Self-employed Canadians often earn strong incomes but report lower taxable income due to legitimate business deductions. This creates a frustrating gap: you can afford the mortgage, but your tax returns say otherwise. Stated income mortgages bridge that gap — but they come at a cost.
Why self-employed borrowers need stated income mortgages
The income documentation problem
| Borrower Type | Reported Income (Tax Return) | Actual Cash Flow | Bank Qualification |
|---|---|---|---|
| T4 employee earning $120,000 | $120,000 | $120,000 | Qualifies easily |
| Self-employed contractor billing $180,000 | $65,000 (after deductions) | $130,000+ | Declines or qualifies for much less |
| Incorporated professional earning $250,000 | $80,000 (salary) + dividends | $200,000+ | Qualifies based on $80K only |
| Small business owner | $50,000 (after all business deductions) | $150,000+ | Severely under-qualifies |
The core issue: A-lenders (banks) use your line 15000 income from your Notice of Assessment (NOA). If you write off vehicle expenses, home office, meals, travel, CCA, and other legitimate deductions, your reported income may be 40–60% of what you actually earn.
Types of alternative documentation
What B-lenders accept instead of NOAs
| Documentation Level | What You Provide | Typical Rate Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Full alternative | 12–24 months of business bank statements showing deposits + accountant letter confirming income is reasonable | +0.75–1.5% |
| Stated income | Self-declared income + 6–12 months of bank statements + proof of self-employment (business license, GST/HST registration) | +1.0–2.0% |
| Equity-based | Minimal income documentation; decision based primarily on property value and down payment size | +2.0–3.5% |
The accountant letter
Most B-lenders require a letter from your CPA or accountant that includes:
| Required Element | Details |
|---|---|
| Business type | Description of your business and industry |
| Years in business | Minimum 2 years typically required |
| Stated income range | Accountant confirms your stated income is reasonable for the business |
| Business health | Confirmation the business is active and in good standing |
| Accountant credentials | CPA designation, firm letterhead, contact info |
Important: The accountant does not guarantee your income — they confirm it is reasonable. Lenders cross-reference with bank statements and industry norms.
Lender options
B-lenders (best option for most self-employed borrowers)
| Lender | Rate Premium vs A-Lender | Min Down Payment | Min Credit Score | Lender Fee |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Home Trust | +0.50–1.50% | 10–20% | 600+ | 0–1% |
| Equitable Bank | +0.75–1.50% | 10–20% | 620+ | 0–1% |
| ICICI Bank Canada | +0.75–2.00% | 15–20% | 600+ | 0.50–1% |
| Bridgewater Bank | +0.50–1.25% | 15–20% | 650+ | 0–0.50% |
| RMG Mortgages | +0.75–1.50% | 10–20% | 620+ | 0.50–1% |
| CMLS Financial | +0.50–1.25% | 10–20% | 620+ | 0–1% |
| First National (Excalibur) | +0.75–1.50% | 10–20% | 620+ | 0.50–1% |
Private lenders (when B-lenders decline)
| Factor | Private Lender Terms |
|---|---|
| Interest rate | 8–14% |
| Lender fee | 1–3% of the mortgage amount |
| Broker fee | 1–2% additional |
| Max LTV | 65–75% |
| Credit score | Flexible — some accept 500+ |
| Income documentation | Minimal — primarily equity-based |
| Term | 1–2 years (short-term only) |
| Best for | Temporary bridge while building income documentation for a B-lender |
Cost comparison — worked example
Scenario: $500,000 purchase, $100,000 down (20%), $400,000 mortgage
| Lender Type | Rate | Monthly Payment | 5-Year Interest Cost | Lender Fee | Total 5-Year Cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A-lender | 5.25% | $2,371 | $92,120 | $0 | $92,120 |
| B-lender | 6.75% | $2,723 | $121,540 | $4,000 (1%) | $125,540 |
| Private | 10.00% | $3,516 | $170,460 | $12,000 (3%) | $182,460 |
B-lender premium over A-lender: $33,420 over 5 years ($557/mo) Private premium over A-lender: $90,340 over 5 years ($1,506/mo)
Qualification requirements
B-lender stated income requirements
| Requirement | Details |
|---|---|
| Self-employment history | Minimum 2 years (some require 3 years) |
| Business verification | Business license, GST/HST registration, CRA business number |
| Bank statements | 6–24 months showing consistent business deposits |
| Accountant letter | CPA confirming stated income is reasonable |
| Credit score | 600+ (650+ for best B-lender rates) |
| Down payment | 10–20% minimum (higher down = better rate) |
| Debt service ratios | GDS under 39%, TDS under 44% (some B-lenders allow up to 50%) |
| Property type | Residential (1–4 units); some restrictions on rural or non-standard properties |
How much income can you state?
