Profit and Loss Only Mortgage New Jersey — Qualify Without Tax Returns
A Profit and Loss Only Mortgage New Jersey program lets a self-employed borrower qualify for a home loan using a 12-month profit and loss statement signed by a CPA, enrolled agent, or licensed tax preparer — no tax returns, W-2s, or pay stubs required. Minimum credit score is 620, loan amounts run from $100,000 to $3,500,000, and the maximum loan-to-value is 80%. Underwriting is fully manual, and the program covers purchases, rate-and-term refinances, and cash-out refinances anywhere in New Jersey.
P&L Statement
Is All You Need
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Credit Score
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Loan-to-Value
Your Answer Right Here
What Is a Profit and Loss Only Mortgage in New Jersey?
A Profit and Loss Only Mortgage New Jersey program is a home loan built for self-employed borrowers whose tax returns undersell what their business actually brings in. Instead of two years of tax returns, W-2s, or pay stubs, an underwriter qualifies you using a 12-month profit and loss statement prepared and signed by a CPA, enrolled agent, CTEC, or PTIN-holding tax preparer. That statement shows your revenue, expenses, and net income, and the net income figure is what drives your qualifying income for the mortgage.
This program exists because so many New Jersey small business owners — contractors, salon owners, restaurant operators, consultants, real estate agents — legitimately write off expenses to reduce their tax bill, and those same write-offs shrink the income shown on their tax returns. A P&L only mortgage sidesteps that mismatch. Mortgage-World.com has been placing loans for self-employed borrowers across Bergen County, Hudson County, Essex County, and the rest of New Jersey since 2017, and this program is often the fastest route to closing for a business owner buying or refinancing a home.
Program Snapshot
New Jersey P&L Only Mortgage Program Highlights
Here’s what defines this program at a glance for New Jersey borrowers, based on current Alt Doc underwriting guidelines.
| Program Detail | What It Means for You |
|---|---|
| Income Documentation | 12-month P&L prepared by a CPA, EA, CTEC, or PTIN tax preparer |
| Minimum Credit Score | 620, with higher scores unlocking better loan-to-value ratios |
| Loan Amount Range | $100,000 up to $3,500,000 |
| Occupancy Types | Primary residence, second home, or investment property |
| Loan Terms | 30-year fixed, or a 10-year interest-only option on a 30-year fixed |
| Maximum LTV | Up to 80% loan-to-value on P&L only documentation |
| Debt-to-Income Ratio | Up to 50% depending on overall file strength |
| Tax Returns Required | None — the P&L statement replaces tax return review entirely |
Actual terms depend on credit score, property type, occupancy, and loan amount, and are confirmed once your New Jersey file is reviewed.
Why This Matters
How a Profit and Loss Only Mortgage Works in New Jersey
The process starts like most New Jersey mortgage applications: you tell us the purchase price or payoff amount, the property type, and roughly what your business brings in. From there, instead of pulling two years of tax returns, your CPA or tax preparer puts together a profit and loss statement covering the most recent 12 months. That statement has to be dated within 90 days of your closing, so it reflects where your business stands right now.
Why a Signed P&L Carries So Much Weight
Once your tax preparer signs the P&L, they’re putting their license on the line to confirm your business’s numbers, so the file is treated with the same weight as a full tax return review. Your preparer’s letter has to sit on their business letterhead and confirm they either prepared or reviewed your last two years of business tax filings, since that history is what backs up the current-year P&L. If your line of work requires a New Jersey state or local business license, we’ll need that too, covering the past two years.
Underwriting Is Manual, Not Automated
Because no automated underwriting engine is built for P&L only files, every New Jersey application goes through manual underwriting. A real underwriter reviews your credit, your P&L, your assets, and your property as one complete file rather than running it through a rigid computer model. It takes a little longer than a fully automated approval, but a knowledgeable underwriter can work through the nuances of a self-employed borrower’s situation instead of the file getting flagged by an algorithm that only understands W-2 income.
What You’ll Need
What Your P&L Statement Must Include
Not every P&L will satisfy a New Jersey underwriter, so it helps to know what has to be on it before your tax preparer puts one together. According to the CFPB’s overview of non-qualified mortgage programs, alternative documentation loans like this one still require a lender to reasonably verify a borrower’s ability to repay, which is exactly why the preparer letter and licensing checks below carry so much weight.
Required From Your Tax Preparer
Your CPA, enrolled agent, CTEC, or PTIN-holding preparer needs to provide the 12-month P&L itself, dated within 90 days of closing, plus a separate letter on their business letterhead. That letter has to list their company name, address, phone number, license number, and signature, and it has to confirm they’ve prepared or reviewed your last two years of business tax filings and can speak to your ownership percentage in the business.
Required From You
Beyond the P&L, you’ll need a valid New Jersey business or professional license if your industry requires one, going back two years. If your profession doesn’t require a license, your preparer’s letter can confirm that instead, based on Internal Revenue Service filing categories your business falls under, which you can review on the IRS Schedule C instructions. You’ll also need one month of bank statements to document your down payment and reserves, a signed authorization to pull credit, and a government-issued photo ID. One nice perk of this program: sourcing large bank deposits generally isn’t required the way it is on some other loan types. You can also confirm any New Jersey business licensing requirement directly through the New Jersey Department of Banking and Insurance.
Full Picture
Who This Program Fits and What It Covers in New Jersey
A Profit and Loss Only Mortgage New Jersey program isn’t for every borrower, but for the right file, it’s one of the fastest routes to approval anywhere in the state.
- New Jersey business owners whose tax write-offs lower their reported income
- Sole proprietors, single-member LLCs, and Schedule C filers
- Borrowers who’ve been self-employed for at least two years
- Purchases, rate-and-term refinances, and cash-out refinances
- Single-family homes, PUDs, and warrantable condos
- 2-4 unit properties
- Primary residences, second homes, and investment properties
- Manufactured, mobile, and agricultural properties are not eligible
- $1,000,000 or less at 75% LTV or below: no reserves required
- Up to $1,000,000: 3 months of reserves
- Up to $2,000,000: 6 months of reserves
- Up to $3,000,000: 9 months of reserves
- Down payment is typically 20% or more, since LTV tops out at 80%
- Underwriting is manual, so New Jersey file review takes a bit longer
- Business funds may be used up to your percentage of ownership
How To Get Started
Three Steps to Your New Jersey P&L Only Approval
Tell us about your business, your target New Jersey property, and your down payment so we can confirm the program fits.
Your CPA or tax preparer completes the 12-month P&L and signed letter, then sends it to our underwriting team.
A loan officer manually underwrites your file, confirms reserves and credit, and moves you to closing anywhere in New Jersey.
Most New Jersey borrowers who go this route already have a CPA or tax preparer they work with year-round, which speeds things up considerably. If you don’t, we can point you toward preparers who are familiar with mortgage P&L requirements and know how to format the letter so it doesn’t bounce back from underwriting.
Related Resources
Related Mortgage Pages
A New Jersey P&L-only mortgage is one of several self-employed programs. These pages cover the alternatives.
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