Fact-checked by the CapitalLendingNews editorial team
As of late 2024, investment-property buyers financing a two-to-four-unit building are paying rates that run 0.5% to 1% above what a comparable primary-residence borrower would receive, according to The Mortgage Reports. That headline gap understates the real cost. Stack a two-unit loan-level price adjustment on top of an investment-property surcharge, factor in a credit score below 740, and a borrower can find their actual multi-unit property mortgage rates running more than 2% above the 30-year fixed average that dominates financial headlines. These are not rounding errors. On a $600,000 loan, a 2% rate difference equals roughly $700 extra per month and more than $250,000 in additional interest over a 30-year term.
The scale of the multi-unit mortgage market makes this pricing dynamic worth understanding precisely. The Mortgage Bankers Association reported that lenders originated $288.7 billion in new mortgages for multifamily properties with five or more units in 2024, a 17% year-over-year increase. Government-sponsored enterprises Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased 41% of those originations by dollar volume, making their pricing decisions the single largest influence on what borrowers actually pay. Meanwhile, the Federal Housing Finance Agency set combined 2024 multifamily loan purchase caps at $140 billion across both GSEs, a constraint that shapes lender appetite and competitive spread pricing throughout the year.
This article explains exactly how lenders construct rates for multi-unit properties, where the hidden costs appear, which loan structures make sense for which buyer profiles, and what specific moves can reduce the rate you receive. By the end, you will understand why your quote looks different from the advertised rate and what to do about it.
Key Takeaways
- Multi-unit investment-property mortgage rates run 0.5% to 1% above primary-residence rates at the headline level, but cumulative loan-level price adjustments can push the effective premium above 2% for borrowers with lower credit scores or higher LTVs.
- The 5-unit property boundary is a hard regulatory line: 1–4 unit properties fall under residential lending rules (Fannie Mae, FHA), while 5+ units enter commercial territory with rates benchmarked to DSCR, NOI, and Treasury spreads rather than the 30-year conventional average.
- An owner-occupying FHA borrower buying a fourplex can access 3.5% down and primary-residence pricing, while a pure investor buying the identical property needs 25% down under Fannie Mae conventional guidelines and pays a materially higher rate.
- DSCR loans for multi-unit properties carry a 1%–2% rate premium over conventional financing but bypass personal debt-to-income ratios entirely, have no 10-property portfolio cap, and can close in as few as 6–14 days versus 30–45 days for conventional loans.
- Multifamily property insurance premiums rose an average of 45% from 2023 to 2024, a cost surge that can compress a property’s debt-service coverage ratio below qualifying thresholds and silently push borrowers into higher-rate loan tiers.
- Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased 41% of 2024 multifamily originations by dollar volume, and the FHFA’s $140 billion combined purchase cap directly shapes how aggressively GSEs price multi-unit conforming loans throughout the year.
In This Guide
- Why Multi-Unit Properties Get a Different Rate Sheet Entirely
- The Rate Premium Is Real: Here’s Exactly How Much More You’ll Pay
- How Loan-Level Price Adjustments Quietly Drive Up Your Rate
- Owner-Occupied vs. Pure Investment: The Single Biggest Rate Decision You’ll Make
- Conventional vs. DSCR vs. Agency: Which Loan Type Actually Wins
- The Hidden Costs That Make Your Effective Rate Higher Than Your Note Rate
- Practical Moves That Actually Lower Your Multi-Unit Mortgage Rate
- Is Now a Defensible Time to Finance a Multi-Unit Property?
Why Multi-Unit Properties Get a Different Rate Sheet Entirely
Single-family underwriting models are built around one income stream, one household, and one occupant whose financial stability is either present or absent. Multi-unit properties introduce a categorically different risk profile. A landlord who loses one tenant in a duplex has lost 50% of gross rental income overnight. In a fourplex, one vacancy represents 25% of the property’s revenue. Lenders account for this income volatility by treating multi-unit assets as structurally riskier than a single-family home, regardless of the borrower’s personal creditworthiness.
The risk logic goes further. Research on borrower default behavior consistently shows that when owners face financial stress, they prioritize the mortgage on their primary residence over an investment property. A landlord holding a duplex and a personal home is statistically more likely to miss the duplex payment first. Lenders price that behavioral risk into the rate, not as a penalty, but as a reflection of the expected loss model embedded in their capital requirements.
The 1–4 Unit vs. 5+ Unit Divide
The single most important structural distinction in multi-unit lending is the 5-unit boundary. Properties with one to four units fall under residential lending rules and can be financed through Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or FHA programs. Cross into five units, and the property becomes a commercial asset. That shift changes the applicable rate benchmark, the lender universe, the underwriting standards, and the recourse structure entirely.
