4 tiers (Yellow / Orange / Pink / Blue). Terms: 30Y fixed · 40Y fixed · 40Y interest-only (all tiers). Pull live guidelines anytime via ChatUWM. Figures current as captured — confirm on the matrix.
| Tier | Min DSCR (30Y / 40Y) | Min FICO | Max LTV | Reserves | Loan amount |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Yellow | 0.00 / 0.00 (no ratio) | 640 | 80% | 6 mo | no min – $2M |
| Orange | 0.00 / 0.00 (no ratio) | 660 | 80% (70% for STR) | 3 mo | $100K – $3M |
| Pink | 1.00 / 0.80 | 660 | 80% (30Y); 75% fixed / 65% IO (40Y) | 3 mo | $50K – $3M |
| Blue | 0.80 / 0.80 | 660 | 80% (30Y); 75% fixed / 65% IO (40Y) | 12 mo | $100K – $2M |
LTV is the same across purchase / rate-and-term / cash-out. Cash-out proceeds cap: Yellow up to $1M, others up to $500K (can count as reserves). First-time investor on Orange needs DSCR > 1.00 & FICO > 700. All tiers close in an LLC (confirm personal-guarantee specifics w/ UWM). Property: 1–4 unit, condo, non-warrantable condo OK; rural/agricultural ineligible. Prepay: 3/2/1, 2/1, or 1/1 structures, where state-permissible by law (confirm CA & MO terms w/ UWM). Also: max property size 20 acres; agricultural zoning ineligible.
Yellow and Orange require no minimum DSCR (ratio down to 0.00) — the property doesn't have to cash flow to qualify. A standard DSCR needs rent ≥ payment (1.0); these don't. That's what finances appreciation plays and negative-cash-flow properties — exactly where most California deals live, since high-priced CA rentals rarely hit 1.0 at today's rents.
It's not free — UWM offsets the missing cash flow with more reserves (Yellow = 6 mo), stronger credit (Orange = 660; first-time investor on Orange needs DSCR > 1.0 & FICO > 700), an 80% LTV cap, and a rate premium.
How to use it: CA investor whose property won't pencil at 1.0 → Yellow/Orange (no-ratio). MO cash-flow deals that do pencil → Pink/Blue (better pricing). The line on a call: "It doesn't cash flow? That's exactly what this loan is for."
| Tier | Ch. 7 seasoning |
|---|---|
| Yellow | 24 months from discharge · active repayment plan = ineligible |
| Pink / Blue | 2 yrs from discharge (or 4 yrs from dismissal) |
| Orange | 4 years from discharge/dismissal |
| All tiers | Multiple BKs in 7 years → 5-year wait from most recent |
Takeaway: UWM's floor is 2 years from discharge — there is no 1-year DSCR here. A more recent BK = bridge/hard-money now, refinance into Investor Flex once seasoned to 2 years.
| Tier | STR income documentation |
|---|---|
| Yellow | Purchase: 100% of Form 1007 market rent (no STR comps). Refi: 12-mo average actual income. License/permits verified via Property Guard. |
| Orange | 12-mo service-provider payment history required. Max LTV 70%, min DSCR 1.00, max loan $2M. Third-party verification. |
| Pink / Blue | 12-mo actual income (or Form 1007 for purchase if unavailable). 1007/1025 on long-term comps only. Third-party verification. Unleased/vacant supported w/ 75% vacancy factor. |
Rent-loss coverage not required on any tier. STR caps LTV at 70% on Orange.
Every DSCR file needs the borrower's signed & dated business-purpose certification, which must state: borrower & subject-property address · proceeds used for business purpose (no payoff of non-subject liens) · borrower/family does not occupy or plan to occupy · property will be leased. The loan is then deemed business-purpose and exempt from ATR, QM, and HPML. All tiers close in an LLC.
ChatUWM doesn't carry CA/MO-specific overlays — get these from your UWM AE (Edward Kuzava): CA & MO prepayment-penalty allowability + max term, any state LTV reductions or county/geographic restrictions, and any state-specific disclosures on a business-purpose DSCR loan. Anything that reads as a legal/disclosure requirement — confirm with NEXA compliance too.
Cash-out seasoning + delayed-financing (BRRRR exit); foreclosure / short-sale / deed-in-lieu seasoning; prepay buyout; personal-guarantee specifics.
