Investing in Silt, CO — Market Analysis
Silt is a solid LTR cash-flow market with affordable entry prices and steady Colorado rental demand from working families and regional employees. With a median home price of $385,000, acquiring a rental property in Silt requires a minimum $77,000 down payment for a DSCR loan (20% of purchase price) or $96,000 for a conventional investment property loan (25%). At current DSCR investor rates around 7.5%, your estimated monthly payment on a $308,000 DSCR loan is approximately $2,153 in principal and interest, with a total PITIA (including taxes and insurance) of approximately $2,442/month.
For a long-term rental strategy, Silt properties at the median price point generate an estimated $3,200/month in gross rent — a gross rent multiplier of approximately 10.0x. After accounting for all operating expenses including vacancy, property management, maintenance, capital reserves, taxes, and insurance (typically 35% of gross), estimated net operating income runs around $2,080/month. This produces an estimated cap rate of 6.5% and an estimated monthly cash flow of $-70 after P&I on a DSCR loan. The estimated DSCR ratio of 1.31x qualifies at the 1.0 threshold most lenders require.
Short-term rental activity in Silt is limited or heavily regulated. Most investors in this market pursue long-term rental strategies targeting local workforce, families, and professional tenants. DSCR qualification here is based on a market rent appraisal from a licensed appraiser — Tayton Capital coordinates the appraisal as part of the DSCR loan process.
Garfield County's high-balance conforming limit of $1,209,750 means DSCR loans up to $1,209,750 at 80% LTV qualify for Fannie Mae/Freddie Mac-eligible investor pricing — typically 0.5-0.75% lower than true jumbo DSCR rates. For Silt investors acquiring properties in the $1M+ range, confirming whether the transaction stays within the conforming limit significantly impacts the rate and investor pricing tier.
Select rural addresses around Silt qualify for USDA Rural Development loans. USDA is owner-occupied only — not available for investment properties — but investors can use USDA to acquire a primary residence and convert it to a rental after 12 months of owner-occupancy.

