Home / Trading Glossary / Debt Service Coverage Ratio
D

Debt Service Coverage Ratio

Trading Glossary

Definition

The Debt Service Coverage Ratio (DSCR) is a financial metric that measures a company's or an individual's ability to cover their debt obligations using their operating income. A DSCR above 1.0 indicates that there is sufficient income to service the debt, while a ratio below 1.0 suggests potential difficulty in meeting repayment obligations. It is commonly used by lenders and investors to assess financial health.

Example

If a business generates $500,000 in annual net operating income and has $400,000 in annual debt payments, its DSCR would be 1.25, indicating it comfortably covers its obligations. Traders and investors analysing companies as part of a fundamental strategy may use DSCR to evaluate whether a business is financially stable or over-leveraged. A declining DSCR over time can be an early warning sign of financial distress, which may negatively impact the company's stock price or creditworthiness.

All glossary terms in "D"

Understanding terms is the first step

Learn the language behind real trading decisions with clearer definitions, better context, and structured examples.

Back to Glossary