Two products: Kind DSCR (standard, broader box — ADUs OK) and DSCR Max (elite pricing, tighter box — no ADUs). Business-purpose, investment-only, closes in LLC. Top-10 Non-QM lender. Portal: Quickie (matrices, job aids, co-branded flyers). To $3M · FICO from 620 · 40-yr interest-only available.
| DSCR ratio | Max LTV | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| ≥ 1.25 ("super kind") | 85% (15% down) | Best pricing tier |
| 1.00 (break-even) | 80% | Great first-time-investor fit |
| < 1.00 (no-ratio) | 70% (≈30% down) | Below break-even OK — leans on borrower strength + reserves |
Formula: gross rents ÷ PITIA (incl. HOA). 1003 carries no income/employment. LLC: include operating agreement + EIN.
| Scenario | Example | Investor type | Say this |
|---|---|---|---|
| Super Kind (≥1.25) | $3,000 ÷ $2,400 = 1.25 → up to 85% LTV | Seasoned / portfolio buyer | "This property pays for itself — and then some." |
| Kind (1.0) | $2,800 ÷ $2,800 = 1.0 → 80% LTV | First-time / cautious investor | "It breaks even and starts building wealth immediately." |
| No-Ratio (<1.0) | $2,400 ÷ $2,800 = 0.86 → up to 70% LTV (strong credit) | Appreciation-focused / high-income | "You're betting on long-term value — and this loan makes it possible." |
Pitch tip: investors love simple math that proves the deal works — walk them the rent ÷ PITIA, then the LTV.
Single-family purchase, money transaction:
| Monthly PITIA | $1,500 |
| Estimated monthly market rent (FNMA Form 1007) | $2,000 |
| Existing lease rent | Not available |
| Rent used (no lease on a purchase → use market rent) | $2,000 |
| DSCR = gross rent $2,000 ÷ PITIA $1,500 | 1.33 → Super Kind tier |
Broker tip: "A DSCR over 1.25 means you get the best loan options — higher LTVs and more flexibility." On a purchase with no existing lease, qualify on the Form 1007 market rent.
| Long-term rentals | Short-term rentals (nightly/weekly/seasonal) | |
|---|---|---|
| Purchase | Gross rents from FNMA Form 1007/1025. Reflect long-term market rent, or current rent if tenant-occupied. 100% of long-term rent used. | DSCR calc uses: 1007/1025 comparable rent survey reflecting short-term market rents; rental income from management services or bank statements on a 12-month average of gross rents (accounting for seasonality); gross rents reduced 20% for operating costs; AirDNA Rentalizer + Overview reports. |
| Refinance | FNMA Form 1007/1025 and lease agreements. Gross rents = higher of actual lease amount or market rent. |
Broker talk tracks:
36 months (3 years) from a bankruptcy or short sale; 48 months if severe. ⚠️ Stricter than UWM's 2 years — reinforces the bridge-first play for a recent BK, then refinance into DSCR once seasoned. Scenario desk + exception desk available via your AE for edge cases.
For strong borrowers who have wealth, not a W-2 — retirees, high-net-worth, complex self-employed, real estate investors, divorce/settlement recipients, trust beneficiaries, early-retirees between careers. Qualify on verified assets instead of income. No employment or pay documentation ever required; ability-to-repay is based solely on assets. Min FICO 620.
(Eligible assets − down payment − closing costs − reserves) ÷ 60 months = monthly qualifying income.
KIND divides by 60 months — vs Fannie's 360 and Freddie's 240. A far bigger monthly income → far more borrowers qualify. No minimum age (Fannie/Freddie require 62+). Income can be blended with bank-statement, 1099, or W-2 income to stack for DTI.
