Arizona Self-Employed Loans · Cornerstone First Mortgage · NMLS #173855 Call Mike Certo · (480) 296-6513
Program

1099 Only loans: your 1099 is the income doc.

If your income arrives on Form 1099 — contractor, real-estate agent, financial advisor, gig worker — you don't need to wade through tax returns to qualify. Your most-recent 1099 plus 60 days of statements does the job.

Quick answer: what is a 1099 Only loan?

  • Income source: most-recent 1099(s) + 60 days of bank statements as a sanity check.
  • Tax returns required? No.
  • Who it's for: independent contractors, commissioned salespeople, gig workers, real-estate agents — anyone whose income arrives on Form 1099.
  • Min FICO: typically 660+.
  • Down payment: typically 15–25%.
  • History: usually 2 years of 1099 income.

How underwriting calculates 1099 income

The underwriter takes the gross 1099 amount and applies an expense haircut to get qualifying income — same logic as business bank statements, since 1099 revenue typically has expenses behind it.

  • Default expense factor: typically 50% (1099 gross × 50% = qualifying income).
  • Lower expense factor can be used with a CPA letter documenting actual overhead — common for low-overhead 1099 work like real-estate agents, financial advisors, and pure-service contractors.
  • The 60 days of bank statements should show deposits roughly consistent with the 1099 revenue.

Worked example

Real-estate agent, prior-year 1099 = $240,000. Business overhead minimal (license, MLS, marketing) — CPA attests true expense ratio is 20%.

  • Default 50% factor → $120,000/yr → $10,000/mo qualifying income.
  • 20% factor with CPA letter → $192,000/yr → $16,000/mo qualifying income.

1099 Only vs. Bank Statement — when to pick which

If your income is primarily 1099 from a small number of payers, 1099 Only is usually cleaner — one document instead of 24 statements. If you receive a mix of 1099 and direct-payment work, bank statements may capture more of the picture.

What you'll need

  • Most-recent 1099(s) — most programs accept the prior tax year's 1099s.
  • 60 days of business or personal bank statements showing recent deposits.
  • Optional CPA letter for a lower expense factor.
  • 2 years of self-employment / 1099 history.
  • Standard mortgage docs.

FAQ

I just switched from W-2 to 1099 last year. Will 1099 Only work?

If you have less than 2 years of 1099 history, you're likely better off with 12-month bank statements or, if you have liquid assets, an asset-based program.

My 1099s are inconsistent year to year. Does that matter?

Investors typically use the most-recent year. If the most-recent year is meaningfully lower than the year before, underwriting may average — we'll model both.

Do I need to itemize my expenses?

Not for the loan. The expense factor is applied programmatically — a CPA letter can lower it, but you don't need to schedule expenses out.

Can I use 1099 income from multiple payers?

Yes. Underwriter sums the 1099 totals across all payers.

My 1099 has YTD gross only — no prior year. What now?

If you have less than 12 months of 1099 income, talk to us about bank statement programs or asset-based qualification instead.

Ready to see if this is the right program?

Start the application or book a 20-minute call. We'll model real numbers, not estimates.