Not every foreign national or US expat has a rental property that produces a qualifying DSCR ratio. For investors and homebuyers who generate strong income or hold significant assets but cannot produce standard US documentation, bank statement loans and asset-based mortgages provide an alternative path to US real estate financing. This guide explains how each product works, who qualifies, and exactly what lenders evaluate.
When a DSCR Loan Is Not the Right Tool
The DSCR loan is the dominant financing vehicle for foreign nationals purchasing US rental properties — but it is not the right tool in every situation. A DSCR loan requires that the subject property generate sufficient rental income to achieve a qualifying debt-service-coverage ratio. If any of the following conditions apply, a bank statement or asset-based loan may be more appropriate:
- The property is a second home or vacation property (not a rental) — DSCR does not apply to non-income-producing properties
- The property is a primary residence — DSCR programs are for investment properties only
- The property is in a lower-yield market where market rents do not support a 1.0+ DSCR at the requested LTV
- The borrower generates substantial documented income from business operations or employment and prefers to qualify on that income
- The borrower holds significant liquid assets and prefers an asset-based qualification rather than relying on rental projections
- The borrower wants cash-out refinancing of a second home or primary residence, not an investment property
In these scenarios, bank statement loans or asset depletion mortgages provide the path to qualification.
Bank Statement Loans: Definition and Mechanics
BANK STATEMENT MORTGAGE LOAN — DEFINITION
A bank statement loan is a non-QM mortgage that uses 12 or 24 months of bank account deposit history as the primary income verification document, in lieu of tax returns, W-2s, or pay stubs. The lender calculates qualifying income by analyzing the average monthly deposits, adjusting for business-related expenses where applicable. This product is designed for self-employed individuals, foreign nationals, and others with non-traditional income structures.
The fundamental logic of a bank statement loan is straightforward: if money is regularly entering your bank account in amounts sufficient to support a mortgage payment, the lender can treat those deposits as evidence of income — regardless of how that income is categorized, documented, or taxed.
For foreign nationals and US expats, this is valuable because it shifts the documentation requirement from US-specific instruments (W-2s, 1040 tax returns, SSN-linked credit history) to a universal format — bank account statements — that exists in every country and every language.
How Lenders Calculate Income from Bank Statements
The income calculation methodology varies by lender, but the standard framework follows these steps:
BANK STATEMENT INCOME CALCULATION
Qualifying Income = (Total Qualifying Deposits ÷ Months) × Expense Ratio Factor
Example — Personal Account (100% of deposits counted):
24-month total deposits: $480,000 → Average monthly: $20,000 → Qualifying income: $20,000/month
Example — Business Account (50% expense ratio applied):
24-month total deposits: $960,000 → Average monthly: $40,000 → After 50% expense ratio: $20,000/month qualifying income
What Deposits Are Included vs. Excluded?
| Deposit Type | Included in Calculation? | Notes |
| Regular salary/income deposits | Yes (100%) | Core qualifying deposits; must show consistent pattern |
| Business revenue deposits | Yes (50% for business accounts) | Expense ratio applied to account for business costs |
| Transfers from other personal accounts | No | Excluded to prevent double-counting |
| One-time asset sale proceeds | No | Not representative of recurring income |
| Gift funds | No (as income) | May count toward reserves/down payment with gift letter |
| Tax refunds | No | Non-recurring; excluded from income calculation |
| NSF / returned items | N/A | Flagged by underwriter; excessive NSFs are a negative indicator |
| Regular rental income deposits | Yes | Strong indicator; consistent monthly deposits |
| Investment dividends / interest | Varies | Some lenders include; must show 2-year history of receipt |
Using International Bank Statements for a US Mortgage
The most critical question for foreign national borrowers is whether their international bank statements will be accepted by a US lender. The answer, for specialist lenders including those accessed through America Mortgages, is yes — subject to the following requirements and conditions.
Requirements for International Bank Statement Acceptance
- Professional certified translation: All statements not in English must be translated by a certified translation professional (not automated translation). The translator must sign a certification statement attesting to accuracy. Cost: approximately $50–150 per document set.
- Authentication of the banking institution: The lender will verify that the bank is a legitimate, regulated financial institution in the issuing country. Statements from major international banks (HSBC, Standard Chartered, DBS, Barclays, Deutsche Bank, BNP Paribas, Mitsubishi UFJ, etc.) and major domestic banks in their home countries are generally accepted without question.
