Your income is real. The bank just doesn’t know how to read it.
Self-employed borrowers are not risky — they’re just documented differently. The right lender and the right income presentation unlocks prime-rate financing.
The accountant did their job. The bank doesn’t know what to do with the NOA.
A great accountant reduces taxable income — which makes your NOA look modest. Lenders who only read Line 15000 will decline you. Lenders who understand gross revenue, add-backs, corporate retained earnings, and stated income programs see a very different borrower. The gap between those two outcomes is who you work with.
Business owners and incorporated professionals
- Sole proprietors, partnerships, or incorporated business owners
- Minimum 2 years self-employed (some lenders: 1 year with strong file)
- Contractors and gig-economy workers with consistent revenue
- Professionals (doctors, lawyers, dentists) drawing from a corporation
- Borrowers with write-offs that reduce declared income significantly
- Good credit, solid equity or down payment, consistent industry history
Three ways self-employed income can qualify
- Traditional: 2-year average of Line 15000 after add-backs (CCA, amortization, etc.)
- Gross Revenue: some B-lenders use a % of gross revenue for sole props
- Stated Income: declare income with 2-year business history; down payment ≥10%; CMHC insured available
- Corporate: retained earnings + salary + dividends modeled together
- Bank Statements: some alternative lenders use 12-month deposit average
A-lender, B-lender, and alternative paths
A-Lender (Prime Rates)
Requires strong 2-year income history with add-backs that bring declared income up. Prime-rate access. Stress-test applies. Full documentation required.
CMHC Stated Income Program
2 years self-employed, 10% minimum down payment, strong credit. Insured premium applies. Income stated by borrower but must be reasonable for industry. Many business owners access A-lender rates through this path.
B-Lender (Alt-A)
Rate 1–2% above prime but full income flexibility. Great bridge for borrowers building their declared income history or recovering from a business disruption year.
Private / MIC Lender
Asset-backed lending when income qualification is complex. Higher rate, short term (1 year), used as a bridge to prime lending. Always structured with a clear exit plan.
2-Year NOAs
CRA Notice of Assessment for the last 2 tax years. Core document for any self-employed file. CRA My Account can pull these instantly.
T1 Generals or Corporate Returns (T2)
Full tax return shows gross revenue, expenses, and write-offs. Add-backs are calculated from Schedule 1 of T1 or T2.
Business Bank Statements
12 months of business account statements showing deposit history and cash flow. Used for stated income and B-lender qualifying.
Business Proof
Business registration, HST registration, or professional license. Confirms legitimacy and operating history.
Down Payment Docs
Personal bank statements. Self-employed equity from the business may not directly qualify — ensure personal funds are separate and documented.
Accountant Letter
CPA letter confirming self-employment type, years in business, and income for current year if YTD gap is large. Not always required but helps complex files.
Your bank has one playbook. I have 140+ lenders.
I know exactly which lenders allow CCA, interest, amortization, and home-office add-backs to boost your qualifying income.
Sole prop, incorporated, partnership — each lender has a preference. I match the file to the lender who wants it.
If you start at B-lender rates, I build a 12–24 month plan to migrate to A-lender prime pricing.
One application. I approach the right lenders the right way — protecting your credit score from multiple hard pulls.
Self-Employed Mortgage in Canada: How Income Actually Qualifies
The short version — and you can always call for the full picture.
Prefer it explained in plain English?
In a short, no-obligation call I’ll walk you through exactly how this works for your situation — no jargon, no pressure.
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