All metrics

DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio)

CFADS / Annual Debt Service

DSCR measures how many times annual cash flow can cover the annual loan payments (principal + interest). A DSCR of 1.25x means cash flow is 25% more than the required debt payments.

How it's used in a deal

SBA 7(a) lenders typically require a minimum DSCR of 1.15x to 1.25x. Higher is better. DSCR directly determines how much debt the business can support.

Worked example

Take a deal with $198,900 of CFADS, financed with a $1.12M SBA 7(a) loan at 8.5% over 10 years (about $167,000/year in payments):

CFADS$198,900
÷ Annual debt service$167,000

DSCR ≈ 1.19x — below the 1.25x many lenders want; the price or structure needs work

Numbers from our sample deal report — an anonymized real-world analysis.

Free DSCR Calculator

A quick screen, not an analysis — real deals need normalized earnings, not reported ones.

Annual debt service: $200,857

DSCR 1.00x

Below the SBA 1.15x minimum — price or structure needs work

Want this computed from the actual financials — normalized, explained, and lender-ready?

Important caveat

DSCR below 1.0x means the business cannot service the debt. DSCR between 1.0x and 1.15x may not meet SBA minimum requirements.

Frequently asked questions

What DSCR do SBA lenders require?

SBA SOP guidance sets 1.15x as the floor, but most lenders underwrite to 1.25x on normalized cash flow. Below 1.15x, expect a lower loan amount, more equity down, a seller note on standby, or a price renegotiation.

How do I improve a deal's DSCR?

Four levers: lower the purchase price, put more equity down, extend the loan term, or move part of the price into a standby seller note. DSCR is the single most useful early screen for whether a deal can be financed at the asking price.

See DSCR computed on a real deal

Upload the broker package and get DSCR — plus a risk score, valuation range, and lender-ready report — in minutes.

Related metrics

Educational content from a decision-support tool — not a CPA audit, review, or assurance engagement, and not tax, legal, or investment advice.