You think you’re ready to buy a home because a website gave you a "pre-qualification" letter in thirty seconds. You think because your credit score is a 720, you’re a "shoe-in."

I KNOW WHY you’re nervous. And I know why so many buyers: even those with high incomes: get hit with a "denied" or "suspended" status two weeks before closing.

It’s because you are playing a game where you don’t know the rules. You are looking at your finances like a consumer. I look at them like an underwriter.

As a Certified Mortgage Underwriter, I’ve seen thousands of files. I don’t just see numbers; I see patterns, risks, and red flags that most loan officers don’t even notice until it’s too late. I built the Underwriter-Designed System at Kimcorp Group because the "internet advice" you’re reading is fluff. It’s not enough to be "qualified." You have to be Lender-Ready.

Here are the 5 things I see when I open your file that you probably don't.


1. The "Math of Reality": Your Real DTI

You might think your Debt-to-Income (DTI) ratio is fine because you can afford your bills. But underwriters don’t care what you feel you can afford. We care about the Math of Reality.

When I look at your DTI, I’m not just looking at your car note and your student loans. I’m looking for:

THE TRUTH: Most buyers are one small debt away from disqualification. If you aren't using a proven readiness strategy, you’re guessing with the biggest purchase of your life.


2. Credit Patterns (Not Just the Score)

A 700 credit score is a snapshot. An underwriter looks at the movie.

I’m looking at your credit behavior over the last 12 to 24 months. If I see a 700 score but your credit card balances have been steadily creeping up for six months, I see Financial Stress.

Credit Score Secrets

I also look for:


3. Employment Stability: The "Predictability Factor"

"But I make $100k a year!" Great. But how do you make it?

Underwriters are obsessed with predictability. If you are a W-2 employee with a steady salary, you’re easy. But if you are self-employed, 1099, or rely heavily on overtime and bonuses, I’m digging deep.

I’ve detailed exactly how to audit your own income in the Home Buyer Readiness Workbook. Don't let an underwriter be the first person to find a hole in your income story.

Home Buyer Readiness Workbook


4. Asset Sourcing: The "Large Deposit" Trap

This is where the most "ready" buyers fail. You have $20,000 in your bank account for a down payment. You’re good, right?

Not if $5,000 of it appeared out of nowhere last Tuesday.

Underwriters have to "source" every dollar. If I see a large deposit that isn't a payroll check, I need to know exactly where it came from.

DPA Secrets


5. Layered Risk: The Big Picture

Finally, I look for Layered Risk. This is the "hidden" reason people get denied.

Separately, these things might be okay, but together, they are a nightmare:

Individually, each of those might meet the "minimum guidelines." But when they start stacking up, the underwriter sees a "high-risk" profile. My job is to protect the lender, and if your file has too many "layers," I’m going to pass.


Stop Guessing. Start Positioning.

The secret to getting a "YES" isn't having a perfect life. It’s about positioning your file so that when it hits my desk, there are no questions left to ask.

You don't need "internet advice." You need a playbook.

I created the Underwriter’s Playbook System to take the mystery out of this process. It’s the exact same logic I use to approve or deny loans, turned into a step-by-step system for you.

What's inside the system:

Stop being the buyer who gets surprised by a denial letter. Become the buyer who walks into the bank with total confidence.

Get the Underwriter's Playbook System now and clear the hurdles before you even apply.

Underwriter's Playbook Bundle

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