| Method | How it works | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| 1 · Supplemental ("DTI booster") | Blend asset-derived income with documented income (W-2 / 1099 / bank statements) to push a tight DTI into approvable range. | Strong earner on paper, just shy of the DTI limit. |
| 2 · Standalone (with DTI) | Convert assets to monthly income via the 60-month calc; still calculate DTI. No blending. | Lots of verified assets, minimal documentable income; fluctuating/seasonal earners. |
| 3 · No-ratio (no DTI) | No debt ratio calculated at all. Just verify assets cover: loan amount + down payment + closing costs + reserves + 5 yrs (60 mo) of PITIA + 5 yrs property taxes & insurance. | High-net-worth / retirees / investors with liquidity but no active income stream. |
| Asset | % used |
|---|---|
| Checking, savings, money market, short-term U.S. Treasuries | 100% (fully liquid) |
| Stocks, bonds, mutual funds | 90% (10% market haircut) |
| Retirement accounts — borrower 59½ or older | 80% (penalty-free withdrawal) |
| Retirement accounts — borrower under 59½ | 70% (accounts for 10% penalty) |
| Trust assets | Eligible only with unrestricted access |
Ineligible: real-estate equity, restricted / privately-traded stock, business-owned assets, income-generating assets already counted elsewhere (rental portfolios, payout accounts), irrevocable & charitable trusts, foreign assets. Crypto/Bitcoin: varies by lender — confirm with your AE. Rule of thumb: is the asset stable, accessible, and easy to document?
| Borrower | Math | Result |
|---|---|---|
| 67-yo retiree, $2M retirement (over 59½ → 80%), Social Security only | ~$1.5M eligible after reserves/costs ÷ 60 | $25,000/mo → ~$500K mortgage |
| 45-yo investor, $5M investment accts (90%), low tax income (write-offs) | $3.8M available ÷ 60 | $63,333/mo → ~$1.5M mortgage |
| Divorcee, $1.2M settlement, no job (no-ratio standalone) | $900K verifiable ÷ 60 | $15,000/mo → ~$750K home |
The pitch: "Turn your liquidity into loan approvals." Comb your pipeline + old turned-away clients, and tell realtors/financial planners: "If your assets can cover the loan and its expenses, you can qualify — no W-2s, tax returns, or pay stubs." Great call-back play for DSCR investors who now want a primary residence.
For self-employed borrowers, 1099 earners, business owners, independent contractors whose tax returns understate true income (write-offs hide their real cash flow). Qualify on real bank-deposit cash flow, not taxable income. Most bank-statement deals don't die because the borrower doesn't qualify — they die because the file wasn't structured clean up front. Identify these early; never pivot to bank statements after a conventional decline.
| Type | When to use | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Personal | Borrower pays themselves (money moves business → personal account). | Usually the cleanest option; common for smaller businesses. Often best even if borrower hands you co-mingled. |
| Business | All money stays inside the business; expenses go out. | Expense factor applied to back out costs. |
| Co-mingled | Personal & business activity mixed in one account. | Borrower must be 100% owner; treated like a business account. Not all lenders allow — KIND does. |
Don't default to whatever the borrower hands you — pick the type that gives the cleanest, most accurate income picture. Switching types mid-file stacks conditions. Clean wins: clean files can close in ~10 days.
Total deposits − business expenses (expense factor or actual) × ownership % = qualifying income.
Example: $20,000 monthly deposits × (1 − 50% expense factor) = $10,000 × 80% ownership = $8,000/mo qualifying income.
Most lenders need 2 years self-employed; KIND allows just 1 year if it's the same line of work with a similar income stream (classic case: a W-2 loan officer who opens their own brokerage). The prior history supports the file.
Do: consistent/stable deposits · source & flag large deposits up front · ownership docs early · complete the business narrative fully · align P&L / CPA letter to the statements · choose the right statement type.
Avoid (deal-killers): mixing personal/business funds wrong · unexplained large deposits · missing ownership docs · wrong statement type · overestimating income (deposits ≠ income) · incomplete files.
Log into Quickie → Start a New Loan → Create Bank Statement Review → fill the business narrative (borrower info, business type, # employees) → upload all statements → Request Calculation. KIND's desk reviews and returns a calculated monthly income on-screen; large deposits are auto-flagged. Then hit Convert to Loan, upload the 3.4, and register. Submit a TBD this way first to confirm the math before you write the deal.
Where to find them: contractors, consultants, freelancers, creators, photographers/videographers, gym/wellness pros, retailers, restaurant owners, tech/IT, doctors, attorneys, accountants. The pitch: "You're qualified on your actual income — not your tax returns."
