The institutional knowledge layer for foreign investors financing U.S. residential property. Cross-border DSCR, cash-out, and portfolio strategy through Viador Partners.
Cross-border investment-property financing in the U.S. has become more fragmented and lender-specific over the past 18 months. What was once a relatively standardized category within the non-QM wholesale market has differentiated significantly as capital flows have shifted, regulatory attention on non-resident borrowers has increased, and individual wholesale programs have tightened or expanded their country eligibility and underwriting parameters in response to portfolio performance.
The result is a market where program availability, LTV ceilings, reserve requirements, and country eligibility vary materially across the wholesale lender landscape. A foreign national investor who qualified for a 75% LTV purchase in one market segment in 2023 may find that the same transaction now requires 70% LTV, higher reserves, or a different entity structure depending on which program is the correct match for their specific country of residence, property type, and loan size.
What has not changed is the fundamental framework. Foreign national DSCR loans are business-purpose loans extended to non-U.S.-resident borrowers for the acquisition or refinancing of U.S. investment properties. The loans are made to domestic U.S. LLCs rather than to individuals. Qualification is based on property cash flow — the debt service coverage ratio — rather than on the borrower's personal income. No U.S. tax returns, no U.S. W-2s, no U.S. Social Security Number are required. What is required is documentation of foreign residency, identity, reserves, and the entity structure through which the property will vest.
Viador Partners operates as a cross-border capital advisor within this market. The role is not to sell a specific program but to evaluate the investor's scenario against the current wholesale program landscape and identify the correct program match based on country eligibility, property type, reserve capacity, and deal objectives. That advisory function — rather than the transaction itself — is the value we bring to foreign national investors approaching U.S. investment property financing for the first time or expanding an existing portfolio.
While the structural framework of Foreign National DSCR financing is consistent across countries, the practical experience of executing a transaction varies materially depending on the borrower's country of residence. Capital movement mechanics, banking system characteristics, AML documentation expectations, and ID verification requirements all differ. Three country profiles illustrate the range of variation:
Active program parameters across the Viador wholesale network — LTV ceilings, country eligibility, reserve requirements, minimum loan amounts, and property type coverage — vary meaningfully across programs. Understanding the full program landscape is the first step in matching your deal to the correct wholesale source.
Compare Active Programs →Yes. Foreign national DSCR programs are specifically designed for non-U.S. residents without Social Security Numbers. The borrower provides a foreign passport, proof of foreign residency, and international bank statements. An ITIN is not required. At closing, the borrower signs a W-8 BEN affirming non-U.S. tax status.
Minimum loan amounts vary by program. Most active Foreign National DSCR programs have minimum loan amounts ranging from $100,000 to $250,000. Programs with broader country eligibility tend to start at $100,000. Programs with higher reserve requirements tend to start at $150,000 to $250,000.
Documentation typically includes: foreign passport, proof of foreign residency (utility bill or government document), three to twelve months of international bank statements demonstrating reserves, U.S. LLC formation documents, registered agent confirmation, and EIN for the LLC. Requirements vary by program and country of residence.
Foreign national DSCR loans are made as business-purpose loans under the regulatory exemption in 12 CFR 1026.3(a), which applies to credit extended primarily for business or commercial purposes. Vesting in a U.S. LLC establishes the business-purpose character of the loan and satisfies lender requirements for entity-based foreign national financing.
The maximum LTV for a foreign national cash-out refinance is typically 70 percent across most active wholesale programs. This is 5 percentage points lower than the standard 75 percent maximum for purchase and rate-term refinance transactions. Some programs set the cash-out maximum at 65 percent.
Foreign national DSCR loans typically close in 30 to 45 business days from complete file submission. The timeline is influenced by appraisal scheduling, documentation completeness, international wire verification, and apostille requirements if loan documents are signed outside the U.S.
Yes. Foreign national DSCR programs do not impose conventional property count limits. Each property must qualify individually on its own DSCR. Each acquisition typically requires a new LLC or an additional property within an existing LLC structure, subject to lender requirements.
Yes. Short-term rental properties are eligible under most Foreign National DSCR programs, typically subject to a 5 percent LTV reduction relative to long-term rental pricing. STR income underwriting requires AirDNA market data meeting program thresholds. Most foreign national STR purchases are limited to 70 percent LTV.
ITIN lending historically served borrowers with U.S. Individual Taxpayer Identification Numbers who lacked Social Security Numbers. Foreign National lending serves borrowers whose primary residence is outside the U.S. and who do not file U.S. taxes. Most ITIN programs tightened significantly since 2024, while Foreign National DSCR programs have remained available through the non-QM wholesale market. See our full ITIN vs. Foreign National comparison.
When a borrower cannot be present at a U.S. closing, loan documents may be signed outside the United States before a local notary whose signature is authenticated via apostille — an official certification recognized by all Hague Convention member countries. The process adds several days to the closing timeline and requires coordination between the title company, borrower, and the local authority issuing the apostille.
Viador reviews every scenario against the current wholesale program landscape. No general inquiries — specific scenarios receive specific responses.