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Alternative documentation for qualifying self-employed borrowers

Bank-Statement Loans

Bank-statement programs may evaluate qualifying cash flow differently from traditional tax-return analysis. The structure must match the business, deposits, expense factor, documentation, and property goal.

Who this may help

A potential path when tax returns do not reflect current cash flow.

For eligible self-employed borrowers whose bank deposits may provide a more useful income picture than conventional tax-return calculations.

Deposit review

Separate qualifying business revenue from transfers, one-time deposits, and nonbusiness activity.

Expense-factor analysis

Apply the program’s allowable business-expense methodology and supporting documentation.

Full loan comparison

Compare down payment, reserves, pricing, prepayment terms where applicable, and conventional alternatives.

Common questions

Bank-Statement Loans FAQ

How many months of statements are needed?

Requirements vary by program and may use personal or business statements over a specified period.

Are all deposits counted as income?

No. Transfers, loans, refunds, and other nonbusiness deposits may need to be excluded or documented.

Is this the same as a conventional loan?

No. Bank-statement programs are generally Non-QM products with different documentation, pricing, and eligibility requirements.

Build the next step around your specific scenario.

Program eligibility, documentation, pricing, and availability vary. Start with a focused review before deciding on a loan structure.