Self-Employed Mortgage Loans | Bank Statement & P&L Programs | The Starks Team

Your Business Earns It.
We Can Help You Prove It.

Bank statement and P&L mortgage programs for self-employed borrowers who don't fit the conventional tax-return mold — and shouldn't have to.

🏦 Bank Statement Loans
📊 P&L Programs
🏆 Top 1% Originator
🇺🇸 All 50 States

Built for Borrowers Who Work for Themselves

If any of these sound familiar, there's very likely a loan program that works for your situation — even if a bank already turned you down.

💼

Business Owners

You run a profitable business but write off enough expenses that your tax returns paint the wrong picture to a conventional lender.

🧾

1099 Contractors

Consistent income, flexible schedule — but no W-2 to hand a standard underwriter. You're not unemployed. You're just not easy to categorize.

🏗️

Real Estate Investors

Multiple properties, depreciation deductions, and a tax return that doesn't reflect your actual cash position. Non-QM was practically designed for you.

📈

Entrepreneurs

Multiple entities, retained earnings, income that shifts year to year — conventional guidelines were written for W-2 employees, not you.

Three Ways to Qualify Without Tax Returns

Each program uses a different income source. I'll tell you which one fits your situation — sometimes it's a combination of two.

🏦

Bank Statement Loan

Instead of reviewing your tax returns, the lender averages 12 or 24 months of deposits from your personal or business bank statements to calculate qualifying income. This is the most common non-QM program for self-employed borrowers.

Business accounts typically have an expense factor applied — usually 50% — to account for operating costs. Personal accounts are generally used at face value. Some lenders let you combine both.

Best for: Business owners and contractors with clean, consistent deposit history who write off significant expenses on their returns.

  • 12 or 24 months of statements
  • Personal or business accounts accepted
  • Loan amounts up to $3M+ for strong profiles
  • Minimum credit score typically 620–680
  • Primary residences, second homes, investment properties
  • Fixed and adjustable rate options
  • Available in all 50 states
📊

P&L Statement Loan

A profit-and-loss statement prepared by a licensed CPA or accountant replaces your tax returns as the income verification document. This works especially well for borrowers with complex entity structures or significant non-cash deductions like depreciation.

The lender reviews your CPA-prepared P&L — typically covering 12 to 24 months — to determine net income for qualifying purposes. No tax transcripts required.

Best for: Business owners with multiple entities, high depreciation, or situations where bank statements alone don't tell the full story.

  • CPA-prepared P&L covers 12–24 months
  • No tax return transcripts required
  • Works with complex entity structures
  • Handles depreciation and non-cash deductions
  • Can be combined with bank statements
  • Loan amounts up to $3M+
  • Multiple property types eligible
💰

Asset-Based / Asset Depletion

If you have significant liquid assets — investment accounts, retirement funds, savings — some lenders will divide those assets over a set number of months to calculate a monthly qualifying income. No employment verification needed.

This is particularly useful for recently retired borrowers, high-net-worth individuals, or anyone whose wealth is in assets rather than active income.

Best for: High-net-worth borrowers with substantial liquid assets and low or irregular active income — including those who are semi-retired or between ventures.

  • Qualify on liquid assets, not income
  • Brokerage, retirement, savings accounts eligible
  • No employment verification required
  • Significant assets required (varies by lender)
  • Works alongside other income sources
  • Strong credit profile typically needed
  • Available for primary residence and investment

Why a Broker Has the Edge on Non-QM

Non-QM lending is where the broker advantage matters most. Every lender has different overlays, different income calculation methods, different appetite for certain borrower profiles. I shop all of them — so we find the one that wants your file, not just the nearest option.

🔍

Multiple Lenders, One Call

I'm not locked into one rate sheet. I submit your profile to lenders who actively compete for your loan.

📋

23 Years of Guideline Knowledge

I know which lenders accept 12-month statements, which prefer business vs. personal accounts, and who prices your profile best.

Pre-Underwritten Before Submission

I review your file thoroughly before it goes anywhere. Fewer surprises. Faster closes.

💬

Honest About Tradeoffs

Non-QM rates are typically higher than conventional. I'll tell you the real numbers so you can decide with clear eyes.