For 1–4 unit properties, rates are benchmarked primarily against the 30-year fixed conventional average, adjusted upward through loan-level price adjustments. For 5+ unit commercial assets, pricing is driven by the property’s net operating income, debt-service coverage ratio, and spreads over the 5-year or 10-year U.S. Treasury yield. Freddie Mac’s multifamily underwriting guidelines require a minimum amortizing DSCR of 1.25x for fixed-rate loans and 1.15x for floating-rate loans, with a maximum LTV of 80%. These thresholds are pricing inputs, not just approval criteria.
Buyers who straddle the line between four and five units face an entirely different financing market depending on which side they land on. A fourplex qualifies for FHA financing with as little as 3.5% down and conventional Fannie Mae financing with 15%–25% down. A five-unit building requires commercial financing, eliminates all FHA options, and often demands two years of prior multifamily ownership experience from the GSE programs that offer the best rates. This distinction is frequently missed by buyers who treat unit count as a minor variable.
Fannie Mae’s agency multifamily programs for properties with five or more units require borrowers to demonstrate at least two years of prior multifamily ownership experience. First-time multi-unit buyers at the 5+ unit threshold often find themselves ineligible for the most competitive GSE rates available in the market.
The Rate Premium Is Real: Here’s Exactly How Much More You’ll Pay
The 0.5%–1% investment-property premium is the starting point, not the ceiling. That figure reflects the base spread between a single-family primary-residence rate and an investment-property rate for a borrower with a 740+ credit score, a 75%–80% LTV, and a straightforward loan profile. Real buyers frequently don’t fit that profile, and the deviations compound quickly.
How the Premiums Stack
Consider a borrower with a 700 credit score seeking a conventional loan on a duplex as a pure investment. The base investment-property premium adds roughly 0.5%–0.75%. The two-unit LLPA under Fannie Mae’s pricing grid adds another fee equivalent to approximately 0.125%–0.25% in rate terms. The credit score below 720 triggers an additional LLPA. If the LTV is at 80% rather than 75%, another pricing tier activates. Each adjustment stacks on the previous one.
A borrower who stacks these adjustments can reach an effective rate 2%–2.5% above the headline conventional average before any lender-specific spread decisions. That is a meaningful number. On a $500,000 loan over 30 years, the difference between a 7% rate and a 9% rate is approximately $640 per month and over $230,000 in total interest. The advertised rate and the actual rate are not the same thing for multi-unit buyers.
Investment-property mortgage rates, including multi-unit properties, run 0.5% to 1% higher than rates for primary residences, according to The Mortgage Reports. But once unit-count LLPAs and credit-score adjustments are layered in, the effective premium for some borrowers exceeds 2% above the 30-year fixed average.
DSCR Loan Pricing on Top
For borrowers who use a DSCR loan rather than a conventional mortgage, the rate premium is more transparent but larger. DSCR loan rates typically run 1%–2% above conventional pricing for the same property. The trade-off is that lenders price the loan entirely on the property’s income relative to its debt obligations, bypassing the borrower’s personal debt-to-income ratio. For investors with complex tax returns that understate income, or those who already hold multiple financed properties, that bypass is often worth the rate difference. But buyers who compare DSCR quotes to conventional rate advertisements are not comparing equivalent products.
Understanding how loan term length quietly controls how much interest you actually pay is especially relevant here, because DSCR loans often feature 5-year or 7-year fixed periods with adjustable-rate resets, not a full 30-year fixed term. The initial rate looks competitive until the reset provisions are examined carefully.
How Loan-Level Price Adjustments Quietly Drive Up Your Rate
Loan-level price adjustments, or LLPAs, are fee add-ons that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac bake into the rate rather than disclosing as a separate line item on your closing disclosure. Most personal-finance coverage of LLPAs focuses on single-family, primary-residence borrowers. Multi-unit buyers face an additional layer that is rarely explained: unit count is a discrete LLPA trigger that stacks on top of every other adjustment.
According to Fannie Mae’s official LLPA Matrix, loan-level pricing adjustments are assessed based on loan features including number of units, occupancy type, credit score, and LTV ratio. Multi-unit and investment properties carry higher cumulative LLPAs than single-family primary residences. Fannie Mae’s Selling Guide further specifies that LLPAs for multiple-unit properties are applied in addition to any other applicable price adjustments for the transaction.
The 2023 LLPA Redesign and Its Ongoing Effect on Multi-Unit Buyers
In 2023, the FHFA redesigned Fannie Mae’s LLPA matrix, restructuring how credit score, LTV, DTI, and property type interact in the fee grid. Most coverage of that redesign focused on changes for first-time homebuyers and high-credit-score borrowers at standard LTVs. What received almost no attention was how the restructured grid affected multi-unit buyers specifically.
