If you've ever been told by a bank that you "don't qualify" — despite having money in the bank, a solid credit score, and the ability to comfortably afford the payment — there's a good chance a Non-QM mortgage is what you were missing.
Non-QM loans have become one of the most important tools in a loan officer's arsenal over the past several years. Yet most borrowers have never heard of them. Let's fix that.
QM stands for Qualified Mortgage — a standard created by the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB) after the 2008 financial crisis. Qualified Mortgages have to meet specific criteria around income documentation, debt-to-income ratios, loan features, and more. Lenders who issue QM loans get certain legal protections, so most banks stick to them religiously.
A Non-QM mortgage is simply any loan that falls outside those guidelines. It's not a bad loan — it's just a different one. Non-QM lenders take on more of the risk themselves, which gives them the freedom to evaluate borrowers in ways that a traditional bank can't.
The result: a whole category of creditworthy borrowers who get rejected by conventional lenders can often qualify for a Non-QM loan instead.
Non-QM loans were designed for borrowers whose financial picture is real and solid — just not standard. That typically includes:
If you own a business, you know the drill: you write off legitimate expenses, which reduces your taxable income, which makes it look like you earn less than you do. A traditional lender sees those tax returns and says no. A Non-QM bank statement loan looks at your actual deposits over 12–24 months instead — a much more accurate picture of what's coming in.
If you're building a rental portfolio, you don't want every new property to run through your personal income calculation. DSCR loans (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) qualify the loan based on the property's rental income relative to its mortgage payment — not your personal W-2 or tax returns. The property pays for itself; the lender verifies that math.
Retirees, early retirees, and people living off investments often have substantial wealth but not much taxable income. Asset depletion loans solve this by dividing your liquid assets over the loan term to calculate a qualifying "income." $2 million in a brokerage account goes a long way.
Some Non-QM programs work with borrowers who had a foreclosure, short sale, or bankruptcy more recently than conventional guidelines allow. If you're 12–24 months out from a credit event with a clean track record since, there may be a program for you.
Non-U.S. citizens buying property in the U.S. often don't have domestic credit history or tax returns. Non-QM foreign national programs use alternative documentation to qualify the loan.
| Loan Type | How You Qualify | Best For |
|---|---|---|
| Bank Statement Loan | 12–24 months of personal or business bank deposits | Self-employed borrowers |
| DSCR Loan | Property's rental income vs. mortgage payment | Real estate investors |
| Asset Depletion Loan | Liquid assets divided over loan term = qualifying income | Retirees, high-net-worth borrowers |
| 1099 Loan | 1099s in place of full tax returns | Gig workers, contractors |
| P&L Loan | CPA-prepared profit & loss statement | Business owners with complex returns |
| Foreign National Loan | Alternative docs, no U.S. credit required | International buyers |
Non-QM loans are a genuinely useful tool, but they're not free. Here's what to expect:
Higher interest rates. Because the lender can't sell these loans to Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac, they hold more risk. You'll typically pay 0.5%–1.5% more than a comparable conventional loan rate, depending on the program and your profile.
Larger down payments. Many Non-QM programs require 10%–20% down, sometimes more for investment properties or lower credit scores.
More documentation upfront. Even though the income docs are different, Non-QM lenders still want to understand your financial picture thoroughly. Expect to gather bank statements, asset statements, and sometimes a CPA letter.
Fewer lenders offer them. Not every loan officer or bank has access to Non-QM programs. You need to work with someone who does.
Here's a simple way to think about it:
Massachusetts is one of the strongest Non-QM markets in the country. The state has a large base of self-employed tech workers, consultants, and small business owners — exactly the borrowers Non-QM was designed for. Home prices are high enough that many buyers are already in jumbo territory, and investors are active across Greater Boston, the South Shore, and Western MA.
If you're in Massachusetts and you've been told you don't qualify for a mortgage, there's a reasonable chance a Non-QM program changes that answer.
I work with Non-QM borrowers regularly — self-employed buyers, investors building portfolios, and high-net-worth clients who need more flexibility than a big bank can offer. If you want to know whether a Non-QM loan is the right fit for your situation, book a free call and we'll walk through your options together. No guesswork, no obligation.
Nate Moghadam is a mortgage loan officer at Fairway Independent Mortgage Corporation, licensed in Massachusetts and 13 other states. NMLS #906770. Company NMLS #2289. Equal Housing Lender.