Condos trip up even experienced brokers — not because they're impossible, but because there's a decision tree people skip. On a condo you underwrite two things at once: the borrower AND the project. Both run simultaneously, independently, and both must pass. A clean borrower in a bad project does not close.
| Limited review | Full review | |
|---|---|---|
| Profile | Strong credit, primary residence, low LTV, established/stable project. | Investment/second home, high LTV, smaller/new project or conversion, or any HOA data/budget question. |
| Docs | Streamlined — no condo questionnaire. | Entire project evaluated vs Fannie/Freddie. KIND's dedicated condo team turns it in ~48 hrs once all docs are in. |
Run DU/LPA first — the findings assign the review type. Collecting full-review docs on a limited deal (or vice-versa) wastes time or forces a restart.
Request HOA docs day one — they're always the bottleneck. Watch for: expired master insurance at closing; budget short on the 10% reserve rule; not reading AUS findings before collecting docs; undisclosed litigation (ask the HOA directly & early: "any active or pending litigation?"); and oversimplifying property use — read the governing docs, because HOA-permitted short-term rentals can make a project ineligible for agency financing.
Appears on the loan dashboard once disclosures are sent — no separate portal or email chain. Pop-up asks: is the project established? (defined as 90% sold/closed for Fannie / 75% for Freddie, 100% complete, no future phases, HOA turned over) and the exact legal project name (from the CC&Rs / recorded plat — not the marketing name). Pick the review type (per AUS), then the system generates the exact document list — upload each (red icon → green check); when all green, "Let's Condo" activates and routes to the condo review team. Status shows In progress / Action required / Completed right on the dashboard.
Bottom line: know the project before you touch the file, run the warrantable checklist, trust the AUS, request HOA docs early, and remember non-warrantable ≠ no deal.
An affordability tool for deals sitting in the "almost works" zone. Fixed up front for stability, adjusts later for flexibility. Lower starting rate → lower payment → deal moves forward. Best for borrowers who plan to sell, refi, or move before the fixed period ends, or who expect income/plan changes. Two core products — 5/6 ARM and 7/6 ARM; everything else (Fannie vs Freddie, high-balance, buydown) is just layering. Start with the structure first.
Fixed for 5 or 7 years, then adjusts every 6 months, indexed to SOFR + a fixed margin, controlled by caps. New rate = index + margin (e.g., SOFR 5% + 2.75 margin = 7.75% fully indexed). Caps are guardrails — they define how much the rate can move, not what it will do.
| Product | Cap (initial / periodic / lifetime) | Worst-case path (from 5.5%) |
|---|---|---|
| 5/6 ARM | 2 / 1 / 5 | First adjust +2 → 7.5%, then +1% every 6 mo, lifetime cap 10.5%. More gradual. |
| 7/6 ARM | 5 / 1 / 5 | First adjust up to +5 → 10.5%, then +1% every 6 mo, same 10.5% lifetime. Bigger first jump. |
Example (5/6): note rate 6% → note+2% = 8%; fully indexed = SOFR 4.75 + 2.75 = 7.5%; qualify at the higher → 8% (borrower's actual payment is still based on 6% for 5 years). Example (7/6, HPML): note 6.5% → +2% = 8.5%; fully indexed = 8%; qualify at the higher → 8.5%. The HPML flag shows on the Compliance Ease report — when tripped, always use the higher of the two.
| Same for both | |
|---|---|
| Same core 5/6 & 7/6, identical adjustment (fixed 5/7, adjusts every 6 mo), same index & margin, same caps (2/1/5 and 5/1/5). Both: standard, high-balance, purchase, refi, even Texas cash-out. | |
| Fannie edge | Freddie |
| LTV up to 97% on 1-unit (better if borrower is stretching the down payment). Buydowns: 2-1 and 3-2-1. | LTV typically a bit lower depending on program. Buydowns: 1-0 and 2-1. |
Borrower gets the ARM disclosure + CHARMS booklet (normal — be ready for the question). The Loan Estimate shows projected payments based on cap limits, not actual future rates. Closing Disclosure: page 1 = projected payments; page 4 = index, margin, caps, adjustment timing. Price it in Quickie → QuickPricer → set amortization type to ARM (top-right) to pull all Fannie/Freddie/high-balance/buydown options.
Realtor talk track: "An ARM can help more buyers qualify and make your listings more affordable." Borrower: "Lower payment now, flexibility later — fixed for 5–7 years, then adjusts only within set limits."
