalty to hold period — Request shorter step-down periods (3-2-1 instead of 5-4-3-2-1) if you plan to sell or refinance within 3 years. This is negotiable on many programs.
- Request no-prepayment-penalty options — Some DSCR programs offer no-prepayment-penalty loans at a slightly higher rate. If your exit timeline is uncertain, the rate premium may be worth it.
- Time your refinance — If you must refinance, waiting until after the step-down period ends eliminates the penalty entirely.
- Partial prepayment exceptions — Some DSCR lenders allow partial prepayments (principal curtailments) up to a certain percentage without triggering the penalty. Check your specific loan terms.
- ARM reset consideration — If you take an ARM product, the prepayment penalty period often aligns with the initial fixed period. Refinancing before the ARM adjusts but after the penalty expires is the optimal exit window.
DSCR Prepayment Penalty vs Conventional Loans
Conventional investment property loans (Fannie/Freddie) do not carry prepayment penalties — you can sell or refinance at any time with no penalty. This is one area where conventional loans have a clear structural advantage.
However, for investors who plan to hold properties for 5+ years (beyond the step-down period), or who choose no-penalty DSCR programs, this distinction becomes largely irrelevant. The no-income-documentation, LLC-vesting, and no-portfolio-cap advantages of DSCR typically outweigh the prepayment penalty for most investors' actual strategies.
Frequently Asked Questions
Most do, but not all. The standard structure is a 5-4-3-2-1 step-down penalty for the first 5 years. Some lenders offer no-prepayment-penalty options at a slightly higher rate. Ask specifically about prepayment penalty options when shopping DSCR programs.
A step-down prepayment penalty where you pay 5% of the remaining loan balance if you pay off in year 1, 4% in year 2, 3% in year 3, 2% in year 4, 1% in year 5, and nothing from year 6 onward. On a $300,000 loan, year 1 penalty = $15,000; year 3 penalty = $9,000.
Yes — if you sell during the penalty period, the prepayment penalty is deducted from your sale proceeds at closing alongside your remaining loan payoff. Factor this into your net proceeds calculation when planning your exit.
Yes — by timing your refinance after the step-down period ends. If you have a 5-4-3-2-1 structure, waiting until month 61 (year 6) to refinance eliminates the penalty entirely. For BRRRR investors who need to refinance faster, look for 3-2-1 or no-penalty programs.
Significantly. If you take a DSCR loan expecting to refinance again in 2-3 years as part of a BRRRR exit, a 5-4-3-2-1 penalty will cost 3-4% of the loan balance. Choose a shorter step-down period or no-penalty program if your BRRRR refinance timeline is under 3 years.
Yes. Prepayment penalty structure is often negotiable, especially on larger loans. Chad Evers shops deals across multiple DSCR lenders and can find programs with shorter step-down periods or no-penalty options when that fits the borrower's strategy.