1099 vs. Bank Statement vs. P&L Loan – Which One Is Right for You?

1099 vs. Bank Statement vs. P&L Loan – Which One Is Right for You?

Self-Employed Mortgage Series — Post 3 of 5

Three programs. All built for self-employed borrowers. They work very differently — and the wrong choice can cost you the deal. This guide ends with a clear answer based on your situation.

Most mortgage guides for self-employed borrowers describe these three programs separately, leaving you to figure out which one fits. This post does something different: it gives you a decision framework. By the end, you'll know which program to start with — and why.

For full context on the California non-QM landscape, start here: The Complete Guide to Self-Employed Mortgages in California.


The Three Programs at a Glance

Program Income Source Ideal Borrower Min. FICO
Bank Statement Loan 12 or 24 months of deposits Business owners with consistent cash flow 620+
1099-Only Loan 1099 forms from last 1–2 years Contractors and freelancers with clean 1099s 620+
P&L Statement Loan CPA-prepared P&L — 12 or 24 months Borrowers whose real income isn't captured by deposits or 1099s 660+

The 1099 Loan — Deep Dive

A 1099 loan qualifies your income using your 1099 forms from the last one or two tax years — without requiring you to file a full tax return as the primary document. Lenders average the gross 1099 income across the documentation period.

Works best when: Your 1099 income is consistent year over year, comes from multiple clients, and reflects your actual earning power. If you receive $150,000 in 1099s but only $90,000 shows up in deposits after business expenses, the 1099 loan captures more of your real income.

Doesn't work when: 1099 income fluctuates wildly between years, or your gross 1099 is high but net income after heavy expenses is low. If lenders see a $200K year followed by a $90K year, they'll average to $145K — which may or may not work for your target purchase price.

Best fit profile:

Independent contractors · Real estate agents and brokers · Consultants · Commissioned salespeople · Gig workers with consistent platform income (Uber, DoorDash, etc. — if 1099 volume is sufficient)


The Bank Statement Loan — Quick Recap

We covered bank statement loans in depth in Post 2 of this series. The short version: 12 or 24 months of deposits, 50% expense factor for business accounts, 100% for personal. Best when your gross deposits are strong even if your documented 1099 or taxable income is lower.

Choose bank statement over 1099 when: Your actual deposits are higher than your 1099 income. This often happens when you invoice clients and collect payment through your business account — the revenue may not all come via 1099s.

Choose 1099 over bank statement when: Your 1099 forms capture more income than your deposits show. Some business owners reinvest heavily — money in, money right back out for operations. The 1099 tells a stronger story.


The P&L Statement Loan — When the Other Two Don't Capture Your Income

A P&L loan uses a CPA-prepared Profit and Loss statement — covering the last 12 or 24 months — as the primary income document. The lender uses the net income shown on the P&L to determine your qualifying income.

This is not a last resort — it's a legitimate, purpose-built program for established businesses with complex financials. It's also more conservative underwriting: expect higher FICO requirements (660+), more reserves, and slightly tighter program overlays than bank statement programs.

P&L Loan Requirements:

✓ CPA-prepared statement on official letterhead — self-prepared P&Ls are not accepted
✓ Covers the most recent 12 or 24 months
✓ Must show consistent positive net income
✓ CPA must be a licensed CPA — not a bookkeeper or enrolled agent in most cases
✓ Lender may require CPA to sign a certification letter confirming accuracy

Best for: Business owners whose deposits are misleadingly low (large portion reinvested into operations), whose 1099s don't capture all revenue sources, or who have complex multi-entity income structures that a P&L can organize cleanly.


The 3-Question Decision Framework

Answer these three questions. They'll point you to the right starting program — and the same questions MLD asks in every qualification review.

Question 1

Do you receive consistent 1099 forms that reflect your real income?

YES → Start with the 1099 loan. If total 1099s average $120K+/year over 2 years and are consistent, this is likely your strongest program.
NO → Move to Question 2.

Question 2

Are your bank deposits consistently higher than what your 1099s or tax returns show?

YES → Bank statement loan. Your deposits tell a stronger story than either your 1099s or your tax return. This is the most common scenario for California business owners.
NO → Move to Question 3.

Question 3

Do you have a CPA who can prepare a compliant 12 or 24-month Profit and Loss statement?

YES → P&L loan may be your path. Your business profitability, accurately captured by a licensed CPA, becomes your qualifying income.
NO → Talk to us before assuming none of these work. Mixed income sources (some W-2, some 1099, some business) can sometimes be combined under a single non-QM application.

Not every file fits neatly into one box. Some borrowers qualify under multiple programs, and the goal is to identify which produces the highest qualifying income — not which is easiest to explain. That's exactly what the MLD deal review is for. Start below.

Let Us Run the Numbers on Your Scenario

Review Your Deal — No Application Required

We look at all three options for every self-employed borrower and identify which program maximizes your qualifying income.

Submitting this form is not a loan application and does not constitute a commitment to lend. All programs subject to qualification and credit approval.

Mortgage Lending Desk is a DBA of Brokers Capital Group, Inc. | CA DRE #02271654 | NMLS #2728634 | ⌂ Equal Housing Opportunity. This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute a commitment to lend or an offer of credit. All loan programs are subject to borrower qualification, credit approval, and applicable state and federal regulations. Not all borrowers will qualify.

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