- Statement completeness: All pages of all requested months must be provided. Missing pages cause underwriting delays or denials.
- Currency conversion: All balances and deposits are converted to USD by the lender using the exchange rate at the time of underwriting. Large currency fluctuations between the statement period and underwriting may affect the qualifying income calculation.
- Source of funds: Deposits must be traceable to a legitimate income source. Lenders review for consistency between stated income source and deposit patterns. Unexplained large deposits trigger additional documentation requests.
- AML compliance: US lenders are subject to BSA/AML regulations that require screening of international fund sources. Deposits from OFAC-sanctioned countries or entities are not acceptable. America Mortgages pre-screens applications to identify and resolve compliance issues before formal submission.
Practical tip: If you maintain accounts at major international banks with English-language online banking, many statements are already available in English format. Even so, international statements from multi-currency accounts may require supplementary documentation explaining the deposit sources for large or irregular amounts.
Bank Statement Loan Requirements for Foreign Nationals
| Requirement | Typical Standard | Notes |
| Statement Period | 12 or 24 months (24 preferred) | 24 months provides more income averaging stability and shows consistency |
| Account Type | Personal or business | Business accounts subject to expense ratio (typically 50%) |
| Down Payment | 20–30% | Foreign nationals typically at 25–30%; US citizens/expats at 20–25% |
| Maximum LTV | 70–80% | Lower LTV may receive better pricing and approval certainty |
| Property Types | SFR, condo, 2–4 unit, second home | Investment properties and second homes; primary residence available from select lenders |
| Loan Amounts | $100,000–$3.5 million | Jumbo bank statement loans available for qualified borrowers |
| Reserves | 6–12 months PITIA | Higher reserves improve approval for borderline income calculations |
| Debt-to-Income (DTI) | Up to 45–50% | Calculated using bank statement income; lower DTI = better pricing |
| Credit Score | 620+ for most programs | Foreign nationals without US credit: international credit references or no-credit programs from specialist lenders |
| Prepayment Penalty | Varies; typically 3-2-1 or none | No-prepayment options available at higher rates |
| Interest Rates (May 2026) | 7.00%–8.75% | Vary by LTV, DTI, credit profile, and documentation strength |
Asset-Based Mortgage Loans: Definition and Mechanics
ASSET DEPLETION / ASSET UTILIZATION MORTGAGE — DEFINITION
An asset depletion mortgage (also referred to as asset dissipation or asset utilization) is a non-QM loan that qualifies the borrower based on liquid asset holdings rather than income. The lender calculates a theoretical monthly income by dividing total qualifying assets by the remaining loan term in months. This imputed income is used in the DTI (debt-to-income) analysis. No employment documentation or tax returns are required for the income portion of qualification — the assets are the income substitute.
Asset-based lending is particularly well-suited to high-net-worth foreign nationals and expats in the following situations: retirees with investment portfolios but no regular employment income; investors who have liquidated a business or sold a significant asset and hold large cash reserves; individuals whose income is complex, multi-jurisdictional, or difficult to document but whose wealth is clearly evidenced through verifiable asset accounts.
How Asset Depletion Income Is Calculated
ASSET DEPLETION INCOME FORMULA
Monthly Imputed Income = Total Qualifying Assets ÷ Loan Term (months)
Example 1 — 30-Year Loan:
Qualifying assets: $2,400,000 ÷ 360 months = $6,667/month imputed income If DTI maximum is 45%: Maximum monthly debt (including mortgage): $6,667 × 0.45 = $3,000 This supports a mortgage payment of approximately $2,500–$2,800/month depending on other debts
Example 2 — Higher Asset Position:
Qualifying assets: $4,000,000 ÷ 360 months = $11,111/month Maximum monthly debt at 45% DTI: $5,000 Supports a mortgage payment of approximately $4,200–$4,600/month (loan ~$600K–$700K at prevailing rates)
Note on retirement accounts: Assets held in retirement accounts (IRA, 401k, pension funds) are typically discounted to 60–70% of face value for asset depletion calculations, to account for income taxes and early withdrawal penalties that would be incurred upon liquidation. A $1,000,000 IRA counts as $600,000–$700,000 of qualifying assets.
