🧮
Mortgage Calculator
Work out how much you can borrow and what your monthly repayments would be
Try the calculator →
🏡 Mortgages

Self-Employed Mortgage Guide UK 2026

Self-employed and want a mortgage? Here's exactly what lenders want to see and how to get approved.

📖 6 min read ✅ FCA-regulated advisers 🆓 Free to use

Can self-employed people get a mortgage?

Absolutely — but the process is more involved than for employed borrowers. The core challenge is proving your income to a lender's satisfaction. Since your earnings fluctuate and aren't confirmed by a simple payslip, lenders require more documentation and assess your income differently.

With good preparation and the right adviser, self-employed mortgages are entirely achievable — even for sole traders, limited company directors, contractors, and freelancers.

How do lenders assess self-employed income?

This depends on your business structure:

Sole traders and partnerships

Lenders typically use your net profit from your SA302 tax calculations — usually averaging the last 2–3 years. Some lenders will use the most recent year if your income is rising. If it's falling, they'll usually take the lower figure.

Limited company directors

Most lenders use your salary plus dividends. Some will also consider retained profit within the company — particularly useful if you pay yourself a low salary for tax efficiency. Specialist lenders are often more accommodating here.

Contractors

If you work on day rate contracts, some lenders will annualise your day rate (day rate × 5 days × 46 weeks) rather than your SA302 profit — often resulting in a much higher assessed income. Not all lenders offer this, which is why an adviser is valuable.

What documents will I need?

💡 One year of accounts? A handful of specialist lenders will consider applications from the self-employed with as little as 12 months of trading history. An adviser can identify these lenders.

Common pitfalls for self-employed applicants

How much can I borrow?

The same income multiples apply as for employed borrowers — typically 4–4.5x your assessed income, with some lenders offering up to 5.5x in certain circumstances. The key is ensuring the right income figure is used in the first place.

Tips to maximise your mortgage options

Related mortgage guides

→ First time buyer guide → Should I remortgage? → Fixed vs tracker → Improve your credit score
View all guides →

Ready to find the right mortgage adviser?

Get matched with a whole-of-market FCA-regulated specialist in under 2 minutes — free, no obligation.

Find my adviser — it's free →
Get Matched Free →