Under the revised matrix, certain multi-unit buyers with strong credit scores in specific LTV bands actually saw their cumulative fee load shift, in some cases slightly favorably, while others faced higher aggregate LLPAs depending on their occupancy classification. The interaction between the unit-count LLPA, the investment-property LLPA, and the credit-score adjustment is not straightforward, and it changes across the LTV spectrum. Borrowers relying on rate quotes from before the 2023 redesign may be working from outdated expectations.
The Owner-Occupancy Escape Hatch
There is a meaningful rate advantage available to buyers willing to live in one unit of a 2–4 unit property. Owner-occupied multi-unit properties qualify under primary-residence LLPA tables, which are materially lower than investment-property tables for the same credit score and LTV combination. A borrower living in one unit of a triplex receives primary-residence pricing on the entire loan. A borrower renting all three units receives investment-property pricing. The property is identical. The rate can differ by 0.5%–0.75% or more based solely on occupancy classification.

If you are buying a 2–4 unit property and can genuinely live in one unit for at least 12 months, qualifying under primary-residence LLPA tables can reduce your effective rate by 0.5%–0.75%. Run the numbers on both scenarios before assuming the pure-investor approach is financially superior.
Owner-Occupied vs. Pure Investment: The Single Biggest Rate Decision You’ll Make
No single factor moves the rate needle more for a 1–4 unit buyer than the occupancy decision. The financing structures available to an owner-occupant are fundamentally different from those available to a pure investor, and the differences touch down payment requirements, rate pricing, and monthly cash flow simultaneously.
The House-Hacking Math
An FHA borrower purchasing a fourplex as a primary residence can put 3.5% down and access primary-residence mortgage insurance premiums. The rental income from the other three units counts toward qualification, subject to FHA’s income-counting rules. A pure investor buying the identical fourplex under conventional guidelines needs 25% down, pays investment-property LLPAs, and accepts a higher base rate. On a $700,000 purchase, that down payment difference alone is $157,500 in cash ($245,000 vs. $87,500). The monthly payment difference from rate alone can easily exceed $400 to $600 per month on the same property.
The rent-vs-buy calculation looks entirely different when the buyer is also collecting rent from adjacent units. Owner-occupying a multi-unit property is a hybrid position that changes both the financing terms and the effective cost of housing simultaneously.
Income-Counting Rules Lenders Apply Differently
Lenders typically count only 75% of projected rental income toward qualification, reserving 25% as an assumed vacancy and maintenance buffer. For borrowers without documented prior landlord experience, some lenders discount projected income further or require a current lease to use any rental income at all. This affects the debt-to-income calculation directly, which in turn affects which rate tier the borrower qualifies for.
For readers managing complex income profiles, understanding how debt-to-income ratios function as a quiet application killer is relevant here. The 75% rental income haircut combined with existing personal debt obligations can push a borrower’s DTI above the conventional 45% ceiling, forcing them toward DSCR products at higher rates when a conventional loan would have been feasible with cleaner documentation.
If you lack documented landlord experience, many lenders will not count projected rental income toward qualification at all, even if you have signed leases in hand. This can push your debt-to-income ratio above the conventional loan ceiling and force you into a DSCR product at a 1%–2% rate premium. Ask your lender specifically about their rental income documentation requirements before assuming projected rents will count.
Conventional vs. DSCR vs. Agency: Which Loan Type Actually Wins
There is no universally superior loan type for multi-unit buyers. The right structure depends on the borrower’s income documentation, the number of properties already financed, the property’s rental income relative to its debt obligations, and the buyer’s timeline. Each structure has genuine advantages and honest limitations.
Side-by-Side Comparison
| Feature | Conventional (Fannie/Freddie) | DSCR Loan | Agency Multifamily (5+ Units) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rate vs. 30-yr Fixed | Base + 0.5%–1% (investment) | Base + 1%–2% | Spread over 5-yr or 10-yr Treasury |
| Down Payment | 15%–25% (investment) | 20%–25% typical | 20%–35% depending on program |
| DTI Requirement | 45% max (typically) | Not applicable | Not applicable (NOI-based) |
| Property Count Cap | 10 financed properties max | No cap | No cap (with experience requirements) |
| Closing Timeline | 30–45 days | 6–14 days possible | 45–90 days typical |
| Income Documentation | Full personal income docs required | Property income only | Property NOI-based; entity required |
| Unit Limit | 1–4 units (residential) | Flexible; often 1–10 units | 5+ units (commercial) |
The DSCR Trade-off Stated Honestly
DSCR loans carry a higher rate, full stop. That 1%–2% premium is real money over a 30-year period. But for investors competing in markets where multiple buyers are bidding on the same property, the ability to close in as few as 6–14 days is not a minor feature. Losing a deal to a faster-closing competitor and then waiting six months to find another comparable property has a cost too. The rate premium on a DSCR loan is often the smaller number compared to the opportunity cost of a lost acquisition.