Account Executive: Andrew Noska · andrew.noska@kiavi.com
Tech-driven private/business-purpose lender for investors only (no owner-occupied). Fast, portal-based — pre-qual letters 24/7, closings in as few as 7 business days, no hard credit pull, no minimum-liquidity requirement. The portal sorts every deal into three product buckets up front: Bridge / Fix & Flip / Fix-to-Rent, New Construction, and Rental (DSCR). Figures below are public marketing ranges — confirm against your live portal quote / current matrix before quoting a client.
| Product | What it's for | Leverage (typical, public) |
|---|---|---|
| Bridge / Fix & Flip / Fix-to-Rent | Short-term purchase + rehab; exit by sale or refi into DSCR. | Up to ~95% LTC of purchase + 100% of rehab; up to ~80% ARV. Loan size ~$100K–$1M. |
| New Construction | Ground-up & major structural rebuilds (see definition below). | Up to ~90% LTC. |
| Rental — Individual (DSCR) | Long-term buy-and-hold, 1 property / 1 loan; up to 30-yr term. | LTV up to ~80% for qualified borrowers. |
Strong BRRRR engine: use Bridge/Fix & Flip for the acquisition + rehab, then refi the seasoned, rent-ready property into a DSCR (theirs or another lender's). Good fallback when a property isn't rent-ready day one and can't go straight to DSCR. New Construction covers ground-up that most DSCR lenders won't touch.
To finish this entry: add portal login, approved states (CA/MO), and exact LTV/credit tiers once you pull a live matrix or rate sheet from the portal. (AE: Andrew Noska — see top.)
Account Executive: Chris O'Neill · Chris.ONeill@cv3financial.com
NEXA-approved direct private money lender specializing in residential 1–4 unit investment properties. Direct lender = controls its own guidelines. Lends in 47 states (only a handful require broker licensing). Portal is for submissions & pipeline only — for pricing, email Chris a scenario directly (intake list below).
| Product | Highlights (lender-advertised) |
|---|---|
| DSCR rental | No seasoning, up to 80% cash-out, portfolio loans available, rates advertised starting ~6.375% (reference only — never quote a client a rate). |
| Fix & Flip | Up to 90% LTV on purchase + 100% of rehab budget. |
| Mid-construction refi | For construction completion. |
| Bridge (1–2 yr) | No DSCR requirement, including cash-out on actively listed properties. |
| Ground-up construction | Up to 85% LTC with full-term interest reserves. |
Best-in-class for the recent-BK / listed-property bridge play — 1–2 yr bridge with no DSCR requirement and cash-out even on actively listed properties is rare and exactly the no-income-proof workaround for borrowers who can't season into a DSCR yet. Also a strong BRRRR shop: fix & flip (90% + 100% rehab) or ground-up (85% LTC), then refi into their no-seasoning, 80% cash-out DSCR.
To finish this entry: ranges above are lender-advertised. Ask Chris for the product matrices / guidelines (or pull from the NEXA portal) and I'll swap in the exact LTV/FICO/reserve tiers.
Channel: Correspondent · Portal: www.EZ-Submit.com (info: www.OaktreeCorrespondent.com). Offers both Non-QM and Agency (agency integrations still being built out). Submissions run through the EZ-Submit portal — the workflow cheat sheet below is from their correspondent user guide. Program/matrix details (LTV, FICO, DSCR, bank-statement terms) not in the guide — pull from the site/portal to complete this entry.
Portal admin: Sellers manage their own users (My Account → TPO Users); Administrators add/modify users; Managers/Admins see all company loans, LOs/Processors see only assigned loans. To finish this entry: add AE name/contact, approved states (CA/MO), and the Non-QM + Agency program details/matrices.
