Non-QM Mortgage Loans Connecticut — No Tax Returns Required
Non-QM mortgage loans in Connecticut let you qualify with bank statements, 1099s, a profit and loss statement, assets, or rental income instead of the two years of tax returns a conventional lender demands. Minimum credit scores start at 600, loan amounts go up to $3.5 million, and Connecticut borrowers can choose from DSCR, ITIN, foreign national, and no income verification programs. Below you’ll find every program, credit score minimum, and down payment requirement we offer in Connecticut — no scrolling required to get your answer.
Minimum Credit
Score to Qualify
Maximum LTV
on Select Programs
Ways to Document
Your Income
Maximum Loan
Amount Available
Your Answer Right Here
What Is a Non-QM Loan in Connecticut?
A Non-QM loan is a Connecticut mortgage underwritten outside the standard tax-return-and-pay-stub box that most banks require. Instead of two years of tax returns, your file can be built around bank statements, 1099s, a CPA-prepared profit and loss statement, liquid assets, or the rent a Connecticut property collects. Minimum credit scores start at 600, loan amounts run from $100,000 up to $3.5 million depending on the program, and both purchases and refinances qualify, including cash-out. Condos, 2-4 unit properties, and non-warrantable buildings are eligible on most tiers throughout the state.
These loans still go through full underwriting; the paperwork just changes. A licensed Connecticut loan officer reviews your credit depth, your reserves, the property type, and the appraisal, since those pieces carry more weight once income isn’t shown on a W-2. If you’re self-employed, a landlord in Hartford or Stamford, new to the country, or retired and living off assets, a Non-QM mortgage loan is often the fastest path to a closing that a conventional Connecticut lender would slow-walk or turn down outright.
Program Requirements
Non-QM Loan Programs, Credit Scores & Down Payments in Connecticut
Every Non-QM mortgage loan in Connecticut qualifies you a different way. Here’s the minimum credit score and maximum loan-to-value (LTV) for each program we place most often across the state. Your actual terms depend on your full file, property type, and reserves.
| Program | Min. Credit Score | Max LTV / Down Payment |
|---|---|---|
| Full Doc Non-QM | 600 | Up to 90% LTV (10% down) at 700+ score |
| 1099 Only | 600 | Up to 80% LTV (20% down) |
| Written VOE (WVOE) Only | 620 | Up to 80% LTV; 70% on cash-out or first-time buyers |
| Asset Utilization | 600 | Up to 80% LTV purchase, 75% cash-out |
| Bank Statement Loans | 600 | Up to 85% LTV (15% down) |
| P&L Only | 660 | Up to 80% LTV (20% down) |
| P&L Plus 3 Months Bank Statements | 660 | Up to 80% LTV (20% down) |
| One-Year Self-Employment | 660 | Up to 80% LTV purchase, 75% cash-out |
| Assets as Blended Income | 600 | Up to 85% LTV (15% down) |
| ITIN Loans | 660 | Up to 85% LTV purchase, 65% cash-out |
| Foreign National (Investment) | No FICO required | 60% to 75% LTV, DSCR-based |
| DSCR Loans (Investment) | None at ≤55% LTV 600 above 55% LTV |
Up to 85% LTV |
| No Income Verification (Primary Residence) | 640 | Up to 80% LTV; unlimited cash-out |
Guidelines reflect general program terms as of July 2026 and are not a quote or a commitment to lend. Property type, loan amount, and reserves can move what’s actually offered.
Why This Matters
Why Connecticut Borrowers Choose Non-QM Mortgage Loans
Most Connecticut homebuyers who end up on a Non-QM loan aren’t credit-challenged; they’re just documented differently than a W-2 employee. A Fairfield County business owner who writes off vehicles and equipment, a New Haven retiree drawing from a brokerage account instead of a paycheck, and a Hartford real estate agent whose commissions swing year to year all look thin on paper at a conventional bank, even when their credit and bank balance tell a stronger story. Non-QM underwriting was built around that exact gap, and it’s grown into one of the fastest-moving corners of the Connecticut mortgage market as more lenders recognize how common this borrower profile has become. According to the CFPB’s home financing guidance, knowing which documents a loan actually requires before applying is one of the biggest factors in whether a file closes on time, and that’s especially true once tax returns leave the picture.
What Underwriters Actually Review
Because personal income documents step back, everything else steps forward. Credit typically needs two tradelines reporting for 12 or more months, or one tradeline reporting for 24 or more months with recent activity, which lines up with how Fannie Mae documents borrower assets on conventional files. Mortgage history generally follows a 0x30x12 standard, meaning no late payment in the trailing twelve months, and a prior forbearance, foreclosure, short sale, or bankruptcy typically needs 12 to 36 months of seasoning behind it depending on the program and severity. Down payment and reserve funds need to be sourced and seasoned for 30 days, and reserves themselves run anywhere from zero to 12 months based on your loan amount, occupancy, and LTV.
