Self-employed & business-owner programs (alternative income verification)
Get a mortgage that understands how you actually earn your money.
How lenders view self-employed and business owners
Business track record and stability
Lenders look at how long you’ve been operating, how consistent your activity is, and whether the business depends on one or two key clients or a broader base. We frame your history—years in business, contracts, repeat customers—so it reads as durable, not risky.
Income patterns, not just last year
They’re usually averaging more than one year of income, and they may be adjusting for big swings. We go through your T1s, NOAs, financial statements, and bank activity to show a pattern: what’s recurring, what’s seasonal, and what should be treated as ongoing instead of one-off.
Personal credit and liquidity position
Even with a strong business, lenders will still look at your personal credit behaviour and available reserves. We review your credit report, current debts, and accessible savings so there are no surprises when the file hits underwriting.
What these programs are designed to solve
Make-income-count strategy
Document game plan
Lender match for your profile
From first conversation to approval decision
Fact-finding and baseline review
Numbers translation and structuring
Underwriter-ready submission
Conditions, clarifications, and funding
Who typically uses these programs
Incorporated owners
If you pay yourself a mix of salary and dividends—or retain earnings in the company—we structure the file so lenders see the full picture, not just the smaller number on your tax line.
Sole proprietors and freelancers
For contractors, consultants, gig workers, and other unincorporated businesses, we show your track record through tax returns and business bank activity, and highlight stability where it exists, even if month-to-month income varies.
Professionals with corporate setups
Doctors, dentists, lawyers, and other professionals often use corporations for tax and liability reasons. We coordinate business statements, T1s, and compensation patterns so the total income story is properly captured.
Entrepreneurs with recent changes
Maybe you left a salaried role to grow your own operation, or merged ventures, or had an unusual year. We explain those transitions in a way that makes sense to a lender instead of letting them guess.