Home buying

What to bring to your first mortgage meeting

Jasper Liu 6 min read 🖨 Print checklist

This guide is useful whether you're meeting me or any other loan originator. The goal isn't to impress anyone — it's to get accurate information back. A mortgage professional can only give you realistic numbers if they understand your real situation, and you can only evaluate what they're telling you if you know your own numbers first.

There are three parts: the numbers you should have a rough sense of before you walk in, the documents you'll need to gather, and the questions worth asking any MLO at that first meeting.


Part 1 — Numbers to know off the top of your head

You don't need documents for this part. These are the rough figures that shape every conversation about what you can borrow.

Gross income

Your income before taxes. If you're buying with a partner or co-borrower, add both incomes. Know your base salary separately from variable income — lenders treat them differently.

If you work in tech: RSUs and bonuses are usable income, but with an important caveat — lenders require a 2-year history of receiving them and will average the past two years. A large RSU grant that just started vesting last year typically can't be counted yet. Know roughly what your last two years of W-2 Box 1 income looks like (base + bonus + RSU vest), since that's the number lenders will work from, not your current comp package or unvested equity.

Monthly debt payments

This is the one people most consistently underestimate. What counts as a "debt" for mortgage purposes:

What does not count: rent, utilities, subscriptions, insurance, groceries. Those are living expenses, not debts in the DTI calculation.

Down payment available

How much you have set aside for this purchase — across all accounts. Don't subtract closing costs yet; that comes later. Just know the rough total you could deploy.

Credit score range

You don't need the exact number, but know roughly where you are. Under 620, 620–679, 680–739, 740+. If you don't know, annualcreditreport.com gives you a free report from all three bureaus, and most credit card apps now show your score for free.

Your credit score doesn't just determine whether you get approved — it determines your interest rate. The difference between a 680 and a 740 score can be 0.25–0.75% on your rate, which adds up to tens of thousands of dollars over the life of the loan.

Target price range and timeline

Even a rough answer helps. "We're thinking $700K–$900K, probably ready in 3–6 months" is enough to orient the conversation. If you have no idea on price, that's fine — that's often what the meeting helps you figure out.


Part 2 — Documents to collect

You won't need all of these at a first meeting — but if you're moving toward a pre-approval (which you should be, since it's what makes your offer credible), you'll need them shortly after. Getting organized now saves scrambling later.

Check off what you have and note what you still need to find.

Income documents

For W-2 employees (most common)
For self-employed or 1099 income
With RSU / Bonus income Common for Bay Area tech
The 2-year rule: Variable income (RSUs, bonuses, commissions) requires a 2-year history to count toward qualifying income. If you just started a new job or just received your first RSU vest, that income generally can't be used yet — lenders need to see a pattern, not a one-time event. Plan accordingly if you're 12–18 months into a new role.
Additional income sources

Asset documents

Proof that your down payment and reserves are real

Identity & credit

Property & existing mortgage if refinancing or selling


Part 3 — Questions to ask any loan originator

A good loan originator should welcome these. If someone gets evasive, that tells you something.

About the rate and costs

About the process

About your specific situation

One more thing: Get a Loan Estimate before you commit to any lender. Lenders are required by law to give you one within three business days of a full application. It's a standardized three-page document that lets you compare offers side by side. If anyone discourages you from shopping around, that's a red flag.

Want to run through this with me?

First conversation is free, takes 20–30 minutes, and doesn't require a credit pull. You'll leave with a clearer picture of what you qualify for and what to focus on next.

Get in touch →

Educational purposes only. Loan programs vary. Not legal, tax, or financial advice. Contact me for individualized guidance.

← Back to all notes