Business-purpose, single-property DSCR (1–4 and 5–8 units). Source: Aspire DSCR Program Eligibility Guide v1.3, eff. 07.21.2025. Business-purpose affidavit required from all borrowers; property must be leased to non-borrower tenants. ✅ Both your states work — ineligible states are ND, SD, NV, MN + US territories (CA & MO are fine). Confirm against the current matrix before quoting.
| Transaction | Max LTV | Min FICO | Min DSCR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase / Rate-Term | up to 80% | 700 @ 80% · 660 @ 75% · 640 @ 70% | ≥1.00x (lower-DSCR tiers ≥.80/.75x at higher FICO) |
| Cash-Out | up to 75% | 700 @ 75% · 660 @ 75% · 640 @ 70% | ≥1.00x |
Monthly gross rent ÷ PITIA (ITIA for Interest-Only). Leased: lower of in-place rent and 1007 market rent. Vacant: 100% of 1007 market rent. Foreign nationals / non-perm residents: min 1.25x. Products: 30/40-yr fixed (fully amortizing or IO); IO has a 10-yr IO period, qualifies at note rate on 20/30-yr amortization.
| Borrower / loan | Reserves |
|---|---|
| US citizen / PR · loan ≤ $1.5M | 6 months |
| US citizen / PR · loan > $1.5M | 9 months |
| US citizen / PR · loan ≥ $2.5M | 12 months |
| Foreign national / NPR / first-time investor | up to 12 months |
| 5–8 unit · loan ≥ $2M | 12 months |
Assets: checking/savings/MM 100%, stocks/bonds/funds 100% (less margin), retirement 50%; sourced & seasoned 60 days; large deposit = any single deposit >50% of monthly avg balance. Gift funds allowed after borrower puts in 5% own funds — not for reserves.
12-month average income, −20% for operating costs: (gross rents × 0.80) ÷ PITIA. Max 80% LTV, min DSCR 1.00x. Occupancy must be >60%, market grade 60+. Multiple income sources → use the lowest. Not allowed on 5–8 units.
Where EPM fits: deep, full-featured DSCR with 5–8 unit capability, 40-yr + IO options, lower-DSCR tiers (down to .75x at high FICO), and foreign-national lending — a strong primary DSCR shop for your CA/MO investors, including small multifamily most lenders won't touch.
Owner-occupied / second-home / investment Non-QM for borrowers who can't go full-doc agency. Source: Non-QM Program Guide v10, eff. 09.15.2025. Two tiers — Prime and Elite (higher leverage). Doc options: 24-mo full doc · 12/24-mo personal or business bank statements · 1/2-yr 1099. Products: 30-yr fixed or 30-yr (10/20) Interest-Only — no ARMs. Max DTI 50%. Where silent, defaults to FNMA.
| Tier | Owner-occ / 2nd home | Investment |
|---|---|---|
| Prime | up to 85% purchase/RT (680 FICO); 80% cash-out | up to ~80% (FICO-tiered); cash-out lower |
| Elite | up to 90% purchase (700 FICO) | up to ~80% (660); cash-out ~70–75% |
Independent contractors / gig workers, 2-yr 1099 history. 1 or 2-yr 1099s + 30-day YTD proof (YTD no more than 10% below qualifying). Entity-issued 1099 → borrower must own 100%. Business narrative + expense factor (min 10%). Qualifying income = 1099 income × expense factor ÷ 12 or 24.
Where it fits: your self-employed primary-residence buyers (vs KIND's similar program) — bank-statement or 1099 income, up to 90% on Elite. Pair with the Aspire DSCR for the same borrower's rentals.
Conventional purchase + renovation in one loan (Freddie Mac CHOICERenovation). Buy and rehab a primary, second home, or investment property with a single conforming loan — qualifies on the after-improved value. Must be run through AUS. Great for a buyer who wants a fixer but doesn't want hard-money.
| Occupancy | Max LTV | Min FICO |
|---|---|---|
| Primary 1-unit | 97% ($832,750) | 620 |
| Primary 2 / 3–4 unit | 85% / 80% | 620 |
| Second home 1-unit | 90% | 620 |
| Investment 1-unit | 85% (own funds for down payment) | 620 |
Where it fits: the owner-occupant version of a fix-and-flip — a retail buyer purchasing a dated home and rolling the rehab into one low-down conventional loan. Also works for investors (85%) who'd rather not use bridge money.
EPM is a CalHFA-approved lender, so you can offer California Housing Finance Agency first-time-homebuyer and down-payment-assistance programs to your CA buyers. Source: CalHFA Lender Program Manual (rev. March 2025). Built for low-to-moderate-income Californians.
Where it fits: your CA first-time buyers who are income-qualified but short on down payment — a strong lead-gen and referral magnet. To finish this entry: pull the specific program handbooks (e.g., MyHome, current DPA programs) for exact assistance amounts and income caps before quoting.
