Should I Stop Taking Write-Offs to Qualify for a Mortgage?

The honest answer after 23 years closing self-employed loans — and the math behind it.

Nate Jones · NMLS #304056 · New American Funding

What People Ask

Should I stop taking write-offs to qualify for a mortgage?

Usually no. Reducing write-offs means paying more in taxes every year to qualify for a slightly lower mortgage rate. A bank statement loan lets you keep your deductions while still qualifying — using deposits instead of taxable income. Run the numbers on the write-off calculator first.

Is it worth taking fewer deductions to get a conventional mortgage?

For most self-employed borrowers, no. The annual tax cost of showing higher income typically exceeds the rate savings from a conventional loan. The break-even analysis almost always favors keeping deductions and using a bank statement loan.

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