Lenders use reasonability tests. You cannot claim $500,000 income from a small landscaping business. Industry benchmarks include:
| Self-Employment Type | Reasonable Stated Income Range |
|---|---|
| IT consultant | $80,000–$200,000 |
| Realtor | $60,000–$250,000 |
| Contractor / trades | $70,000–$150,000 |
| Restaurant owner | $50,000–$120,000 |
| Rideshare / delivery driver | $40,000–$70,000 |
| Freelance professional | $60,000–$150,000 |
| Incorporated physician / dentist | $150,000–$400,000 |
| Small retail business | $50,000–$100,000 |
If your stated income is significantly above industry norms, the lender will require additional justification (contracts, client list, business financials).
Strategies to move from B-lender to A-lender
The goal for most borrowers is to use a stated income mortgage temporarily, then qualify with an A-lender at renewal for a lower rate.
| Strategy | How It Helps |
|---|---|
| Report higher income next year | Reduce deductions strategically; show higher line 15000 income on your NOA |
| Use the CRA gross-up | A-lenders can gross up self-employed income by adding back certain deductions (business-use-of-home, CCA, meals at 50%) |
| Two-year NOA average | Build two consecutive years of higher reported income; A-lenders average the two years |
| Incorporate and pay salary | A consistent T4 salary from your corporation can qualify you with an A-lender |
| Pay down debt | Lower TDS ratio means you need less income to qualify |
| Work with a mortgage broker | Brokers know which A-lenders have the most favorable self-employed policies |
The income gross-up — how A-lenders help self-employed
Some A-lenders allow self-employed borrowers to add back certain tax deductions:
| Deduction | Gross-Up Allowed? |
|---|---|
| Business-use-of-home | Yes — most A-lenders add this back |
| Capital cost allowance (CCA) | Yes — most A-lenders add this back |
| Motor vehicle (business portion) | Some lenders allow partial add-back |
| Meals and entertainment (50%) | Some lenders allow |
| One-time expenses | Yes — if clearly non-recurring |
| Depreciation | Yes |
| Interest on business loans | Sometimes |
Example: Self-employed income of $85,000 after deductions. With $15,000 in CCA, $8,000 in business-use-of-home, and $5,000 in meals deductions grossed up, the qualifying income becomes $113,000. This could be the difference between qualifying with an A-lender and needing a B-lender.
CMHC insured options for self-employed
CMHC offers the Self-Employed Without Traditional Income Validation program:
| Feature | Details |
|---|---|
| Down payment | 10% minimum (not available with 5% down) |
| Documentation | Business financial statements, bank statements, accountant letter |
| Credit score | 680+ recommended |
| Available through | Select A-lenders and B-lenders |
| Insurance premium | Higher than standard CMHC premiums |
| Max amortization | 25 years |
| Rate | Higher than full-doc insured rates but lower than uninsured B-lender rates |
This program sits between full A-lender rates and typical B-lender stated income rates.
Common mistakes
| Mistake | Consequence | How to Avoid |
|---|---|---|
| Overstating income | Mortgage fraud; loan rejection; potential criminal charges | State a reasonable income supported by bank statements |
| Not having an accountant | B-lenders require an accountant letter | Establish a CPA relationship well before applying |
| Applying to the wrong lender | Wasting time with banks that will decline you | Use a mortgage broker who specializes in self-employed |
| Not saving bank statements | Cannot demonstrate cash flow | Keep business and personal accounts separate; save 24 months of statements |
| Mixing personal and business accounts | Lender cannot verify business income | Separate accounts are essential |
| Not planning for renewal | Stuck at B-lender rates indefinitely | Build an A-lender qualification plan from day one |
Step-by-step: getting a stated income mortgage
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Confirm you have 2+ years of self-employment history |
| 2 | Gather documentation — bank statements (12–24 months), business license, GST registration, accountant letter |
| 3 | Contact a mortgage broker — specifically one experienced with self-employed borrowers and B-lenders |
| 4 | Determine your stated income — reasonable for your industry, supported by bank deposits |
| 5 | Get pre-approved — broker submits to 2–3 B-lenders to find the best rate |
| 6 | Make your offer and close — process is similar to a standard mortgage with additional documentation |
| 7 | Plan your exit strategy — work toward A-lender qualification for renewal |