Requirements by Property Count Tier
| Tier | Down Payment (1-Unit Invest.) | Down Payment (2-4 Unit Invest.) | Credit Score | Reserves | Payment History |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Properties 1-4 | 15% minimum | 25% minimum | Program standard (620-680+) | Program standard (2-6 months) | Standard |
| Properties 5-10 | 25% minimum | 30% minimum | 720+ minimum | 6 months PITI on each financed property | No 30-day lates in prior 12 months; no BK/foreclosure in 7 years |
| Beyond 10 | Conventional unavailable. Portfolio, DSCR, blanket, and commercial lenders set their own requirements. | ||||
What Stops Investors First: The Constraint Stack
Most investors do not hit the 10-property limit as their first obstacle. The binding constraint shifts as the portfolio grows:
| Portfolio Size | Primary Constraint | Why |
|---|---|---|
| 1-4 properties | Down payment capital | Each acquisition requires 15-25% down. Investors run out of deployable cash before hitting any count limit. |
| 5-7 properties | Reserve requirements | 6 months PITI per property accumulates fast. At 7 properties averaging $2,000/mo PITI, that is $84,000 in liquid reserves required simultaneously. |
| 8-10 properties | Credit + lender overlays | 720+ score must be maintained across years of acquisitions. Many lenders add overlays beyond GSE minimums at this tier, reducing available options. |
| 10+ properties | Loan structure | Conventional is unavailable. The investor must transition to portfolio, DSCR, blanket, or commercial products with different rates, terms, and documentation. |
The Short Answer: There Is No Universal Limit
No federal statute caps the number of mortgages one person can hold simultaneously. In theory, a borrower with sufficient income, assets, and creditworthiness could carry dozens of mortgage obligations. In practice, the limit is set by the specific loan programs used and the qualification standards each lender applies.
The most commonly cited ceiling comes from conventional conforming loans sold to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, which restrict eligibility based on the number of financed properties a borrower holds. But conventional lending is only one pathway. Investors who outgrow it have several well-established alternatives, each with its own qualification framework.
Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac: The 10-Property Ceiling
Fannie Mae's Selling Guide (Section B2-2-03) and Freddie Mac's Seller/Servicer Guide both limit borrower eligibility to 10 financed properties. This limit was expanded from 4 to 10 in 2009, giving investors significantly more room within the conventional system.
The 10-property limit applies to the total number of properties on which the borrower is obligated under a mortgage, including the primary residence. The requirements escalate at two tiers:
- Properties 1 through 4: Standard investment property rules apply. Down payment minimums are 15% on single-unit investments or 25% on 2-4 unit properties.
- Properties 5 through 10: Requirements tighten considerably. The borrower must provide a minimum 25% down payment on single-unit investment properties (30% on 2-4 unit properties), maintain a credit score of 720 or higher, hold 6 months of PITI reserves on every financed property, show no mortgage late payments of 30 days or more in the prior 12 months, and have no bankruptcy or foreclosure in the prior 7 years.
These are minimum eligibility requirements, not automatic approvals. Individual lenders may impose additional overlays, particularly on borrowers in the 5-10 property range.
How Financed Properties Are Counted
The counting rules are specific and sometimes misunderstood:
- Primary residence counts. If you have a mortgage on your home, that is one of your financed properties. An investor with a primary residence mortgage and 9 rental property mortgages has reached the 10-property limit.
- Properties owned outright do not count. A property with no mortgage obligation does not contribute to the financed property total. An investor who owns 20 properties but carries mortgages on only 8 of them has 8 financed properties.
- Co-signed loans typically count. If a borrower is obligated on another person's mortgage (as a co-signer or co-borrower), that property generally counts toward the financed property total because the obligation appears on the borrower's credit report.
- Commercial and business-entity loans may not count. Properties financed through commercial loans, blanket loans, or loans held in business entities may not appear as personal mortgage obligations on the borrower's credit report. If the obligation is not reported as a personal liability, it typically does not count toward the conventional financed property limit.
- Second homes count the same as investment properties. A financed vacation home or second residence is included in the total.
FHA and VA: Different Rules Entirely
Government-backed loan programs operate under separate frameworks:
FHA loans generally allow only one FHA-insured mortgage per borrower at a time. Exceptions exist for specific circumstances: relocation to a new primary residence more than 100 miles from the current home, an increase in family size that makes the current home inadequate, a co-borrower leaving the property (such as in a divorce), or a non-occupant co-borrower on an existing FHA loan. These exceptions are narrow, and FHA is not designed as an investor financing tool.