EPM's newest unified Non-QM + DSCR guideline (Flex & Select v1.0, eff. 01.15.2026). This is the umbrella that organizes EPM's Non-QM/DSCR shelf into named programs — broader than the older Aspire DSCR / Prime-Elite matrices (notably it adds ITIN/DACA and Foreign National, which Aspire excludes). Where silent, defers to FNMA.
Where it fits: your single most flexible Non-QM menu — covers self-employed, ITIN/DACA, foreign nationals, no-ratio DSCR, multifamily/mixed-use, and second liens under one lender. To finish: the 146-page guide has per-program matrices (LTV/FICO by program) — pull the specific program matrix when quoting a given borrower.
Agency-style jumbo for loans above the conforming limit (Jumbo Express v13). Underwrites via DU/LPA and follows the AUS + Agency selling guide unless the guide says otherwise. Five rate sheets: Jumbo Express 1, 2, 5, 6, 9 (each with its own matrix). Interest-only loans are classified Non-QM.
Where it fits: high-balance CA purchases above conforming — full-doc borrowers who just need more loan than agency allows.
Standard Fannie/Freddie conforming fixed, AUS-driven (must run DU/LPA), max DTI up to 50% (per AUS). 2026 conforming limits: $832,750 (1-unit) up to $1,601,750 (4-unit).
| Occupancy | Purchase / Rate-Term | Cash-Out |
|---|---|---|
| Primary 1-unit | 97% | 80% |
| Primary 2 / 3-4 unit | 95% / 95% | 75% |
| Second home 1-unit | 90% | 75% |
| Investment 1-unit | 85% purch / 75% R-T | 75% |
| Investment 2-4 unit | 75% | 70% |
Manufactured homes to 95% (primary purchase/RT). Appraisal waivers per FNMA (not on 2-4 units, manufactured, values ≥$1M, etc.). MI required >80% LTV.
Where it fits: your bread-and-butter agency loans — including investment-property conventional (a cheaper option than DSCR when the borrower can document income).
VA Standard & High Balance, owner-occupied only, 1–4 units. 100% LTV (purchase excludes funding fee; cash-out includes it), min FICO 500, max ratios per AUS. Manual underwrite needs 24-mo VOR/VOM with 0x30 in last 12 months. Veteran must have sufficient entitlement.
Where it fits: veteran buyers — 100% financing down to a 500 FICO is a strong niche most lenders won't touch.
Business-purpose, investment-only DSCR (Spring EQ also does HELOC / investment HELOC / 2nd-lien — those guides still to come). Manually underwritten; no employment disclosure required. Min loan $100,000 (max per eligibility matrix). Tighter on borrower types than EPM/KIND — see the no-go list.
Annual gross rental income ÷ annual PITIA (ITIA for IO). Long-term rent = comparable rent schedule; if two appraisals, use the lower value & rent. Vacant uses Form 1007 (no lease needed). Refi multi-unit: 1 vacant unit OK on 2–3 units, 2 on 4 units. Family-leased properties are ineligible.
No first-time homebuyers (no ownership in past 3 yrs), no ITIN, no non-permanent residents, no foreign credit/foreign nationals, no irrevocable/land/blind trusts, no non-arm's-length. For any of these → use EPM Flex (Select ITIN / Foreign National) or KIND instead.
Where it fits: a clean, straightforward DSCR for U.S.-citizen/PR investors — especially valuable because there's no cap on financed properties (good for a portfolio builder). To finish this entry: the LTV/FICO eligibility matrix is a table image in the PDF — send the matrix page (or the numbers) and I'll add the exact LTV/FICO/loan-amount grid.
Spring EQ's flagship — tap equity without touching the 1st mortgage. The answer for the borrower who loves their low first-lien rate but wants cash. Crucially, these are available on investment properties too (rate add-on), so an investor can pull equity to fund the next BRRRR down payment. Pricing lives on the live EMMA rate sheet — never quote a rate; talk structure.
| Product | Structure | Terms |
|---|---|---|
| Fixed HELOAN (2nd lien) | Fully amortizing fixed home-equity loan. | 10 / 20 / 30-year |
| Adjustable HELOC | Revolving line, Prime + margin, 3-year draw; lifetime floor ~4.99%; 45-day lock. | 20-yr term / 3-yr draw |
| Fixed HELOC (FIXLINE) | Fixed-rate line with a 3-year draw. | 10 / 20 / 30-year |
Where it fits: two killer plays — (1) the homeowner who won't refi their 2-3% first mortgage but wants cash → 2nd-lien HELOAN/HELOC; (2) the investor pulling equity out of a rental (investment-eligible to 90% CLTV) to fund the next deal without disturbing the existing low-rate financing. Pair with your DSCR shops for the acquisition.
