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Mortgages for New Medical Professionals

by | November 29, 2025

…Just Getting Started? How New Doctors, Dentists & Medical Professionals Can Get a Mortgage Sooner Than You Think

You’ve put in the years: university, med school, residency, sleepless nights, and long shifts. Now you’re finally launching your career as a medical professional. But despite your high earning potential, buying your first home might still feel out of reach because you don’t yet have the income history that lenders usually want to see.

Here’s the good news: many lenders offer special mortgage programs just for you — new doctors, dentists, pharmacists, veterinarians, and other medical professionals. Why? Because lenders understand your career path is unique. They know your income is only going up from here. These programs are designed to help you get into homeownership earlier, without having to wait two or three years to build income history or pay off student debt.

In this article, I’ll walk you through how mortgages work for new medical professionals, what lenders are looking for, and how we can use these programs to your advantage.

Here’s what I’ll cover:

What Lenders Offer to New Medical Professionals

What Lenders Look for in Qualifications

Documentation You’ll Need to Provide

What the Mortgage Can Be Used For

Property Types That Qualify

Amortization Options: How Long You Can Stretch the Payments

Real-World Examples

How I Can Help: Setting You Up for Success from Day One

What Lenders Offer to New Medical Professionals

Certain banks and lenders recognize the earning potential of medical professionals and offer special programs tailored to your unique situation. These programs often allow you to:

  • Qualify based on future earning potential, not just current income
  • Use employment contracts or letters of offer instead of two years of income history
  • Access higher mortgage amounts with smaller down payments
  • Get preferential rates and terms that reflect your profession’s stability

Lenders see you as low-risk because of your career path, even if your paycheque hasn’t caught up to your credentials just yet.

What Lenders Look for in Qualifications

Here’s what lenders want to see from new medical professionals:

  • Confirmation you’re in a licensed medical field (doctor, dentist, pharmacist, vet, etc.)
  • Proof of current employment, residency, or signed offer letter
  • Good credit history (even limited credit is okay if it’s clean, meaning no bankruptcies or consumer proposals)
  • Manageable debt outside of student loans
  • A reasonable down payment — as little as 5% down for an owner-occupied home

Some lenders will allow extended debt service ratios for medical professionals because they trust your future income trajectory.

Documentation You’ll Need to Provide

You don’t need two years of tax returns. Instead, lenders will look for:

  • Letter of employment or signed offer of employment
  • Professional licensing or registration (CPSO, ODA, OCP, etc.)
  • Proof of income (salary, stipend, or projected earnings)
  • Bank statements for down payment and closing costs
  • Government-issued ID
  • Credit bureau report (I’ll handle that)

Your student loans won’t necessarily count against you as harshly as they would for someone in another profession because lenders expect your income to handle it.

What the Mortgage Can Be Used For

These programs are flexible and allow you to:

  • Buy your first home (detached, semi, townhouse, condo)
  • Purchase a second home if relocating for residency or work
  • Refinance to consolidate debt or access equity (after you’ve been in the home for a while)

Some programs even allow for financing your professional practice or buying into a clinic. Contact me for details.

Property Types That Qualify

The property types aren’t restricted because of your profession. You can buy:

  • Detached homes
  • Townhouses
  • Condominiums
  • New builds or resale

The key is it must be owner-occupied if you’re using these specific professional programs.

Amortization Options: How Long You Can Stretch the Payments

Amortization options are standard:

  • 25 years for insured mortgages (with less than 20% down)
  • 30 years for uninsured mortgages (20% down or more)

Longer amortizations help keep payments lower in the early years when your income is still ramping up.

Real-World Example

Meet Sarah — First-Year Resident, Future Homeowner

Sarah is a first-year resident in Toronto with a signed contract guaranteeing her a jump in income after residency. She’s been living frugally and saved 5% for a down payment on a modest condo.

Her realtor told her to talk to me because the big banks wanted two years of history she doesn’t have yet. I connected her with a lender offering a medical professional program. They approved her based on her current contract and future earning potential.

Sarah moved into her condo — close to the hospital — and is now building equity while her peers are still renting.

How Realtors Can Help

Realtors working with medical professionals should:

  • Understand these programs exist and refer clients early to a knowledgeable mortgage agent
  • Set expectations realistically based on location, budget, and financing timelines
  • Help clients focus on homes that align with lender guidelines

How I Can Help: Setting You Up for Success from Day One

Navigating mortgages as a new medical professional isn’t about jumping through hoops — it’s about knowing which lenders recognize your potential. I help by:

  • Connecting you with lenders that offer specialized medical programs
  • Structuring your application around your future, not just your present
  • Helping you plan financing strategies as your career and income evolve
  • Working with your realtor to keep your home search on track

Whether you’re buying now or planning for the next year or two, I’ll make sure you’re set up to succeed without unnecessary delays or roadblocks.

Allen’s Final Thoughts

You’ve spent years investing in your education and your future. Now it’s time to invest in your first home — and you shouldn’t be held back by paperwork that doesn’t reflect your potential. Lenders know your income is only going one direction: up. That’s why these programs exist, and why working with someone who understands them makes all the difference.

If you’re a medical professional starting your career, or a realtor helping one find their first home, let’s connect. I’ll help you navigate this process so you can focus on what you do best: caring for others.

Your career is taking off — let’s make sure your homeownership journey does, too.

Reach out anytime — I’m here to help.

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Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert

Allen Ehlert is a licensed mortgage agent. He has four university degrees, including two Masters degrees, and specializes in real estate finance, development, and investing. Allen Ehlert has decades of independent consulting experience for companies and governments, including the Ontario Real Estate Association, Deloitte, City of Toronto, Enbridge, and the Ministry of Finance.

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