Most cold email for mortgage brokers is dead on arrival. Subject lines that scream "open me," body copy that says nothing, CTAs that ask for a 15-minute call. The brokers who get inbound from cold email are doing something different.
Why most mortgage cold email fails
Three structural problems.
Targeting is too broad. "Real estate investors" is not a target. "Investors who closed a rental in Phoenix in the last 90 days holding three or more SFR properties" is a target.
The pitch is for the sender, not the recipient. "I'd love to share what we offer" is sender-centric. "Here's a number I think you should know about your market" is recipient-centric.
The CTA is too heavy. Asking for a call from a cold contact who has zero context on you is a 1% conversion event. Asking for a reply to a low-stakes question is a 15% event.
The structure that works
Five lines, no more.
- Specific reference to the recipient. What you actually know about their situation.
- One useful piece of information they probably don't have.
- A soft observation that connects to financing.
- A tiny ask, not a meeting.
- Sign-off with one line on who you are.
That's it. No long P.S. No "looking forward to your reply." No bullet point list of what you offer.
Template - investor with recent rental purchase
Subject: Quick note on your Memphis duplex
Saw the recent acquisition in Memphis. Solid market choice, particularly with the secondary market cap rate spread holding up better than most this year.
One number worth flagging: most DSCR refis on duplexes under $250k in Tennessee right now are pricing 60-80bps better than purchase money, which makes a rate-and-term in 12-18 months potentially worth modeling now rather than later.
Curious whether you've thought about the refi window on this one. Happy to send a quick rate sheet for the property type if useful.
Marcus, DSCR specialist with portfoligrow.com
That email gets opened, gets read, and converts at meaningfully higher rates than the typical mortgage cold email. Not because it's clever. Because it respects the recipient's time and provides value before asking for any.
Template - investor with multiple property holdings
Subject: Portfolio loan question on your Charlotte properties
Public records show you holding 4 SFRs in the Charlotte metro through your LLC. Nice portfolio.
Wanted to flag something investors with 3+ doors often miss: portfolio DSCR loans bundling 3-5 properties under a single note are pricing meaningfully better than individual DSCRs right now, particularly for borrowers above 720 FICO. The bundle saves on closing costs and simplifies underwriting.
Worth a quick rate comparison sometime? No pitch, just numbers.
Marcus, portfoligrow.com
Where most brokers screw this up
Sending in volume without personalisation. A 50-email-per-day cadence with one specific reference per email converts. A 500-email-per-day cadence with no personalisation produces nothing and may get the sending domain flagged.
Following up too aggressively. One follow-up after 5-7 days is acceptable. Three follow-ups in 10 days is harassment and gets reported.
Sending from a personal Gmail. Domain reputation matters. Send from a real broker domain or expect deliverability issues.
How to source the lists
Public LLC property holdings, MLS investor transaction history, and BiggerPockets profile data are all legitimate sources. Skip-tracing services like BatchLeads or similar provide contact data for property owners. Avoid purchased "investor lists" from generic data brokers; they're typically scraped, often outdated, and produce dismal response rates.
For brokers without time or appetite to build cold email lists, DSCR lead generation through specialist marketplaces is often the more efficient channel, particularly because the borrower has already self-identified as interested rather than been guessed at.
The honest math
A well-targeted, well-written cold email campaign sending 30 to 50 emails per day, five days a week, typically produces:
- 15 to 25% open rate
- 8 to 15% reply rate
- 1 to 3% rate of replies that produce qualified conversations
- 0.5 to 1.5% rate of replies that eventually close
For a broker sending 200 emails a week, that's roughly 1 to 3 closed loans every two to three months once the cadence stabilises. Slow but steady, and the cost is meaningfully below paid acquisition.
Trade outlets including National Mortgage Professional regularly cover outbound prospecting trends for non-QM originators.
The summary: cold email works for DSCR if it stops looking like cold email and starts looking like a useful note from a knowledgeable person.
Editorial note: figures and benchmarks referenced in this article are estimates synthesised from industry observations, broker reports, and publicly available trade reporting. They are intended to illustrate market dynamics and should not be cited as primary research without independent verification.