The portfolio cap limitation on conventional financing is also a practical ceiling. Fannie Mae conventional loans cap a single borrower at 10 financed properties. For investors building a portfolio beyond that threshold, DSCR loans or agency commercial programs are not optional alternatives; they are the only path forward. That cap applies regardless of creditworthiness or income, and it catches portfolio-builders off guard when they hit it.
Where Portfolio Lenders Fit
Smaller banks, credit unions, and portfolio lenders hold loans on their own balance sheets rather than selling them to Fannie or Freddie. This frees them from GSE underwriting guidelines entirely. They can finance non-standard unit counts, accept lower credit scores, and structure terms that agency programs won’t touch. The trade-off is rate. Portfolio lenders typically price 0.25%–1% above comparable conventional loans, and their terms vary widely enough that shopping between three or four institutions is more important here than in any other multi-unit financing category.

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac purchased 41% of all 2024 multifamily mortgage originations by dollar volume, totaling $288.7 billion across the market. The FHFA set the combined GSE purchase cap for 2024 at $140 billion ($70 billion per Enterprise), directly limiting how aggressively agency programs could expand into higher-risk multi-unit loan categories.
| Lender Type | Typical Rate vs. Conventional | Best For | Key Limitation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Bank (portfolio) | +0.25%–0.75% | Non-conforming scenarios | Higher rate; relationship-dependent |
| Credit Union | +0.10%–0.50% | Members with strong deposits | Membership required; limited scale |
| Non-QM / DSCR Lender | +1%–2% | Investors beyond 10 properties | Higher rate; prepayment penalties |
| Fannie Mae Conventional | Base investment premium | 1–4 unit, strong credit | 10-property cap; full income docs |
| Agency Multifamily (5+ units) | Treasury spread-based | Experienced investors | 2-year experience requirement |
The Hidden Costs That Make Your Effective Rate Higher Than Your Note Rate
The note rate on a multi-unit mortgage is the starting point for cost analysis, not the ending point. Several factors routinely increase the effective cost of financing above what the rate sheet shows, and most of them are introduced after the borrower is already under contract and committed to the transaction.
The Property Insurance Premium Surge
Multifamily property insurance premiums rose an average of 45% from 2023 to 2024, according to a Minneapolis Federal Reserve survey. That statistic deserves emphasis because it is almost entirely absent from multi-unit mortgage rate coverage, yet it has a direct effect on loan qualification and effective financing cost.
Lenders require hazard insurance coverage that meets or exceeds the loan amount on a multi-unit property. When premiums surge, the annual insurance cost becomes a material line item in the property’s operating expenses. For borrowers relying on DSCR qualification, higher insurance premiums reduce net operating income, which compresses the DSCR calculation. A property that qualifies at a DSCR of 1.30x before the insurance renewal can fall to 1.18x after, potentially pushing the borrower below the 1.25x threshold required for standard-tier pricing under Freddie Mac’s guidelines. The result is either a higher rate or a requirement to increase the down payment to reduce the loan amount and restore the coverage ratio.
For landlords managing multiple properties, this effect compounds. Readers who are using fintech platforms to finance renovations across multiple properties should factor insurance premium increases into their overall portfolio cash flow models, not just the acquisition financing.
The Appraisal Complexity Penalty
Multi-unit property appraisals take 40%–60% longer than comparable single-family appraisals and cost materially more, often running $600–$1,500 versus $300–$600 for a single-family home. But the more consequential risk is what happens when the appraised value comes in below the purchase price.
A buyer planning to put 25% down on a $600,000 duplex has a $450,000 loan amount, representing a 75% LTV that sits at a favorable pricing tier. If the appraiser values the property at $550,000, the $450,000 loan now represents an 81.8% LTV. That single LTV change crosses a pricing tier breakpoint, triggering higher LLPAs and a higher rate, even though the buyer’s financial profile is unchanged. The buyer either needs to renegotiate the purchase price, increase the down payment, or accept a higher rate. Most buyers have no way to anticipate this scenario before the appraisal is ordered.
Multi-unit property appraisals typically take 40%–60% longer than single-family appraisals and can cost two to three times as much. A low appraised value can push a buyer’s LTV above a pricing tier breakpoint, automatically triggering a higher mortgage rate even when the buyer planned to put 25% down.
Guarantee Fees and Their Effect on Pricing
The FHFA reported that the average guarantee fee charged by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on single-family loan acquisitions in 2024 was 65 basis points. This g-fee is embedded in the rate rather than listed as a separate charge, meaning borrowers see a higher rate than the raw risk-based cost would suggest. For multi-unit loans, the g-fee structure interacts with unit-count LLPAs to produce a compounding effect that raises the rate before any lender-specific spread decisions are made.
Practical Moves That Actually Lower Your Multi-Unit Mortgage Rate
Not every lever is available to every borrower, but the ones that exist are meaningful. The goal is to identify which combination of adjustments produces the largest rate reduction for the specific profile at hand, rather than applying generic advice about creditworthiness.
