Self-Employed Mortgage Ontario: How to Get Approved Without T4s
Being self-employed in Ontario gives you freedom — but when it comes to getting a mortgage, that freedom can feel like a penalty. Traditional banks want T4s, pay stubs, and stable employment letters. If you're running your own business, you likely have none of those. The good news: there are more options than most self-employed borrowers realize.
Paul's 15-year reality check: Most self-employed mortgage rejections aren't about creditworthiness — they're about documentation mismatch. The right lender for your income structure makes all the difference.
Why Banks Struggle with Self-Employed Borrowers
Traditional A-lenders (the big banks and credit unions) qualify borrowers based on net income after all deductions. This is where self-employed borrowers run into trouble: the tax strategies that minimize what you owe CRA also minimize the income that qualifies you for a mortgage.
Write off your home office, vehicle, meals, equipment, and business expenses — smart tax planning — and your NOA shows $48,000 in net income. But your business deposited $180,000 last year. That gap is exactly why self-employed mortgages require a different approach.
The Three Lending Tiers for Self-Employed Borrowers
Tier 1: A-Lenders (Banks & Credit Unions)
A-lenders will consider self-employed borrowers who can demonstrate 2 years of consistent declared income through T1 General returns and NOAs. The income used is the net income after business expenses, averaged over 2 years.
If your declared income is strong enough to service the mortgage — and your credit is above approximately 680 — A-lender rates are available. These are the best rates in the market.
What you need: 2 years T1 General + NOAs, business registration, letter from accountant, 20% minimum down payment for conventional (insured available with strong income).
Tier 2: B-Lenders (Trust Companies & Monolines)
B-lenders offer stated income programs (also called Business for Self or BFS programs) designed specifically for self-employed borrowers. Rather than using your declared net income, they assess your income based on what is reasonable for your industry and business size.
Some B-lenders also offer bank statement programs — qualifying based on 12–24 months of business bank deposits rather than tax returns. This is particularly effective for borrowers with strong revenue but significant write-offs.
What you need: 20% minimum down payment, 12–24 months bank statements OR reasonable stated income with business documentation, credit typically 600+.
Tier 3: Private Lenders
Private lenders — individuals and Mortgage Investment Corporations (MICs) — lend based primarily on property equity rather than income. Income verification requirements are minimal or none. This makes private lending the solution of last resort for self-employed borrowers who can't qualify through A or B lenders.
Private rates are higher (typically 7–12%+ OAC), but these mortgages are usually structured as short-term (1 year) bridge solutions while the borrower establishes their income history or improves their documentation.
What you need: 25–35%+ equity in the property, exit strategy.
| Lender Type | Income Used | Min. Down | Rate Range | Best For |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| A-Lender | Net declared (T1/NOA, 2 yr avg) | 20% conventional | Best market rates | Strong declared income, good credit |
| B-Lender | Stated or bank statement | 20% | +0.5–2% over A | Write-offs reducing declared income |
| Private | Equity-based, minimal | 25–35% | 7–12%+ OAC | Short-term bridge, no qualifying income |
Strategies to Improve Your Self-Employed Mortgage Qualification
1. Talk to Your Mortgage Broker Before Your Accountant (This Year)
Your accountant's job is to minimize taxes. Your mortgage broker's job is to maximize your qualifying income. These goals conflict. Before filing your taxes, discuss your mortgage plans — there may be a middle ground that reduces your tax burden while maintaining enough declared income to qualify for the mortgage you need.
2. Add Back Depreciation and Non-Cash Expenses
Some lenders will add back certain non-cash deductions — like CCA (capital cost allowance / depreciation) — when calculating your qualifying income. A knowledgeable broker knows which lenders allow add-backs and how to structure your application.
3. Use a Co-Applicant
If your spouse or business partner has T4 employment income, adding them to the application can significantly boost qualifying income and open A-lender options that would otherwise be unavailable.
4. Build a 2-Year Track Record
Most A and B lenders require a minimum 2-year history of self-employment. If you recently went self-employed, a private or B-lender mortgage for 1–2 years while you build your track record may be the most practical path.
Common Mistakes Self-Employed Borrowers Make
- Applying directly to their bank — banks see self-employment as risk. An experienced broker has relationships with lenders who actively want self-employed business.
- Waiting until they're under contract — pre-approval is especially important for self-employed borrowers. Know your options before you make an offer.
- Not knowing their lender options — most self-employed borrowers don't know B-lenders or stated income programs exist. They assume a bank rejection means no mortgage.
- Insufficient down payment — saving 20%+ opens significantly more lender options and eliminates CMHC insurance premiums.
Self-Employed and Need a Mortgage?
Paul Hunjan has placed self-employed mortgages across Ontario for 15+ years. He knows which lenders want your business and how to structure your application to get approved.
See Self-Employed Mortgage OptionsFrequently Asked Questions
How long do I need to be self-employed to get a mortgage?
Most A and B-lenders require a minimum 2-year history of self-employment, confirmed by 2 years of T1 General returns and NOAs. Some B-lenders may consider 1 year in certain circumstances. Private lenders have no minimum self-employment history requirement.
Does incorporation help for mortgage qualification?
It depends on the lender. Some lenders will use the T4 salary you pay yourself from the corporation. Others will look at the corporation's net income. A broker experienced in self-employed mortgages knows how different lenders treat incorporated borrowers and can position your application accordingly.
Can I use rental income to supplement my self-employment income?
Yes — most lenders will include a portion of rental income (typically 50–80% of gross rents) when calculating your total qualifying income. This can be particularly helpful for self-employed borrowers with investment properties.