Eligible and Ineligible Asset Types
| Asset Type | Eligible? | Counted At | Documentation Required |
| US checking / savings accounts | Yes | 100% | 2–3 months of statements |
| US brokerage / investment accounts | Yes | 70–100% | Most recent quarterly statement |
| US IRA / 401k / retirement accounts | Yes (with discount) | 60–70% | Most recent quarterly statement; plan documentation |
| Foreign bank accounts (major institutions) | Yes | 100% after conversion | Certified statements + certified translation + source documentation |
| Foreign investment / brokerage accounts | Yes (varies by lender) | 70% after conversion | Certified statements + certified translation |
| Certificates of deposit (CD) | Yes | 100% | CD statement; note any early withdrawal penalty terms |
| Money market accounts | Yes | 100% | 2–3 months of statements |
| Cryptocurrency holdings | Limited | 50% (select lenders) | Exchange account statement; converted to USD at current market value |
| Real estate equity | Generally no | N/A | Not liquid; excluded unless converted to cash via sale or HELOC |
| Business assets / equipment | No | N/A | Not liquid or personally accessible |
| Life insurance cash value | Sometimes | 100% | Insurance policy statement showing cash surrender value |
Asset-Based Loan Requirements for Foreign Nationals
| Requirement | Typical Standard | Notes |
| Minimum Qualifying Assets | Sufficient to produce qualifying DTI (see formula) | Generally requires $1M+ in liquid assets for meaningful loan amounts |
| Asset Seasoning | 60 days minimum in documented accounts | Large recent deposits require source documentation |
| Down Payment | 25–35% | Down payment funds are in addition to qualifying assets; cannot be double-counted |
| Reserves | 6–12 months after closing | Reserve assets are also separate from qualifying assets and down payment; borrower needs assets for all three purposes |
| Property Types | SFR, condo, 2–4 unit, second home, primary residence | More flexible than DSCR; available for all residential property types |
| Loan Amounts | $250,000–$5 million+ | Asset-based lending common in jumbo loan scenarios |
| Credit Score | 660+ for most programs | International credit references accepted by specialist lenders for foreign nationals |
| Interest Rates (May 2026) | 7.25%–9.00% | Varies by LTV, asset type, and documentation complexity |
Critical point on asset counting: Assets used for the down payment and assets held as post-closing reserves cannot also be counted as qualifying assets for income depletion purposes. A borrower must have sufficient assets to fund all three buckets independently. Example: $4M in assets, $400K down payment (10% of $4M purchase), $200K reserves (6 months), leaves $3.4M for income depletion calculation.
Choosing Between DSCR, Bank Statement, and Asset-Based Loans
| If Your Situation Is… | Best Loan Type | Reason |
| Purchasing a US rental property with strong rental income | DSCR Loan | No personal income needed; simplest path for investment properties |
| Purchasing a second home or vacation property | Bank Statement or Asset-Based | DSCR doesn’t apply; qualify on income or wealth |
| Purchasing a primary residence as an expat | Bank Statement (with Form 2555 add-back) or Asset-Based | Primary residence programs; income or asset qualification |
| Self-employed with strong cash flow but complex taxes | Bank Statement Loan | Deposit history shows true cash flow; avoids tax return understatement |
| Retired or semi-retired with large investment portfolio | Asset-Based (Asset Depletion) | No income required; wealth generates theoretical qualifying income |
| Rental property in a market with borderline DSCR | Asset-Based (to supplement DSCR) | Assets as compensating factor to support a lower-DSCR property |
| Entrepreneur who just sold a business | Asset-Based | Large liquid asset position; income may not yet be established |
| High earner with complex multi-country income | Bank Statement | Deposits tell the income story better than multi-country tax documents |
Ideal Borrower Profiles for Each Product
BANK STATEMENT LOAN
The Singapore-Based Business Owner
A Singaporean entrepreneur owns a profitable IT services company with annual revenues of SGD 2.4 million. Her personal tax return shows a modest salary, as most profits are retained in the business. She wants to purchase a US condo in Miami as a second home for personal use during visits. DSCR doesn’t apply (not a rental). Her solution: a 24-month bank statement loan using her business account deposits, with a 50% expense ratio applied, still produces $10,000+/month in qualifying income — more than sufficient to qualify for a $750,000 mortgage.
ASSET DEPLETION LOAN
The Dubai-Based Retired Investor
A 62-year-old British national has lived in Dubai for 20 years and retired at 58. He holds $3.8 million in a combination of USD brokerage accounts and a DBS Singapore account. He receives no regular salary but has significant investment income and savings. He wants to purchase a $1.2 million condo in Miami as a US base. Asset depletion calculation: $3.8M (after 25% LTV down payment reserve) ÷ 360 months = $10,556/month imputed income. This supports a $900,000 mortgage at prevailing rates. The loan is structured as a second home purchase.