LTV Breakpoints Worth Targeting
LLPA matrices are structured around LTV breakpoints, and crossing from one band to a lower one produces a discrete pricing improvement. The most significant breakpoints for multi-unit investment properties are at 80%, 75%, and 70% LTV. Pushing from 80% to 75% by increasing a down payment by 5% can reduce the effective rate meaningfully on its own, separate from any credit score improvement. On a $600,000 loan, the difference between 80% and 75% LTV is $30,000 in additional down payment. Whether that additional capital is better deployed as a larger down payment or held in reserve is a calculation worth running, not a default answer.
Credit Score Targeting for Multi-Unit Buyers
The 740 credit score threshold is the most important single number for conventional multi-unit buyers. Below 740, LLPA adjustments increase incrementally. Below 720, the adjustments become more significant. The jump from a 719 score to a 740 score can produce a rate improvement of 0.25%–0.5% on an investment-property multi-unit loan, which is a larger effect than the same improvement would generate on a primary-residence single-family mortgage. Borrowers who can delay a purchase by 3–6 months to improve their credit profile often recover that time in lower financing costs over the first two to three years alone.
For DSCR loan borrowers, targeting a debt-service coverage ratio of 1.30x or higher rather than the 1.20x–1.25x minimum can unlock better pricing tiers with many non-QM lenders. The rate difference between a 1.20x DSCR and a 1.35x DSCR can be 0.25%–0.50%, and improving that ratio often requires only modest rent adjustments or a slightly larger down payment at the margin.
The Rate-Lock and Multi-Lender Shopping Case
Multi-unit borrowers should expect more rate variation across lenders than primary-residence borrowers encounter. The same borrower profile can generate quotes that differ by 0.5%–1.5% depending on whether they approach a bank, a credit union, a mortgage broker with non-QM access, or a direct DSCR lender. That is not a hypothetical range; it reflects the absence of standardized pricing in the non-conforming portion of the market.
For DSCR loans specifically, the signal to watch for a refinance opportunity is the 5-year U.S. Treasury yield, not the Fed funds rate or the 10-year Treasury. DSCR loan rates are typically priced off 5-year Treasury benchmarks, and those can move independently of the interest rate signals that dominate mainstream financial media. A borrower watching the Fed for refinance timing is watching the wrong indicator. For conventional multi-unit loans, the 10-year Treasury remains the relevant benchmark, but the spread between the Treasury and the actual mortgage rate varies by lender and market conditions in ways that make a 3-lender comparison more valuable than any single rate forecast.
Readers who are weighing timing decisions should also review the analysis on whether to lock a rate early or float it when the Fed signals a pause, since the conventional multi-unit market is sensitive to the same Treasury dynamics discussed there.
| Rate Lever | Potential Rate Impact | Time Required | Capital Required |
|---|---|---|---|
| Credit score: 700 to 740+ | -0.25% to -0.50% | 3–6 months | None (behavior-based) |
| LTV: 80% to 75% | -0.125% to -0.375% | At purchase | 5% of purchase price |
| Owner-occupancy vs. investment | -0.50% to -0.75% | At purchase | Lifestyle decision |
| DSCR above 1.25x vs. minimum | -0.25% to -0.50% | At purchase | Larger down payment or higher rent |
| Shopping 3+ lenders | -0.50% to -1.50% | 2–4 weeks | None (time cost only) |
Is Now a Defensible Time to Finance a Multi-Unit Property?
The honest answer is that the rate environment for multi-unit investment properties in late 2024 is objectively harder than 2020 or 2021. Rates in the 6%–8% range on multi-unit investment properties are not a temporary anomaly that disciplined waiting will resolve. They reflect structural shifts in how lenders and capital markets price risk for income-producing real estate after a period of compressed spreads and near-zero base rates.
The Opportunity Cost of Waiting
Buyers expecting primary-residence rates from 2020 to return before making a move are likely waiting for a scenario that does not arrive in the near-to-medium term. The spread between multi-unit investment mortgage rates and single-family rates has remained relatively stable at 0.5%–1% for investor properties. The rate environment is harder for everyone, but the relative cost of multi-unit financing compared to single-family has not widened dramatically. The income-generating advantage of a multi-unit property, where rental income from adjacent units offsets the higher rate, remains structurally intact even at current rates.
Holding cash while rents in most urban markets continue rising has its own cost. A buyer who waited through 2023 and 2024 paid lower rates as a renter while watching the rental income potential of multi-unit properties they could have purchased grow alongside those same rents. Neither timing is obviously correct, but the opportunity cost of waiting deserves the same analytical attention buyers typically give to the cost of purchasing.