For Connecticut Investors
DSCR Loans in Connecticut: Qualify on Rental Income
A DSCR loan qualifies a Connecticut investment property off the income the property generates instead of your personal tax returns or pay stubs. DSCR stands for debt service coverage ratio, calculated by dividing the property’s gross rental income by its total housing payment. A ratio of 1.00 means the rent covers the mortgage; above 1.00 means it cash flows. This makes DSCR loans a natural fit for Connecticut landlords, first-time investors, and anyone building a rental portfolio without wanting their personal income tied to every purchase. Investment properties only, 1-4 units, are eligible on this program.
Standard Program: Credit Score & LTV Tiers
| Credit Score | Purchase | Rate/Term | Cash-Out |
|---|---|---|---|
| 720+ | 85% | 85% | 80% |
| 700+ | 80% | 80% | 75% |
| 680+ | 80% | 80% | 75% |
| 640+ | 75% | 75% | 70% |
| 620+ | 70% | 70% | 65% |
| 600+ | 65% | 65% | 60% |
Standard Program requires a minimum 1.00 DSCR ratio (1.20 above 80% LTV). Based on a representative loan amount; higher amounts adjust tiers.
Beyond the Standard Program, a handful of DSCR variations cover Connecticut investors who don’t fit that grid. A Sub1 DSCR option accepts a ratio as low as 0.75, useful when a property doesn’t quite cash flow to a full 1.00 but still makes sense on paper. A No Ratio DSCR option skips the ratio requirement entirely and qualifies purely on credit and LTV. A DSCR Fusion option blends the rental income with your liquid assets to boost an initial ratio between 0.75 and 0.99 up to a qualifying 1.15. And a Foreign National DSCR option lets non-U.S. citizens purchase or refinance Connecticut investment property with no FICO score required in some cases, typically capped between 60% and 75% LTV depending on credit history and loan amount.
For Primary Residences
No Income Verification Mortgage for Connecticut Homeowners
A no income verification mortgage is built for a Connecticut homeowner who can’t or doesn’t want to document income at all, no bank statements, no tax returns, no employment verification. Approval leans entirely on credit, reserves, and equity. This program is limited to a primary residence, and the minimum loan amount is $417,000, with loan amounts going up to $2.5 million and unlimited cash-out available. Only a 30-year fixed rate is offered; adjustable-rate and interest-only options are not permitted on this program, which keeps the payment predictable for the life of the loan.
Purchase & Rate/Term Refinance Tiers
| LTV / CLTV | Min. Credit Score | Reserves |
|---|---|---|
| 80% / 80% | 720 | 9 months |
| 75% / 75% | 680 | 6 months |
| 70% / 70% | 660 | 6 months |
| 65% / 65% | 640 | 6 months |
Cash-Out Refinance Tiers
| LTV / CLTV | Min. Credit Score | Reserves |
|---|---|---|
| 75% / 75% | 700 | 9 months |
| 70% / 70% | 680 | 6 months |
| 65% / 65% | 660 | 6 months |
| 60% / 60% | 640 | 6 months |
Credit still matters here, just in a different way. Mortgage history needs to run 0x30x12, and a prior foreclosure, short sale, deed-in-lieu, or bankruptcy needs 24 months of seasoning. Assets need to be sourced and seasoned for 30 days, and a Connecticut borrower must be a U.S. citizen, a permanent resident alien, or a non-permanent resident alien with established U.S. credit. Single-family homes, PUDs, condos, 2-4 units, modular, and rural homes are all eligible, though log homes and manufactured homes are not, and seller concessions up to 6% are allowed toward closing costs.
Full Picture
What Affects Your Non-QM Mortgage Approval in Connecticut
Your income documentation type sets the program, but these four areas decide whether the file clears underwriting.
- 600 minimum credit score on most programs, 640 on no income verification
- Two tradelines 12+ months, or one tradeline 24+ months with recent activity
- 0x30x12 mortgage history standard on most programs
- 12 to 36 months seasoning after a foreclosure, short sale, or bankruptcy
- Primary residence, second home, and investment property all eligible
- SFR, PUD, 2-4 unit, and warrantable condos eligible on most tiers
- Non-warrantable condos eligible at a reduced LTV
- Log homes and manufactured homes are generally not eligible
- Assets sourced and seasoned for 30 days
- Reserves run 0-12 months depending on loan amount, LTV, and occupancy
- Cash-out proceeds can often count toward reserves at lower LTVs
- Gift funds allowed on most programs, subject to an LTV adjustment
- $100,000 to $3.5 million loan amounts, program dependent
- $417,000 minimum on no income verification loans
- 15-, 30-, and 40-year fixed terms available on most programs
- Seller concessions and interested-party contributions allowed
How It Works
How a Non-QM Loan Works in Connecticut
Self-employed, retired, an investor, or new to the country — we match your situation to the Connecticut program built for it, not the other way around.
We match your credit score, reserves, and property type against the grids above and confirm exactly what LTV and loan amount you qualify for.
A rate tied to your actual file, no guesswork, with the option to lock once you’re ready to move forward.
Most Connecticut callers already know roughly what the home is worth, what they earn or what a rental collects, and what’s sitting in their accounts, so one phone call is usually enough to confirm your tier. If a bank turned you down because your tax returns didn’t reflect what you actually earn, that’s a sign you were talking to the wrong lender, not that the loan is out of reach.
Related Resources
Related Mortgage Pages
These pages cover the programs most often paired with a Non-QM loan.
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