LinkedIn is the channel most DSCR brokers either ignore or abuse. The brokers who treat it like paid acquisition get banned. The brokers who treat it like a social network get nothing. The brokers who treat it like a slow trust-building exercise quietly build pipelines that last for years.
Who to target
Three audience profiles produce most of the DSCR loan flow.
Active investors posting about deals. Profiles with recent posts mentioning "closed," "acquired," "BRRRR," "added a door."
Real estate professionals adjacent to investors. Property managers, investor-focused agents, contractors who work on rentals.
Investor-focused content creators. Smaller real estate investing influencers (5,000 to 30,000 followers) appreciate guests who know financing inside out.
Don't target: brand-new aspiring investors, generic real estate enthusiasts, or other brokers.
The opening message
LinkedIn outreach has been ruined by automated DM tools. The bar is so low that anything human-sounding stands out.
A working opening has four properties:
- References the recipient's recent activity specifically
- Offers something useful with no ask attached
- Doesn't pitch
- Under 100 words
Example:
"Saw your post about the Toledo duplex. Solid pick. Toledo cap rates have been holding up better than most Midwest secondary markets through 2025. I keep an eye on Ohio submarkets for what I do and Toledo is genuinely interesting right now. Hope it cash flows."
No CTA. No pitch. Just acknowledgment plus a small piece of information.
The follow-up cadence
The opening rarely produces a reply. The point is to plant a name.
- Day 14 to 21: Comment thoughtfully on one of their posts
- Day 30 to 45: Second DM with different useful information
- Day 60 to 90: If they've engaged, a slightly more direct message: "If you ever need a quick second opinion on financing structure, happy to be a sounding board, no pitch"
- Beyond 90 days: Stay visible, comment consistently
By month four to six, a meaningful fraction of these contacts will reach out when they need financing.
Posting your own content
Content that works:
- Specific deal walkthroughs with names redacted
- Market data points
- Useful frameworks
- Honest industry commentary
What doesn't work: motivational quotes, celebration of milestones, generic real estate content, anything ending in "DM me if you need a DSCR loan."
Where Leedwallet fits
For brokers building LinkedIn pipelines, the gap between inbound momentum and immediate revenue is the hardest part of year one. Most LinkedIn-sourced loans close months after first contact.
The brokers who play this well typically run Leedwallet or a similar specialist marketplace for immediate volume while LinkedIn compounds underneath. The marketplace covers revenue today; LinkedIn covers compounding referral relationships for next year.
The thing nobody mentions
The brokers who win on LinkedIn aren't the ones with the slickest profiles. They're the ones who don't stop.
Six months of consistent useful posting plus thoughtful DMs produces results. Eighteen months produces a referral pipeline. Three years produces a brand. Most brokers quit at month four because the early months produce mostly silence.
Industry coverage of how mortgage professionals are building organic referral pipelines is regularly published in Scotsman Guide.
The honest answer to "how do I get DSCR leads from LinkedIn" is: keep doing the unrewarding parts longer than anyone else.
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.