Refinance Considerations for Existing Holders
Borrowers who financed multi-unit properties at the peak rates of 2022–2023 have a different calculation. The DSCR loan market has stabilized, and the relevant refinance trigger is movement in the 5-year Treasury yield rather than a Fed rate cut announcement. When 5-year Treasury yields dip by 50–75 basis points from their recent range, the refinance math on DSCR loans typically improves enough to justify the transaction costs, especially for borrowers who can also demonstrate improved DSCR since the original closing.
For borrowers currently holding conventional loans at 2022–2023 rates on 1–4 unit properties, the refinance calculus is more conventional: the 10-year Treasury benchmark applies, and the break-even period on closing costs relative to the monthly payment reduction drives the timing decision. Readers comparing refinancing options for their current property may find the analysis on using equity to negotiate a lower mortgage rate directly applicable if their property has appreciated since the original purchase.
DSCR loan rates are typically priced off 5-year U.S. Treasury yields, not the 10-year Treasury or the Fed funds rate. Borrowers watching Federal Reserve announcements as their primary signal for multi-unit refinancing opportunities are tracking the wrong indicator. A sustained 50-basis-point drop in the 5-year Treasury is the benchmark to monitor for DSCR loan refinances.
HUD data published in the Federal Register showed that rising mortgage rates and construction costs made FHA multifamily mortgage insurance premiums cost-prohibitive for market-rate properties, with only 4% of certain FHA multifamily loan closings from March 2024 to March 2025 being for market-rate properties. If you are considering an FHA multifamily program for a 5+ unit property, verify current MIP rates and proposed changes before modeling your financing costs, as HUD has proposed reducing MIP to a uniform 0.25% across programs.

The FHFA set 2024 multifamily loan purchase caps at $70 billion for Fannie Mae and $70 billion for Freddie Mac, totaling $140 billion, with at least 50% required to support affordable housing. Workforce housing loans were exempted from the volume caps, creating a pricing incentive that lenders pass through as modestly lower rates on qualifying affordable and workforce multi-unit properties.
Real-World Example: Fourplex Financing Across Three Buyer Profiles
Consider an illustrative example: three buyers are each purchasing the same fourplex at a $750,000 sale price in late 2024. The property generates $5,400 per month in gross rental income across all four units. The appraised value matches the purchase price. Prevailing 30-year conventional rates for primary-residence single-family loans are 6.75%. Each buyer takes a different approach to financing.
Buyer A is an owner-occupant with a 760 credit score who plans to live in one unit and rent the other three. She uses an FHA loan with 3.5% down ($26,250), qualifies under primary-residence guidelines, and receives a rate of 7.00% (reflecting FHA MIP structure rather than LLPA stacking). Her principal and interest payment on a $723,750 loan is approximately $4,815 per month. Three rented units at $1,400 each generate $4,200 in gross monthly income, covering the majority of her housing cost.
Buyer B is a pure investor with a 730 credit score who plans to rent all four units. He applies for a conventional investment-property loan with 25% down ($187,500), financing $562,500. His rate reflects the base investment-property premium, the two-unit LLPA (the lender prices it as a duplex-or-more adjustment), and a credit score below 740: an effective rate of 8.25%. His monthly payment is approximately $4,225. Gross rental income of $5,400 per month creates positive cash flow on paper, but after the 25% income haircut for vacancy assumptions, insurance, taxes, and maintenance, his net operating income is constrained.
Buyer C is also a pure investor but with five existing financed properties, which puts him at the Fannie Mae 10-property limit’s edge. He uses a DSCR loan with 25% down ($187,500) and a loan amount of $562,500. The property’s DSCR is calculated at 1.28x (gross income divided by PITIA). His rate is 9.10%, reflecting the DSCR premium over conventional. His monthly payment is approximately $4,600. The rate is higher, but Buyer C closes in 11 days, secures the property in a competitive market where two other offers were pending, and avoids the income documentation requirements that would have been problematic given his business structure. The rate cost over 12 months is approximately $5,100 more than Buyer B’s conventional loan. He views that as the cost of the acquisition, not the cost of the financing.
Your Action Plan
-
Determine your occupancy classification before modeling any rate
Owner-occupancy on a 1–4 unit property is the single most powerful rate lever available. Before assuming you will purchase as a pure investor, run the numbers on living in one unit for 12–24 months. The rate difference (0.5%–0.75% or more), the down payment difference (3.5% vs. 25% under FHA), and the cash flow difference can each be individually significant. Together they determine whether the investment works at all.
-
Identify which side of the 5-unit line your target property sits on
If you are considering properties with four versus five units, understand that crossing from four to five changes your entire lender universe, rate benchmark, experience requirements, and recourse structure. A four-unit property can be financed with FHA or conventional residential products. A five-unit property requires commercial financing, eliminates FHA and VA options, and often requires two years of prior multifamily ownership experience for the best agency rates. This is not a minor distinction.
