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The Bankable-Not-Bank-Shaped Dossier

How to look trustworthy without ever having worn a necktie.

You may not have a W-2, a corner office, or even a functioning printer—but you can still look absolutely irresistible to a lender. You just need a clean, logical, financially-flavored packet that whispers, “This borrower? Rock solid.”


🧠 TL;DR (The Lender’s Dream in One Sentence)

Lenders don’t care if you wear pants to Zoom meetings. They care whether your cash flow is real, repeatable, and resilient. Put together a tidy dossier with identity, banking, income clues, obligations, reserves, and any real estate collateral. And if there’s a weird deposit or unexplained asset? Say something before they ask. Trust us.


✅ The Checklist (Yes, You Can Print and Gleefully Check Boxes)

🪪 Identity & Entity

  • Legal names (spelled the same in all 37 places, please)

  • Current address, ID that hasn’t expired

  • Entity docs: Articles, Operating Agreement, EIN

  • CPA letter confirming they know you and you use numbers on purpose

🏦 Banking & Cash Flow

  • 12–24 months of bank statements (business and/or personal)

  • A neat little table showing average monthly deposits

  • Label anything unusual: that $92k wire from “consulting” should come with a contract, not mystery

💸 Revenue Evidence

  • Contracts, renewals, 1099s, K-1s, distribution logs—anything that screams “they pay me”

  • Sales pipeline: signed LOIs, retainers, aged receivables (top 10 customers, not 10,000)

📉 Fixed Obligations

  • Personal & business debt schedule (balance • interest rate • monthly payment • maturity)

  • Leases: office, equipment, possibly that regrettable Range Rover

  • Any personal guarantees hiding in the fine print

🧾 Reserves & Liquidity

  • Account balances: checking, savings, money market, brokerage, retirement, crypto (don’t leave out the sad ones)

  • Liquid vs. restricted: tell them what you can touch

  • Show you have enough for the down payment and reserves—lenders love a buffer

🏘️ Collateral (if real estate is in the mix)

  • Purchase contract or current mortgage statement

  • Insurance binder or quote, tax statement, HOA dues letter (because someone always forgets this)

  • If it’s a build or rehab: budget + Schedule of Values + timeline (ideally not sketched on a napkin)


🛠 Lane-Specific Add-Ons (Your Flavor May Vary)

  • Bank-Statement Loans: Expense factor by industry or CPA-supported ratio

  • DSCR Loans: Lease or market rent (Form 1007); T-12 if short-term rental

  • Asset-Qualifier: 60–90 days of asset statements, with seasoning and haircuts that would make a hairstylist weep


🧮 How Underwriters Actually Think: A Mini-Example

You submit:

  • 24 months of bank statements

  • Avg deposits = $40,000/month

  • Expense factor = 50% → qualifying income = $20,000/month

  • 9 months of PITIA in reserves

  • A clean debt schedule

  • One mystery $95k deposit—explained with a signed contract and invoice

Underwriter reaction:
“Ah. Logical. Documented. Pleasantly boring. Approved.”


🚩 Red Flags (and How to Disarm Them Before They Explode)

  • NSFs or random deposits from Narnia: Clean the last 90 days. Label everything.

  • Business/personal commingling: If you’re mixing, keep it traceable and consistent. No financial smoothies.

  • Thin reserves + high leverage: Either increase the down payment or show a backup plan (cash under mattress doesn’t count).


Final Thought:

You don’t have to be W-2 shaped—you just have to be organized, explainable, and mildly impressive on paper. Lenders aren’t looking for perfection. They’re looking for a story that adds up and a borrower who won’t disappear mid-renovation to “pursue vanlife.”


Get a 12-minute pre-underwrite call · Download the 1-page dossier checklist (PDF)

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