Investing in Colorado Springs, CO — Market Analysis
Colorado Springs is one of the top military rental markets in the country; VA-tenant demand near Fort Carson and Peterson creates reliable, long-term tenants. With a median home price of $465,000, acquiring a rental property in Colorado Springs requires a minimum $93,000 down payment for a DSCR loan (20% of purchase price) or $116,000 for a conventional investment property loan (25%). At current DSCR investor rates around 7.5%, your estimated monthly payment on a $372,000 DSCR loan is approximately $2,601 in principal and interest, with a total PITIA (including taxes and insurance) of approximately $2,949/month.
For a long-term rental strategy, Colorado Springs properties at the median price point generate an estimated $3,500/month in gross rent — a gross rent multiplier of approximately 11.1x. After accounting for all operating expenses including vacancy, property management, maintenance, capital reserves, taxes, and insurance (typically 35% of gross), estimated net operating income runs around $2,275/month. This produces an estimated cap rate of 5.9% and an estimated monthly cash flow of $-330 after P&I on a DSCR loan. The estimated DSCR ratio of 1.19x qualifies at the 1.0 threshold most lenders require.
Short-term rental activity in Colorado Springs is limited or heavily regulated. Most investors in this market pursue long-term rental strategies targeting local workforce, families, and professional tenants. DSCR qualification here is based on a market rent appraisal from a licensed appraiser — Tayton Capital coordinates the appraisal as part of the DSCR loan process.
El Paso County uses the standard conforming limit of $832,750. Most DSCR investor loans in Colorado Springs at current prices fall at or below this threshold, qualifying for standard investor DSCR pricing. Properties above $832,750 require jumbo DSCR or portfolio financing, which Tayton Capital also offers.
Veterans in Colorado Springs can use a VA loan to purchase a 2-4 unit investment property if they occupy one unit — an excellent strategy to house-hack into rental income with 0% down. For pure non-owner investment properties, conventional investor or DSCR loans apply (VA does not cover non-owner rentals).