-
Pull your credit score and target 740+ before applying
The 740 threshold produces a discrete improvement in LLPA structure for multi-unit investment buyers. If your current score is between 700 and 739, evaluate whether a 3–6 month improvement campaign is feasible. Pay down revolving balances, dispute any inaccuracies, and avoid new credit applications during that window. The rate improvement for reaching 740 on a multi-unit investment loan often exceeds what the same improvement would generate on a primary-residence single-family mortgage.
-
Model your down payment against LTV pricing tier breakpoints
Do not choose a down payment amount without mapping it to the LLPA pricing tier it lands in. The breakpoints at 80%, 75%, and 70% LTV each produce discrete rate improvements. Calculate the additional capital required to cross the next breakpoint below your initial plan and compare that capital cost to the 30-year interest savings from the rate reduction. In many scenarios, deploying an additional $20,000–$30,000 in down payment to cross a breakpoint generates more savings than putting that capital into reserves.
-
Get quotes from at least three different lender types
For multi-unit properties, the rate variation across lender types is larger than for standard single-family loans. Request quotes from a conventional bank, a credit union if you qualify for membership, and at least one mortgage broker with access to non-QM and DSCR products. Compare the same loan amount, term, and down payment across all three. A 0.5%–1.5% spread for the same borrower profile across lenders is common in this market segment, and the lowest rate is not always from the source you would expect.
-
Pressure-test the property’s DSCR at current insurance costs
Before finalizing your financing plan, obtain a current insurance quote for the specific property rather than relying on the prior owner’s premium. With multifamily insurance premiums having risen 45% on average from 2023 to 2024, the prior year’s insurance cost is likely materially understated. Run the DSCR calculation using the current insurance quote. If it falls below 1.25x, either renegotiate the purchase price, plan a larger down payment to reduce the loan amount, or identify which lender’s DSCR floor is 1.20x rather than 1.25x and understand the rate difference.
-
Clarify which Treasury benchmark drives your loan’s rate
Conventional multi-unit loans are primarily benchmarked against the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield. DSCR loans are typically benchmarked against the 5-year U.S. Treasury. If you are purchasing with a DSCR loan or expect to refinance an existing DSCR loan, track 5-year Treasury movements rather than 10-year movements or Fed announcements. A 50-basis-point drop in the 5-year Treasury is the trigger to evaluate a refinance, not a specific Fed rate decision.
-
Factor a multi-unit appraisal buffer into your financing plan
Assume your appraisal may come in below the purchase price and model what happens to your LTV, your LLPA tier, and your rate if it does. Know in advance whether you are willing and financially able to increase your down payment to preserve the intended LTV if the appraisal is lower than expected. Buyers who have not modeled this scenario face a difficult choice at a late stage of the transaction with limited negotiating leverage.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why are mortgage rates higher for multi-unit properties than for single-family homes?
Multi-unit properties carry higher default risk from the lender’s perspective. Income volatility across multiple tenants, the statistical tendency of landlords to prioritize their personal residence mortgage over investment property loans during financial stress, and the complexity of income verification all contribute to the risk premium. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac encode this risk assessment through loan-level price adjustments that are layered on top of the base rate and add up across multiple risk factors simultaneously.
What is the difference in mortgage rates between a duplex and a fourplex?
Both are treated as residential properties under Fannie Mae and FHA guidelines if they have four or fewer units, but the unit count itself is an LLPA trigger. A duplex carries a higher LLPA than a single-family home, and a three- or four-unit property typically carries a higher LLPA still. The rate difference between a duplex and a fourplex under conventional investment-property guidelines may be modest, often 0.125%–0.25% in effective rate terms, but it stacks on top of all other applicable adjustments. Owner-occupied properties in all these unit categories receive substantially more favorable LLPA treatment than pure-investor purchases.
Can I use FHA financing to buy a multi-unit property?
Yes, for properties with two to four units, provided you occupy one of the units as your primary residence. FHA financing allows as little as 3.5% down with a qualifying credit score of 580 or above, and you can count projected rental income from the non-owner-occupied units toward qualification, subject to FHA’s income-counting rules. FHA does not finance five-unit or larger properties, which are classified as commercial assets. Mortgage insurance premiums apply and add to the effective cost, but for owner-occupant buyers with limited down payment capital, the FHA path often produces a lower monthly cost than conventional investment-property financing on the same property.
What is a DSCR loan and when does it make sense for multi-unit buyers?
A debt-service coverage ratio loan qualifies a borrower based on the property’s income relative to its debt obligations rather than the borrower’s personal income. The lender calculates the DSCR by dividing the property’s gross rental income by the total monthly debt service (principal, interest, taxes, insurance, and association fees). A DSCR of 1.25x means the property generates 25% more income than its debt costs. DSCR loans carry a 1%–2% rate premium over conventional financing but bypass personal DTI requirements, have no portfolio property cap, and can close much faster. They are particularly useful for investors with complex tax returns, high existing personal debt, or more than 10 financed properties.