Bank Statement vs. Conventional: What's Different

This is a straightforward comparison — no spin. Non-QM programs have real tradeoffs worth knowing before you decide.

Feature Bank Statement / P&L Loan Conventional Loan
Income Verification Bank statements or CPA P&L Tax returns + W-2s required
Who Qualifies Self-employed, 1099, investors W-2 employees, standard income
Minimum Credit Score Typically 620–680 Typically 620+ (740+ for best pricing)
Rates vs. Conventional Typically higher Standard market rates
Down Payment Typically 10–20% minimum 3–20% depending on program
Loan Limits Up to $3M+ for strong profiles Conforming limit applies (unless jumbo)
Sold to Fannie/Freddie? No — portfolio lenders hold these Yes — meets agency guidelines
Best Use Case Tax deductions reduce qualifying income Standard W-2 income, clean docs

A note on rates

Yes, bank statement loans typically carry higher rates than conventional financing. That's a real tradeoff, and I won't pretend otherwise. The question I ask every borrower is: does owning this home at these terms make more sense than renting or waiting? For most self-employed buyers, the answer is yes — especially when you consider what you're leaving on the table while waiting for a conventional option that may never come.

Not Sure Which Program Fits You?

Tell me your situation in 60 seconds and I'll let you know which income documentation approach is most likely to work — no commitment, no pressure.

How the Process Works

Non-QM has a few extra moving parts compared to conventional loans — here's what to expect from start to close.

📞 1

Initial Conversation

We talk through your income situation — business structure, deposit patterns, how long you've been self-employed — to identify the best program fit.

📁 2

Document Collection

You gather 12–24 months of bank statements (and/or a CPA-prepared P&L). We calculate your qualifying income before anything gets submitted.

🔍 3

Lender Selection

I shop your file to the lenders whose non-QM guidelines and pricing best match your profile. You get options, not a take-it-or-leave-it offer.

4

Underwriting & Close

Because I pre-underwrite every file, conditions are anticipated in advance. No last-minute surprises. We close on time — or early.

Questions I Hear Every Day

Self-employed mortgage programs are genuinely more complex than conventional loans. Here are the questions I get most often.

Can I get a mortgage if my tax returns show low income?

Yes — and this is exactly the situation these programs were designed for. Bank statement and P&L loans qualify you on actual cash flow, not taxable income. If you're writing off significant business expenses (which is smart tax strategy), conventional lenders will hold that against you. Non-QM lenders won't. Learn more about non-QM loans here.

How many months of bank statements do I need?

Most programs require 12 or 24 months of personal or business bank statements. The lender averages your deposits over that period to calculate qualifying income — and will apply an expense factor (often around 50%) to business accounts to account for operating costs. Some lenders offer 12-month options for borrowers with strong credit and a clean deposit history.

What credit score do I need?

Requirements vary by lender and program, but most bank statement loans start around a 620–680 minimum. Higher scores typically open up better terms and more lender options. Because I shop multiple lenders, I can match you with one whose guidelines align with your credit profile — not every lender prices this the same way.

What's the difference between a bank statement loan and a P&L loan?

A bank statement loan uses your actual deposit history — the lender reviews 12 or 24 months of statements and averages the deposits. A P&L loan uses a profit-and-loss statement prepared by a licensed CPA instead of tax returns. P&L programs work particularly well for borrowers with complex entity structures or significant non-cash deductions like depreciation. Some lenders accept a combination of both.

Will I pay a higher rate than a conventional borrower?

Typically, yes — and I'll never pretend otherwise. Non-QM programs carry higher rates than conventional financing because they don't meet the agency guidelines required to sell to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac. But the right question isn't "Is the rate higher?" — it's "Does owning this home at this rate make more sense than renting or waiting?" For most self-employed borrowers I work with, the answer is yes.

How much can I borrow?

Loan amounts vary based on your deposit averages, credit score, down payment, and property type. Many non-QM programs go up to $3M or higher for strong borrower profiles. We'll calculate your qualifying income before you commit to anything, so you know your real number before you start house hunting.

Let's Figure Out What Your Business Actually Qualifies For

I've helped a lot of self-employed borrowers who had been told "no" by a bank. Most of them didn't need a perfect tax return — they needed the right program and the right lender. Let's find yours.