A bank statement loan qualifies you using the deposits in your bank account instead of your tax returns, which makes it built for self employed borrowers whose write offs shrink their taxable income. A traditional mortgage qualifies you off W2s, pay stubs, and two years of tax returns. If you own your business and your tax returns do not reflect what you truly earn, the bank statement loan is usually the better fit.

If you are self employed, your tax returns may not show the real strength of your business. You can have steady deposits, strong revenue, and a clear ability to repay, and still watch a traditional lender count only the modest number left after your write offs. That gap is not a flaw in your business. It is a flaw in how traditional underwriting reads it. A bank statement loan was built to close that gap by looking at the money flowing into your accounts instead of the income left on your tax return.
Self employed and not sure which path fits? Let us look at your deposits, not just your tax returns.
No impact on credit score
No hidden costs
No documents required
Self employed borrowers, business owners, 1099 earners
W2 employees with steady documented income
12 or 24 months of personal or business bank statements
Two years of tax returns, W2s, recent pay stubs
No
Yes
Commonly starts around 620
Varies by loan type: VA may go as low as 500 with certain lenders, FHA may start around 580, and conventional commonly starts around 620
Often requires more money down than traditional options
Varies by program: VA, FHA, and conventional may offer lower down payment paths depending on eligibility
Often available up to 3 million and beyond
Conforming limit caps most loans lower
Your write offs make your taxable income look smaller than your real income
Your income is fully documented on paper
Tax returns not showing your full income? Compare your options in a few quick questions.
A bank statement loan is a non QM mortgage that lets self employed borrowers qualify on the actual cash flowing into their accounts rather than the income reported after deductions. Instead of handing over tax returns, you provide 12 or 24 months of bank statements, and the lender averages your deposits to establish a qualifying income. For a business owner who writes off vehicles, equipment, home office, travel, and payroll, this is often the difference between a denial and a clear to close.
One thing worth being clear about: a bank statement loan is not automatically easier because of credit. The credit floor is similar to conventional. The real advantage is the income method. It can let a self employed borrower qualify on deposits instead of the taxable income left after write offs.
A traditional mortgage, usually a conventional or government backed loan, qualifies you on documented income. The lender pulls two years of tax returns, W2s, and pay stubs, then calculates your debt to income ratio off the income reported to the IRS. For a W2 employee this is clean and straightforward. For a self employed borrower, the same deductions that lower your tax bill also lower the income a traditional lender will count, which is exactly where strong earners get denied.
It is the write off trap. The tax code rewards you for reducing taxable income, so a smart business owner deducts aggressively and shows a modest net profit. A traditional underwriter only counts that net number. So a contractor who clears strong revenue can look, on paper, like they barely qualify, even with money in the bank and a thriving business. The bank statement loan was built to solve this exact problem by looking at deposits instead of deductions.
Already been told no by a bank? That does not have to be the end of the conversation.
No impact on credit score
No hidden costs
No documents required
I built UHome for exactly this borrower. Most of my business is closing loans the big lenders will not touch, and self employed approvals are at the heart of that.
I have approved a bank statement borrower on a cash out refinance, taken a one year self employed borrower to the closing table, and structured files other lenders called impossible.
As an independent broker I am not stuck inside one bank’s overlays. I shop your file across a network of non QM lenders to find the program that actually fits how you earn. You are not a square peg. There is a loan for you, and my job is to find it.

UHome Mortgage helps self employed borrowers, business owners, 1099 earners, and investors explore bank statement loan options across Georgia, with licensing in Alabama and Texas as well. If your tax returns do not show your full income, I can review whether a bank statement loan or a traditional path makes more sense for your situation. Whether you are buying in the Atlanta metro or refinancing a home you already own, the goal is the same: qualify you on how you actually earn.

Questions we get every day, answered the way we’d want them answered. Still stuck? Call 404-919-5533.
Yes. A bank statement loan lets you qualify using 12 or 24 months of bank deposits instead of tax returns, which is ideal for self employed borrowers.
Yes. Bank statement loans are available for purchases, refinances, and cash out refinances, so you can use one to buy or to tap equity you already have.
Yes. They are a recognized non QM product offered by established lenders, designed for borrowers whose income does not fit traditional documentation. They are not a loophole, they are a different and fully legitimate way to verify income.
Non QM loans can carry a higher rate than conventional financing because they serve borrowers traditional underwriting turns away. For many self employed buyers, getting approved at all is the priority, and I work to structure the most competitive terms available for your file.
The first step is a quick review of your deposits and your goal. Answer a few short questions and I will help you see whether a bank statement loan or a traditional path fits best, with no commitment to lend.
No pressure. No commitment to lend. Just a smarter starting point.
Serving self employed borrowers in Georgia, Alabama, and Texas. Based in Georgia.