What does the 5-unit boundary mean for financing?
The 5-unit boundary is a hard regulatory line that moves a property from residential to commercial lending. Properties with one to four units can be financed with Fannie Mae conventional, FHA, VA, or USDA programs. Properties with five or more units require commercial financing, lose access to all government-backed residential programs, and are underwritten on the basis of net operating income and DSCR rather than borrower personal income and DTI. The rate benchmark shifts from the 30-year conventional average to spreads over the 5-year or 10-year Treasury. Agency multifamily programs from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac offer competitive non-recourse rates for 5+ unit properties but typically require two years of prior multifamily ownership experience, a threshold that excludes most first-time investors.
How does owner-occupancy affect the mortgage rate on a multi-unit property?
Owner-occupancy produces the largest single rate reduction available to a 1–4 unit buyer. Living in one unit qualifies the entire loan for primary-residence LLPA treatment, which is materially lower than investment-property LLPA treatment for identical credit scores and LTVs. The effective rate difference is typically 0.5%–0.75%, and the down payment requirement drops from 25% (conventional investment) to as low as 3.5% (FHA primary residence). On a $700,000 property, the down payment difference alone exceeds $150,000 in cash. Borrowers who can genuinely occupy one unit for at least 12 months should model this scenario before assuming the pure-investor approach is more financially efficient.
What credit score do I need to get competitive multi-unit investment property rates?
The 740 credit score is the most important threshold for conventional multi-unit investment buyers. Below 740, LLPA adjustments increase, and the combined effect of an investment-property LLPA, a unit-count LLPA, and a sub-740 credit score LLPA can add 0.75%–1.25% to the effective rate compared to a 740+ borrower at the same LTV. For DSCR loans, credit score requirements vary by lender but most require a minimum of 660–680, with better rates available above 700 and 720. Improving a credit score from the 700–719 range to 740+ typically produces a larger rate benefit on a multi-unit investment loan than on a comparable primary-residence loan.
Are there hidden costs that make my effective rate higher than my note rate?
Several factors systematically raise the effective financing cost above the note rate. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac guarantee fees average 65 basis points and are embedded in the rate. Property insurance premiums rose an average of 45% from 2023 to 2024, and rising premiums can compress DSCR enough to move a borrower into a higher-rate loan tier. Multi-unit appraisals cost more and take longer, and a low appraisal can silently raise the effective LTV above a pricing breakpoint, triggering higher LLPAs. DSCR loan prepayment penalty structures can create a cost that is not visible in the rate but affects the total financing expense over the holding period.
Is now a good time to buy a multi-unit property given current mortgage rates?
The rate environment for multi-unit investment properties in late 2024 is objectively more expensive than 2020–2021, and rates in the 6%–8% range for investment multi-unit properties reflect structural risk repricing rather than a temporary anomaly. That said, the spread between multi-unit investment rates and single-family rates has remained relatively stable at 0.5%–1%, meaning the relative cost of multi-unit financing has not widened dramatically against the broader market. For buyers who can offset the higher rate with rental income from adjacent units, particularly owner-occupants, the math can still work. The relevant question is whether the property’s income at current rent levels covers the debt service at current rates, not whether rates are lower than they once were.
How should I monitor for a refinance opportunity on a DSCR multi-unit loan?
Track the 5-year U.S. Treasury yield, not the 10-year Treasury or Federal Reserve announcements. DSCR loans are typically benchmarked against 5-year Treasury rates, which can move independently of the Fed funds rate and the 10-year Treasury that most financial media covers. A sustained 50-basis-point decline in the 5-year Treasury yield is the relevant signal that refinancing DSCR loan economics have likely improved enough to justify transaction costs. Also evaluate whether the property’s current DSCR, after any rent increases since the original closing, qualifies for a lower pricing tier than the initial loan, which could produce a double improvement in rate.
Sources
- Fannie Mae, Loan-Level Price Adjustment (LLPA) Matrix
- Fannie Mae Selling Guide, General Property Eligibility (B2-3-01)
- Federal Housing Finance Agency, 2025 Multifamily Loan Purchase Caps Fact Sheet
- Federal Housing Finance Agency, 2024 Multifamily Loan Purchase Caps Announcement
- Federal Housing Finance Agency, 2024 Single-Family Guarantee Fees Report
- Federal Register, HUD Proposed Changes to FHA Multifamily Mortgage Insurance Premiums
- Freddie Mac Multifamily, Securitization Program Investor Presentation
- Scotsman Guide, Multifamily Lending Made a Comeback in 2024 (MBA Data)
- The Mortgage Reports, Investment Property Mortgage Rates: How Much More Will You Pay?
- U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, FHA Program History and Guidelines
- Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, What Is a Loan-Level Price Adjustment?