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Program Comparison · 8 min read · Updated April 2026 · By Mike Certo

Bank Statement vs. P&L Only: Which Fits Your Business?

These are the two most-used Non-QM programs for self-employed borrowers — and they produce very different qualifying income depending on your business profile. Here's the decision framework.

What each program is

  • Bank Statement Loan: qualifies you on 12 or 24 months of personal or business bank deposits. No tax return, no P&L.
  • P&L Only Loan: qualifies you on a CPA- or tax-preparer-prepared profit & loss statement covering 12 or 24 months. No tax return, no deposit math.

How they read your income differently

Bank Statement

Underwriter sums deposits, applies an expense factor (50% default, lower with CPA letter), divides by months. Qualifying income reflects cash flow, not net profit.

P&L Only

Underwriter takes the net income line on the P&L as qualifying income. No expense haircut. Reflects what your books say you actually made.

Decision framework

Pick Bank Statement when…Pick P&L Only when…
Your business has low overhead (consultant, agent, online services).You have a CPA who closes books regularly.
Most of your real revenue arrives as deposits — services, product sales, recurring billing.You operate an entity (LLC / S-Corp) with real recurring expenses.
You don't have a CPA or your books are informal.You'd rather underwrite to net profit than to deposits.
You want the option to apply a low expense factor with a CPA letter.One clean document is preferable to 24 statements.

Three worked examples

Example 1: Marketing consultant (low overhead, high cash flow)

  • Business revenue: $240K/yr · real overhead: ~20% ($48K)
  • Bank Statement: 24mo business deposits at 25% expense factor (with CPA letter) → ~$15K/mo qualifying.
  • P&L Only: net income on P&L ~$192K/yr → ~$16K/mo qualifying.
  • Verdict: close call; P&L slightly higher because no expense factor is applied.

Example 2: E-commerce store (real product COGS)

  • Revenue: $480K/yr · real COGS + overhead ~70% ($336K) · net ~$144K
  • Bank Statement: 24mo business deposits at 50% expense factor → ~$20K/mo qualifying. (But this is wrong — true expenses are 70%, not 50%, so this overstates real cash flow.)
  • P&L Only: net $144K/yr → $12K/mo qualifying. (Reflects reality.)
  • Verdict: Bank Statement looks better on paper but is risky in QC. P&L Only is more honest and underwrites cleaner.

Example 3: Real-estate agent (1099 income)

Neither — go to the 1099 Only program. Most-recent 1099 + 60 days of statements is cleaner than either bank statement or P&L.

What you'll need either way

  • Bank Statement: 12 or 24 most-recent months of statements + business license + optional CPA letter for lower expense factor.
  • P&L Only: 12 or 24 month P&L on CPA / tax preparer letterhead, signed and dated, with their license number.
  • Both: 2 years self-employment history (most programs), standard mortgage docs.

Next step

Send us your most-recent 24 months of business bank statements or your most-recent CPA-prepared P&L. We'll run both calculations and tell you which produces higher qualifying income for your specific file.

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