For investors who used house hacking strategies to acquire their first property with an FHA loan, the transition to conventional or alternative financing for subsequent properties is a common next step.
VA loans have no formal limit on the number of VA loans a borrower can obtain over time. The constraint is entitlement, not count. A veteran's full entitlement restores after selling and paying off a previous VA-financed property. Partial (bonus) entitlement allows a second VA loan while the first remains active, subject to remaining entitlement and applicable loan limits for borrowers with partial entitlement.
What Happens When You Hit the Conventional Limit
Reaching 10 financed properties does not mean an investor must stop acquiring real estate. Several well-established lending channels operate entirely outside the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac framework:
- Portfolio lenders originate loans and hold them on their own books rather than selling to the GSEs. They set their own qualification criteria, including property count limits. Some portfolio lenders will finance borrowers with 15, 20, or more properties if the borrower's overall financial position supports it.
- DSCR loans qualify based on the property's cash flow rather than the borrower's personal debt-to-income ratio. Because each property is underwritten independently based on its rental income relative to its debt service, there is no inherent limit on how many DSCR loans a borrower can carry. These fall under the non-QM category.
- Blanket loans consolidate multiple properties under a single loan, which can simplify management and potentially reduce the number of individual mortgage obligations reported on the borrower's credit.
- Commercial loans apply to properties with 5 or more residential units, which are classified as commercial regardless of ownership structure. Commercial underwriting evaluates the property and business entity rather than the individual borrower's conventional mortgage count. Investors moving into commercial-scale portfolios can find detailed guidance on commercial lending structures at CapitalXO.com.
- Hard money and private lenders provide short-term, asset-based financing that does not follow GSE guidelines. These are typically used for acquisitions, renovations, or bridge financing rather than long-term holds.
For a comprehensive look at how these options fit together as a portfolio grows, see Scaling a Rental Portfolio with Financing.
The Reserve Requirement Problem
In practice, many investors encounter a financing bottleneck well before reaching the 10-property limit. The culprit is reserve requirements.
For properties 5 through 10, Fannie Mae requires 6 months of PITI (principal, interest, taxes, and insurance) reserves on each financed property. This means an investor financing a seventh property does not just need reserves for that property; the lender must verify 6 months of PITI reserves across all 7 financed properties simultaneously.
Consider the arithmetic: if the average monthly PITI across 7 properties is $2,000, the borrower needs $84,000 in liquid or near-liquid reserves ($2,000 x 7 properties x 6 months). At 10 properties with the same average, that figure reaches $120,000. These reserves must be verifiable and accessible, typically in bank accounts, investment accounts, or retirement funds (often at a discounted value for retirement assets).
Reserve requirements effectively create a capital barrier that can be harder to clear than the property count limit itself, particularly for investors who reinvest aggressively and maintain thin cash positions. Understanding down payment requirements and reserve planning together is critical for scaling beyond the first few properties.
Strategies for Scaling Beyond 10
Investors who plan ahead can structure their portfolios to continue growing past the conventional limit:
- Pay off existing mortgages to reduce the financed count. Properties owned outright do not count. An investor with 10 financed properties who pays off 2 mortgages immediately opens 2 new conventional slots. A cash-out refinance on one property can provide funds to pay off another, effectively recycling capital.
- Use DSCR loans for new acquisitions. Keeping conventional loans on properties where they offer the best terms, while using DSCR financing for properties beyond the conventional limit, is a common hybrid approach. Rental income qualification through DSCR lending evaluates the property, not the borrower's total mortgage count.
- Consolidate with blanket loans. Rolling several individually financed properties into a blanket loan can reduce the number of individual mortgage obligations while maintaining leverage across the portfolio.
- Transition to LLC or entity-based ownership. Properties financed through business entities using commercial or portfolio loans may not appear as personal mortgage obligations. This strategy has caveats: some lenders require a personal guarantee regardless of entity structure, and transferring properties with existing conventional mortgages into an LLC can trigger a due-on-sale clause.
- Target multi-unit properties. Acquiring a single 4-unit building generates rental income from 4 units while using only one financed property slot. This approach maximizes unit count relative to mortgage count.
- Leverage short-term rental income. Properties with higher cash flow from short-term rentals can support the reserve requirements more readily, making each additional conventional mortgage easier to qualify for.
The most effective scaling strategies combine several of these approaches rather than relying on any single pathway. Maintaining strong credit throughout the process is essential, as any score drop below the 720 threshold can disqualify a borrower from the 5-10 property tier entirely.