The one-line pitch: "Get the cash you need without refinancing — keep your low first mortgage rate." That's the entire value prop in a market where ~50% of homeowners have a sub-4% first.
Stat hooks: U.S. home equity topped $17 trillion in 2025; the average homeowner has ~$299,000 of equity; values up 40%+ since 2020; nearly half of mortgaged homeowners are "equity rich." Funding in as few as ~11 days; often no traditional appraisal.
Three campaign paths to run to your database:
Database mining tip: target past first-mortgage clients with low rates who now need cash — refi doesn't make sense for them, so a 2nd lien is the only smart option. Also network with contractors, attorneys, and realtors for referrals. Product flyers available: FIXLINE, "Get Cash Without Refinancing," "Eliminate Credit Card Debt," Investment Property HELOAN, HELOC-vs-HELOAN, Piggyback.
⚠️ The kit's email/social/flyer copy is Spring EQ marketing — if you use it, add your own NMLS ID + required compliance disclosures and avoid stating specific rates/APRs.
Cursive (Stockton Mortgage dba Cursive · NMLS 8259) is a NEXA-approved partner and your best FHA pricing. Beyond FHA/agency/government, they run a full correspondent shelf — DSCR, Non-QM, and Jumbo Express (see the two sections below). AE: Lonnie Long · lonnie.long@cursivelending.com · 502-223-6384.
Also on the shelf: Jumbo Express v14 (6 rate sheets, DU/LPA, to ~$3.5M). To finish: the actual FHA/VA/USDA matrices (LTV/FICO floors) weren't in these files — grab those from the Cursive portal and I'll add the agency grids. That's still your one remaining FHA detail gap.
Business-purpose DSCR for experienced investors; qualifies on the property's cash flow regardless of how many properties the borrower owns. Source: DSCR Program Guide, eff. 02.09.2026 (5 rate sheets: DSCR1/2/11/13/15). Min loan $100,000.
| Transaction | Max LTV | Min FICO | Min DSCR |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purchase / Rate-Term (1–4 unit, to $3M) | 80% / 75% / 70% | 700 / 680 / 660 | 1.00 (1.20 at 70/660) |
| Cash-Out (1–4 unit, to $2.5M) | 75% / 70% | 700 / 680 | 1.00 |
Where it fits: a strong DSCR alternative to UWM/KIND/EPM — useful for rate-shopping a clean investor deal across lenders.
Self-employed / alt-doc Non-QM (Program Guide v13, eff. 02.09.2026; rate sheets Non-QM1/2/13/15). Doc options: full doc · 12/24-mo personal or business bank statements · third-party P&L · 1099 · WVOE. A separate Non-QM Select 5 guide adds asset depletion + DSCR Select. Same income math as the EPM template:
Where it fits: rounds Cursive into a one-stop shop — FHA/agency for retail buyers, DSCR for investors, and Non-QM for self-employed, all under one AE (Lonnie). To finish: exact Non-QM LTV/FICO matrices (Appendix B) are in the guide — say the word and I'll extract the specific cells.
FHA, VA, and USDA are government programs with standardized national guidelines — lenders don't publish their own matrices; they follow HUD Handbook 4000.1 (FHA), the VA Lenders Handbook, and USDA 3555, then add their own overlays + pricing. So this baseline applies across all your government-capable lenders (UWM, EPM, Cursive, Pennymac, MLB…); compete them on price and overlay flexibility, not program rules. Figures are 2026 standards — verify the borrower's county limit & current AUS.
How to use this: for any FHA/VA/USDA borrower, the guideline IS this baseline — your lender choice comes down to who prices best and has the friendliest overlays. Cursive is your FHA pricing lead; check UWM/EPM for VA & USDA. Tip: a true rural CA/MO buyer under the income cap may do better on USDA (no down payment, low fee) than FHA — always check.