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Market Profile

Data as of June 2026 — refreshed monthly#40 largest US city

Omaha, NE Rental Investment Market: DSCR & STR Numbers (June 2026)

Where Omaha stands for DSCR-loan investors: one of the 25 major metros we track, scored on the same DSCR math as our ranked leaderboard.

Long-Term Rental Numbers

Median Price

$285,000

Avg Rent

$1,300

per month

Rent / Price

0.46%

monthly

Rent Growth

+3.0%

year over year

Property Tax

1.90%

effective / yr

DSCR Score

52/100

major-metro coverage

Does It Pencil?

The median Omaha deal, run through DSCR math

Purchase price (median)
$285,000
Down payment (20%)
$57,000
Loan amount
$228,000
P&I @ 7.53% / 30yr
$1,599/mo
Property taxes (1.90%/yr)
$451/mo
Insurance (~0.5%/yr of price)
$119/mo
PITIA (full payment)
$2,169/mo
Avg market rent
$1,300/mo

Illustrative DSCR

0.60

Below 1.0 — the median deal doesn't fully cover its payment at these assumptions.

Run your own numbers →

Illustrative only, not a quote or pre-qualification. Uses the median price and average metro rent from our June 2026 dataset, an indicative rate of 7.53% (10-year Treasury + a typical DSCR spread — see the live data dashboard), estimated insurance, and the metro's effective tax rate. Actual rents, taxes, insurance, and pricing vary by property and borrower.

The Read

What the numbers say about investing in Omaha

Omaha, NE's rent-to-price ratio is 0.46% — thin by DSCR standards. A $285,000 median price producing $1,300 in monthly rent means the typical deal struggles to cover PITIA at standard leverage, so DSCR borrowers here usually need larger down payments, interest-only structures, or below-median purchases to make the ratio work.

That ratio is below the 0.71% median of our 15-metro DSCR leaderboard, and Omaha, NE is one of the 25 major metros we track beyond the ranked leaderboard, scoring 52/100 on the same formula. Rent growth is running 3.0% year over year — modest momentum that helps coverage drift up over time without rescuing a deal that doesn't pencil now. The catch is carrying cost: 1.90% effective property tax is on the heavy end, and taxes land inside PITIA, so they eat directly into the DSCR ratio.

Here's the honest math: at 20% down and today's indicative rate, the median Omaha deal computes to roughly a 0.60 DSCR — below 1.0, meaning the rent doesn't fully cover the payment. That doesn't make the market uninvestable, but it does mean DSCR financing at the median price point requires bigger down payments, no-ratio programs at a premium, or deals bought meaningfully below the median.

Omaha isn't on our short-term-rental board — the opportunity we track here is the long-term rental engine: Nebraska lease economics, DSCR qualification, and rent momentum. Treat every number on this page as a metro-level screen, not an appraisal: rents and prices vary block by block, so run your actual address through the calculator and get a real quote before you write offers.

Data as of June 2026 — refreshed monthly. Metro-level estimates for screening, not underwriting.

Next Step

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Real pricing on your actual deal — no hard credit pull to see numbers, and the property's income does the qualifying, not your W2.

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Omaha investor FAQ

Is Omaha good for DSCR loans?

Omaha, NE is a below-average DSCR market on our index, scoring 52/100 (one of the 25 major metros we track). Its rent-to-price ratio of 0.46% (avg rent $1,300/mo vs $285,000 median price) pencils to an illustrative 0.60 DSCR on the median deal at 20% down, as of June 2026 data.

What is the average rent in Omaha?

Average rent in Omaha, NE is approximately $1,300 per month against a median home price of $285,000 (June 2026 metro-level estimate, refreshed monthly). Year-over-year rent growth is 3.0%.

Run the numbers yourself

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