Brokers compare close rates without comparing the underlying lead quality, and the resulting conversations are mostly noise. A 6% close rate from one source is excellent; a 6% close rate from another source is a disaster. Context determines everything.
This is what working DSCR brokers actually convert across the major lead sources in 2026.
Close rate by lead source
Realistic close rate ranges for a competent broker running a tight follow-up cadence:
- Realtor referrals: 22 to 32%
- Existing client referrals: 25 to 35%
- Exclusive pre-priced marketplace leads: 12 to 18%
- Exclusive standard marketplace leads: 8 to 14%
- 3-way shared marketplace leads: 4 to 7%
- 5+ way shared marketplace leads: 1 to 3%
- Google search ads (exact match): 8 to 12%
- Direct mail responses: 8 to 15%
- Meta lead form ads: 1.5 to 3%
- YouTube ad inbound: 6 to 10%
These ranges assume a broker who responds within 30 minutes during business hours, runs a 12+ touch follow-up cadence, and operates in a market where the borrower profile actually fits DSCR products.
Why ranges this wide are real
Close rate variance within a single lead source is driven by three things, in order of impact.
Speed-to-lead. Brokers responding within 5 minutes vs 60 minutes vs 4 hours close at radically different rates. The fastest brokers close at the top of the ranges above; the slowest at the bottom.
Follow-up depth. Brokers running 12+ touch sequences close at meaningfully higher rates than brokers running 3-4 touches. Most DSCR borrowers don't close on first contact.
Market fit. A broker offering DSCR products in markets where investor activity is low operates at a structural disadvantage no follow-up cadence can fix.
The metric most brokers track wrong
"Close rate" without time horizon is a meaningless number. A broker quoting 18% close rate on marketplace leads might be measuring deals closed within 30 days. Another broker quoting 12% might be measuring 90-day windows including longer-cycle refinances.
Working brokers track three windows:
- 30-day close rate: Quick-decision purchases and refinances
- 60-day close rate: Standard pipeline maturation
- 90-day close rate: Total conversion including longer-cycle borrowers
A complete close rate picture requires all three. Marketplaces like Leedwallet and similar platforms typically benchmark cohorts at 60-day and 90-day windows to capture the full conversion arc.
What above-average operations look like
Brokers in the top quartile of close rate across sources share operational patterns.
- Inbound calls answered within 90 seconds during business hours
- Web form fills receive an automated email within 60 seconds and a human call within 15 minutes
- Follow-up cadence runs 14 to 21 touches over 90 days
- CRM scoring distinguishes hot, warm, and cold leads
- Calls are tracked, recorded, and reviewed weekly
- Lead source attribution is honest (no double-counting referrals as marketplace leads)
Below-average operations skip the small things. The aggregate gap is enormous.
Reading the data from outside
For brokers benchmarking their own performance against industry, trade outlets like HousingWire and Scotsman Guide regularly publish originator performance studies worth tracking.
Where the benchmarks are heading
Through 2026 and into 2027, expected trends:
- Marketplace close rates rising as data quality improves at top platforms
- Meta lead form close rates flat or declining as Special Ad Category compresses targeting
- Referral close rates stable
- Search ad close rates declining slightly as costs rise faster than quality
The broker who can hold steady close rates across cycles by improving operational quality outperforms the broker chasing the latest tactic.
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.



