
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


When it comes to income verification for a mortgage a recent paystub and an employment letter will typically do the trick, even if you're a new hire and just have one full pay cycle under your belt. However, things could get a little dicey if you are currently in a period of probation with your new employer.
The most common workaround for an applicant who is in the midst of a probationary period is to coordinate the completion date of your purchase with the expiry date of the probationary period. A lender will proceed with the approval and condition for an updated employment letter and/or recent paystub to verify that the probationary period is no longer in effect.
Lender guidelines generally dictate that probationary periods must pass (in their entirety) prior to the completion of the mortgage. But in many instances a lender will overlook a probationary period provided that a good case can be made. Here are some real life exceptions I've been granted on several files over the years:
Probationary Periods are not the end of the world
I wish I could say this about all other mortgage qualification guidelines, but lenders are generally flexible when it comes to probationary periods. So, as long as your new employment is supported with reasonable tenure from a prior and related employment stint, you should (at the very least) be eligible for strong consideration to have a lender overlook or waive the probationary period condition of your income verification.
604-800-9593 direct Vancouver
403-606-3751 direct Calgary
markogelo.com
@markogelo (Twitter)
MarkoMusic (SoundCloud Account)...all podcast music tracks are performed and produced by Marko
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.
By Mortgagenomics Canada5
11 ratings
When it comes to income verification for a mortgage a recent paystub and an employment letter will typically do the trick, even if you're a new hire and just have one full pay cycle under your belt. However, things could get a little dicey if you are currently in a period of probation with your new employer.
The most common workaround for an applicant who is in the midst of a probationary period is to coordinate the completion date of your purchase with the expiry date of the probationary period. A lender will proceed with the approval and condition for an updated employment letter and/or recent paystub to verify that the probationary period is no longer in effect.
Lender guidelines generally dictate that probationary periods must pass (in their entirety) prior to the completion of the mortgage. But in many instances a lender will overlook a probationary period provided that a good case can be made. Here are some real life exceptions I've been granted on several files over the years:
Probationary Periods are not the end of the world
I wish I could say this about all other mortgage qualification guidelines, but lenders are generally flexible when it comes to probationary periods. So, as long as your new employment is supported with reasonable tenure from a prior and related employment stint, you should (at the very least) be eligible for strong consideration to have a lender overlook or waive the probationary period condition of your income verification.
604-800-9593 direct Vancouver
403-606-3751 direct Calgary
markogelo.com
@markogelo (Twitter)
MarkoMusic (SoundCloud Account)...all podcast music tracks are performed and produced by Marko
Hosted on Acast. See acast.com/privacy for more information.

15 Listeners

13 Listeners

73 Listeners

470 Listeners

1 Listeners

4 Listeners

3 Listeners

5 Listeners

85 Listeners

8 Listeners

30 Listeners

11 Listeners

6 Listeners

0 Listeners