Your business deposits $25K/month. Your tax return says you make $80K. Traditional lenders see the tax return — and deny you.
Sound familiar? You're not alone, and you have options.
The Self-Employed Paradox
Good business owners minimize taxes. That means write-offs, deductions, and depreciation.
These are smart tax strategies — but they make your tax return income look artificially low to mortgage lenders.
Bank Statement Loans
Bank statement loans are designed for exactly this situation. Instead of tax returns, the lender looks at 12-24 months of your bank statements.
They calculate your average monthly deposits and use that as your qualifying income. If you deposit $25K/month, that's your income.
Requirements for Bank Statement Loans
- 2+ years self-employed
- 12-24 months of bank statements (personal or business)
- Minimum 660 credit score
- 10-20% down payment
- Loan amounts up to $3M
The Write-Off Tradeoff
Here's the real question: are your write-offs saving you more in taxes than they're costing you in higher mortgage rates?
Bank statement loans typically carry rates 0.5-1.5% higher than conventional. But the tax savings from your write-offs may far exceed that premium.
We built a free Write-Off Calculator to help you run that exact comparison.
Other Options
If bank statements don't work, there are other paths. Asset utilization loans use your savings as qualifying income. Profit-and-loss programs use a CPA letter.
The right program depends on your specific situation — and that's where having a loan officer who specializes in self-employed borrowers matters.
Talk to Nate
Nate has helped hundreds of self-employed borrowers get approved when other lenders said no.
Call (858) 254-0955 for a free review. No credit pull, no obligation.