COMBINED BANK STATEMENT + DSCR
The Hong Kong Property Investor
A Hong Kong real estate developer is purchasing a Dallas duplex as a rental investment. The DSCR calculates at 1.05, qualifying but marginal. He also holds significant bank deposit evidence from his development business. America Mortgages structures the application as a DSCR loan with bank statement evidence used as a compensating factor for the marginal DSCR, allowing the loan to proceed with preferred pricing despite the borderline ratio.
Documentation Checklist: Bank Statement and Asset-Based Loans
Bank Statement Loan — Documents Required
- 12 or 24 months of personal bank statements (all pages, all accounts)
- 12 or 24 months of business bank statements if using business deposits (all pages)
- Certified English translations for all non-English statements
- Business registration documents (for business account statements)
- CPA letter verifying business ownership and operating status
- Valid passport (primary ID)
- Property purchase agreement or refinance authorization
- Reserve documentation (separate from qualifying accounts)
- US LLC documentation (for investment property purchase)
Asset Depletion Loan — Documents Required
- 2–3 months of most recent statements for all qualifying accounts
- Most recent quarterly brokerage/investment account statements
- Retirement account statements (IRA, 401k, pension — most recent quarterly)
- Foreign bank account statements with certified English translation
- Source of funds documentation for large deposits or transfers within 60 days
- Valid passport (primary ID)
- Property purchase agreement or refinance authorization
- US LLC documentation (for investment property purchase)
Frequently Asked Questions
Q1: What is a bank statement mortgage loan? +
A: A bank statement loan is a non-QM mortgage that qualifies borrowers using 12–24 months of bank account deposit history instead of tax returns, W-2s, or standard income documentation. Lenders calculate qualifying income by averaging monthly deposits and applying an expense ratio to business accounts. Widely used by self-employed borrowers, foreign nationals, and US expats with non-traditional income documentation.
Q2: Can a foreign national use an international bank statement for a US mortgage?
A: Yes, with specialist lenders. International bank statements must be professionally certified and translated into English. The lender verifies the institution’s legitimacy and traces deposits to a legitimate income source. America Mortgages works with lenders that accept statements from major international banks in most countries.
Q3: What is an asset depletion mortgage?
A: An asset depletion mortgage qualifies borrowers based on liquid assets rather than income. The lender divides total qualifying assets by the loan term in months to calculate an imputed monthly income used in DTI analysis. Ideal for high-net-worth individuals with substantial assets but limited documentable monthly income — retirees, entrepreneurs post-exit, and international investors with large investment portfolios.
Q4: How much do I need in assets to qualify for an asset-based mortgage?
A: Required assets depend on the loan payment and term. Formula: Qualifying assets = (Required monthly income × loan term months). For a $3,000/month payment requiring $5,000/month qualifying income over 30 years: $5,000 × 360 = $1,800,000 in qualifying assets. Note that this is separate from the down payment and required reserves.
Q5: What types of assets count for an asset depletion mortgage?
A: Eligible assets include: checking and savings (100%), brokerage/investment accounts (70–100%), retirement accounts like IRA/401k (60–70%), foreign bank accounts (100% after verification), certificates of deposit (100%). Real estate equity, business assets, and cryptocurrency are generally excluded or heavily discounted.
Q6: How do lenders calculate income from bank statements?
A: Lenders add all qualifying deposits over 12 or 24 months. For business accounts, they apply an expense ratio (typically 50%) to net out business expenses. They divide the total by the number of months to get average monthly income. Non-recurring deposits (asset sales, tax refunds, inter-account transfers) are excluded.
Q7:Do bank statement loans require a US credit score?
A: Most programs require 620–680 minimum. For foreign nationals without US credit, specialist lenders accept international credit references or home-country credit reports. America Mortgages works with lenders that underwrite foreign nationals without a US credit score by using alternative documentation and compensating factors.
Q8: What is the down payment for a bank statement loan for foreign nationals?
A: Typically 20–30%, depending on the loan amount, property type, LTV requested, and borrower profile. Foreign nationals who are non-residents generally require 25–30% down. US citizens and expats with documented US credit may qualify with 20% down from some lenders.