Two distinct program frameworks serve non-US-citizen investors. Understanding which path applies to your situation determines documentation requirements, LTV access, and program availability.
Non-US-citizen investors accessing US real estate financing fall into one of two program frameworks: the foreign national path or the ITIN path. These are not interchangeable terms — they represent materially different documentation structures, program access profiles, and underwriting methodologies. Getting the classification right at the start of the process prevents delays and ensures you are presented to the correct capital providers.
In US non-QM lending, a "foreign national" borrower is a non-US-citizen without lawful permanent residency who has no Social Security Number and no established US credit history. The borrower qualifies for investment property financing using a foreign passport, visa or entry documentation, foreign bank statements for reserves, and rental income to satisfy the debt service coverage ratio. Foreign national programs are specifically designed for investors who have no US tax identity and limited or no US financial footprint.
An ITIN (Individual Taxpayer Identification Number) borrower is a non-US-citizen who has obtained a 9-digit tax identification number from the IRS — formatted W7X-XX-XXXX — typically because they earn US-source income, file US tax returns, or have a US business interest. ITIN borrowers often have some US financial history: a bank account, limited tradelines, or prior year tax filings. The ITIN provides a US tax identity that lenders can verify, opening access to a broader range of program tiers than pure foreign national programs, particularly on credit score requirements and rate pricing.
| Parameter | Foreign National | ITIN (No US Credit) | ITIN (680+ US FICO) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax Identity Required | None required | ITIN required | ITIN required |
| US Credit Score | Not applicable | Not established | 680+ FICO |
| Credit Alternative | Foreign CR or bank reference | Foreign CR or bank reference | Not required — FICO used |
| Max LTV (SFR Purchase) | 75% | 75% | 75–80% |
| Max LTV (Cash-Out) | 70% | 70% | 70–75% |
| Min DSCR | 1.00x | 1.00x | 1.00x |
| Reserve Documentation | Foreign bank statements + translation | Foreign or US bank statements | US bank statements preferred |
| Rate Spread vs. Domestic DSCR | +0.50–1.50% | +0.50–1.00% | +0.25–0.75% |
| Program Breadth | Specialized FN programs only | FN programs + broader non-QM | Broadest non-QM access |
| LLC Vesting Allowed | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| 2-4 Unit Eligible | Yes (70% LTV) | Yes (70% LTV) | Yes (70–75% LTV) |
| Closing Timeline | 35–50 days (translation adds time) | 30–45 days | 25–40 days |
There is no universally superior path — the right framework depends on the investor's existing US financial footprint. Investors with no US presence and no ITIN should proceed under the foreign national path, which is fully capable of closing DSCR investment property loans. Investors who already have an ITIN and have filed US tax returns should explore whether existing US financial accounts have generated tradelines, since even limited US credit history can compress rate spread meaningfully. The path that generates the best pricing on a specific scenario is the right one, and Viador evaluates both before making a program recommendation.
The most common question from first-time foreign national borrowers is how creditworthiness is established without a US credit score. The answer is a layered approach that substitutes foreign documentation:
Foreign national programs accept credit evidence through one of three routes: (1) a 12-month foreign credit report from the borrower's home country credit bureau, translated and certified, showing no material derogatory history; (2) a reference letter from a recognized foreign bank on institutional letterhead, confirming the borrower's account standing, tenure, and credit history in good standing; or (3) an international credit report from a credentialing service that compiles cross-border credit data. These alternatives do not produce a FICO score — instead, underwriters review the qualitative credit narrative and reserve documentation to assess repayment capacity.
ITIN holders who have been in the US financial system for at least 12 months may have generated a US credit score even without knowing it. Authorized user accounts, secured credit cards from US banks, and credit builder products all create tradelines under the ITIN number. Before assuming a foreign national program is required, ITIN holders should pull a US tri-merge credit report to see if a score exists — even a thin-file score in the 660 range may qualify for more favorable program tiers.
Generating a US FICO score as a foreign national requires establishing tradelines under a US Social Security Number or ITIN. The most common paths: (1) open a US bank account and apply for a secured credit card with a deposit — the card reports monthly to US bureaus; (2) apply for an ITIN and become an authorized user on a US resident's existing credit card account; (3) apply for a credit-builder loan from a US credit union. After 12–24 months of consistent payment history, a FICO score is typically generated. Foreign nationals planning repeat US investments benefit from starting this process early.
For both foreign national and ITIN programs, substantial liquid reserves serve a compensating-factor role when credit documentation is thin or non-traditional. Borrowers with 18–24 months of PITIA in verified liquid accounts — even in foreign financial institutions — present a materially stronger credit narrative than borrowers with minimal reserves regardless of credit path. Reserve depth is the most reliable compensating factor in non-QM foreign national underwriting.
