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What’s Your Income Story?

by | November 18, 2025

… How Different Income Sources (Including Overtime) Impact Your Mortgage Approval in Today’s Economy

Once upon a time, mortgage applications were simple: you worked a 9-to-5 job, had a steady salary, and lenders barely batted an eye. Fast forward to today’s economy — people wear multiple hats, juggle side gigs, pick up overtime, and sometimes work more than one job to make ends meet or get ahead.

But here’s the catch: lenders haven’t changed nearly as fast as the way people earn their income. They still want to see stability, predictability, and a paper trail. That’s why understanding how different income types are viewed, including overtime, is crucial if you want to avoid surprises in your mortgage approval.

In this article, I’ll walk you through how lenders treat today’s varied income sources, why overtime hours deserve a special conversation, and how to position your income to help — not hinder — your homeownership plans.

Here’s what we’ll cover:

Why Lenders Care About Income Types

How Different Income Sources Are Viewed by Lenders

The Overtime Conversation: How Extra Hours Are Counted (or Not)

Guaranteed Hours vs. Reality: Why Pay Stubs Matter More Than Letters

Real-World Examples

How I Can Help: Making Your Income Work for You

Why Lenders Care About Income Types

Lenders are creatures of habit. They like predictable, stable income streams because it reduces risk. When they see steady, salaried income, they feel comfortable. When they see fluctuating hours, commissions, gig work, or sporadic overtime, they get cautious.

Their questions are simple:

  • Is this income reliable?
  • Is it likely to continue?
  • Can we verify it clearly?

If the answer is yes, they’ll usually play ball. If not, things can get complicated.

How Different Income Sources Are Viewed by Lenders

Salaried (Full-Time, Permanent)

This is the gold standard. Predictable, steady, and easy to document with a letter of employment and pay stubs.

Hourly (Full-Time or Part-Time)

If your hours are consistent, no problem. If they fluctuate, lenders will typically require a 2-year average from T4s and pay stubs.

Part-Time

Consistent part-time work with guaranteed hours is accepted. Variable hours? Same rule: lenders average over 2 years.

Contract Work

Long-term, renewable contracts are fine. Short-term or sporadic contracts require 2 years of history to prove stability.

Bonus, Commission, Overtime

Here’s where things get tricky — especially with overtime. Lenders want to see a 2-year average to account for any ups and downs. They’re not interested in a recent spike; they’re interested in a pattern.

Gig, Freelance, Casual

If this is your primary income, lenders want 2 years of tax returns (NOAs, T1 Generals). If it’s supplemental and declared, it might help, but informal cash jobs don’t count.

The Overtime Conversation: How Extra Hours Are Counted (or Not)

Overtime is one of the most misunderstood parts of mortgage applications. Many clients assume if they’re working 50+ hours a week, lenders will automatically recognize that extra income. Not always.

How Lenders See Overtime:

  • If your overtime is consistent and regular, lenders will average it over the past 2 years based on your T4s or pay stubs.
  • If overtime is sporadic or seasonal, they may ignore it or average it very conservatively.
  • Some lenders will accept a letter from your employer confirming overtime is expected to continue, but that letter alone isn’t enough. Your income history has to support it.

Trigger Point: Pay Stub Reality vs. Letters

Even if your letter says “guaranteed 40 hours”, if your pay stubs consistently show 35 hours, lenders won’t magically stretch your income. They trust your pay history more than promises.

Similarly, if your overtime isn’t shown clearly on your pay stubs or T4s, it likely won’t count.

Guaranteed Hours vs. Reality: Why Pay Stubs Matter More Than Letters

Lenders prioritize what’s been earned, not what’s promised.
If there’s a mismatch between guaranteed hours on your employment letter and your actual pay stubs, lenders will go with the lower, provable income. This is why documenting your real, average income matters more than what’s written on HR’s letterhead.

Real-World Example

Meet Liam — The Overachiever with Overtime

Liam worked consistent overtime in construction but didn’t realize his lender wouldn’t just take his word for it. His employer letter was vague about hours. I secured a lender who would average his overtime over 2 years, based on T4s and pay history. This bumped up his borrowing power significantly.

Meet Priya — Gig Worker & Side Hustler

Priya drove for Uber and ran a profitable Etsy shop. Her bank said no because it looked unstable. I packaged 2 years of tax returns, bank statements, and a track record of earnings. That clarity got her approved.

How I Can Help: Making Your Income Work for You

I help by:

  • Breaking down how lenders view your income
  • Matching you with lenders who understand modern income realities
  • Structuring your documents to tell the best possible story to underwriters
  • Being upfront about what’s realistic and what’s not — no surprises, no guesswork

Your income situation might not fit into a tidy little box, but your mortgage strategy can.

Allen’s Final Thoughts

In today’s world, your income story is probably more complicated than it looks on paper — and that’s okay. The key to mortgage success is understanding how lenders think, documenting your income properly, and working with someone who knows how to navigate the grey areas.

Overtime, gig work, commissions — these can absolutely help you qualify, but only when handled correctly. It’s not just about how hard you work — it’s about how we tell your story to the lender.

Let’s make sure your income works for you, not against you. 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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