No. DSCR loans qualify on rental income from the subject property — not on the borrower's personal income or tax returns. Neither a foreign national nor an ITIN borrower needs to provide US tax returns (Form 1040-NR or otherwise) to qualify for a DSCR investment property loan. The income calculation is entirely property-level: does the property generate enough gross rent to cover PITIA? This makes DSCR structurally accessible to foreign investors with no US tax filing history.
In practice, most borrowers know their situation quickly. Use the decision framework below to identify your starting point before contacting a capital advisor.
You have a valid foreign passport, no US Social Security Number, no ITIN, no US credit history, and assets held primarily in a foreign financial institution. You are investing in US real estate without US residency or employment income. This is the most common profile among first-time international investors in US real estate.
You have already obtained an ITIN from the IRS — typically because you file US tax returns, have US-source income, or have a US business entity. You may have a US bank account or limited US credit tradelines. Your primary residence is outside the US but you have an established US tax identity.
Yes. A foreign national can apply for an ITIN at any time by filing IRS Form W-7 with supporting identification documentation. The ITIN is typically issued within 7 to 11 weeks. Obtaining an ITIN does not by itself generate US credit — that requires opening tradeline-reporting accounts — but it creates the tax identity that enables future access to a broader program tier. Foreign nationals planning multiple US acquisitions over 3–5 years benefit from obtaining an ITIN early in their investment program even if the first transaction closes under foreign national parameters.
Foreign nationals on H-1B, L-1, O-1, TN, or E-3 work-authorized visas who have a Social Security Number and 2+ years of US credit history may qualify for conventional investment property programs (Fannie Mae or non-QM domestic investor products) at significantly more favorable pricing than either the foreign national or ITIN-path alternative. If you have a US SSN, the foreign national and ITIN paths are likely suboptimal — a domestic investor DSCR program should be evaluated first.
Program minimums are generally the same for both paths: most foreign national and ITIN DSCR programs start at $100,000, with loan amounts up to $3,000,000 or higher available on qualifying scenarios. Loan amounts above $1,500,000 typically trigger additional reserve requirements (12–24 months PITIA) and may involve additional documentation layers regardless of whether the borrower is on the foreign national or ITIN path.
Some non-QM foreign national programs offer interest-only payment structures for an initial period — typically 3 to 10 years — before converting to fully amortizing payments. Interest-only structuring reduces the monthly PITIA during the IO period, which can improve DSCR ratios on tighter scenarios. Not all programs offer IO; availability depends on the program tier, LTV, and DSCR ratio. ITIN borrowers with US credit may have access to a broader range of IO program options.
DSCR programs qualify on subject property rental income only — not on the borrower's global rental portfolio. An ITIN borrower with rental properties outside the US cannot use those foreign properties' income to supplement DSCR on a US acquisition. The DSCR calculation is entirely confined to the subject US property: gross monthly rent (from lease or Form 1007 appraisal) divided by PITIA on the subject loan. Foreign asset holdings are relevant only as reserve documentation.
Yes, and this is a structuring consideration worth exploring. If one borrower has established US credit (680+ FICO) and the other does not, using the credit-qualified borrower as the primary borrower may allow the file to qualify under more favorable program parameters, even if the other borrower remains on the foreign national profile. Program rules vary — some require all borrowers to meet the credit standard, while others qualify the file on the strongest borrower's profile. Viador evaluates the full borrower set before recommending structure.
Yes, significantly. Lawful Permanent Residents (Green Card holders) are treated as domestic borrowers by most lenders, not as foreign nationals. If you have an active Green Card (Form I-551), you access the full range of domestic investment property programs including Fannie Mae-eligible products and standard non-QM investor DSCR at domestic pricing. The foreign national and ITIN paths are not applicable — and using them would mean leaving significant pricing value on the table.
Yes. Foreign national DSCR loans are refinanceable. As the borrower builds US credit history and reserves, they may qualify for better program tiers on refinance. Prepayment penalties — common on non-QM foreign national programs — should be modeled against the expected refinance timing. A 5/4/3/2/1 step-down penalty means full payoff in year one incurs a 5% penalty on the outstanding balance; holding through the penalty period before refinancing materially improves the economics of the rate improvement.
Yes. OFAC (Office of Foreign Assets Control) sanctions programs prohibit US financial institutions from transacting with nationals of certain designated countries. Additionally, Florida SB 264 restricts property purchase near military installations for nationals of specified countries. The ineligible country list varies by lender and is subject to regulatory updates. Viador reviews borrower country of citizenship at intake and will advise on eligibility before any application is submitted.
Viador reviews your full borrower profile before recommending a program — foreign national, ITIN, or domestic investor.