Manual Underwriting for Low Credit

Manual underwriting is the process where a human underwriter evaluates a mortgage application that cannot receive automated approval through Desktop Underwriter (DU) or Loan Product Advisor (LPA). It is most common with FHA and VA loans for borrowers with low credit scores, thin credit files, or non-traditional credit histories who need an experienced underwriter to weigh compensating factors and make an individual risk determination.

Key Takeaways

  • Manual underwriting uses a human underwriter to evaluate your mortgage application instead of an automated system like Desktop Underwriter or Loan Product Advisor.
  • FHA and VA are the two loan programs that most commonly allow manual underwriting; conventional loans from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rarely permit it.
  • Compensating factors such as cash reserves, low DTI, residual income, and employment stability are critical to getting approved through manual underwriting.
  • Borrowers without a credit score or with thin credit files must provide at least three non-traditional credit references with 12 months of on-time payment history.
  • The manual underwriting process takes significantly longer than automated approval, typically adding 15-30 days to the overall closing timeline.
  • FHA imposes strict DTI limits for manual underwrites: 31/43 with one compensating factor and 37/47 with two compensating factors for scores 580 and above.
  • Cash reserves of at least three months of mortgage payments are considered one of the strongest compensating factors by manual underwriters.
  • Interest rates for FHA and VA manually underwritten loans are typically comparable to AUS-approved loans, though some lenders add pricing overlays.

How It Works

What Is Manual Underwriting?

Manual underwriting is the process of having a human underwriter individually evaluate a mortgage application rather than relying on an automated underwriting system (AUS) such as Fannie Mae’s Desktop Underwriter (DU) or Freddie Mac’s Loan Product Advisor (LPA). In a standard mortgage transaction, your loan file is submitted to one of these systems, which uses algorithms to assess your credit profile, income, assets, and the property details to issue a finding of Approve/Eligible or Accept. When the automated system cannot issue an approval (or issues a Refer or Caution finding), a human underwriter must step in to review the file manually.

Manual underwriting is not a separate loan product. It is a different method of evaluating risk. The underwriter reads every document, weighs compensating factors by hand, and makes a judgment call about whether the borrower is an acceptable credit risk. This process is slower, more documentation-intensive, and requires the underwriter to justify every approval decision in writing. However, it opens a path to homeownership for borrowers who would otherwise be denied by the rigid scoring models of automated systems.

Borrowers with low credit scores, limited credit history, or non-traditional credit backgrounds are the most common candidates for manual underwriting. If you have experienced a bankruptcy, foreclosure, or other major derogatory event and are rebuilding credit, manual underwriting may be the route your lender uses to evaluate your loan application. Borrowers with thin credit files who lack enough tradelines for an AUS score may also require this process.

When Is Manual Underwriting Required vs. Optional?

Manual underwriting is required when the automated underwriting system cannot issue an approval. This typically happens in the following scenarios:

  • The borrower has no credit score at all (often due to a thin file with fewer than three tradelines or no recently active accounts)
  • The AUS returns a Refer or Refer with Caution finding, meaning the algorithm cannot approve the loan based on its risk models
  • The borrower has a credit score below the AUS minimum threshold for the loan program (for example, below 580 for FHA with 3.5% down)
  • The borrower’s debt-to-income ratio exceeds the limits the AUS will approve without additional scrutiny
  • The loan file contains factors the algorithm cannot properly weigh, such as a recent bankruptcy discharge combined with re-established credit

Manual underwriting can also be optional in some cases. A lender may choose to manually underwrite a loan even if the AUS issued an approval, particularly if the lender has concerns about the file that the automated system did not flag. Some lenders specialize in manual underwriting and prefer to use human judgment for borderline files rather than relying solely on algorithms.

FHA Manual Underwriting Guidelines

The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) is the most accommodating loan program for manual underwriting. FHA’s guidelines, published in HUD Handbook 4000.1, provide a detailed framework for how underwriters should evaluate manually underwritten loans. FHA allows manual underwriting for borrowers with credit scores as low as 500 (with 10% down) or 580 and above (with 3.5% down), though individual lenders may impose higher minimums called overlays.

For FHA manual underwriting, the maximum debt-to-income (DTI) ratios depend on the borrower’s credit score and the presence of compensating factors:

  • Credit score 580 and above with one compensating factor: Maximum front-end DTI of 31% and back-end DTI of 43%
  • Credit score 580 and above with two compensating factors: Maximum front-end DTI of 37% and back-end DTI of 47%
  • Credit score below 580: Maximum front-end DTI of 31% and back-end DTI of 43%, even with compensating factors

FHA recognizes specific compensating factors that strengthen a manual underwrite. These include verified and documented cash reserves equal to at least three months of mortgage payments, minimal increase in housing payment (payment shock of 5% or less compared to current rent), long-term employment stability of at least two years with the same employer, residual income meeting VA residual income guidelines, and no discretionary debt. The underwriter must document which compensating factors are present and explain how they offset the risk in the loan file.

Borrowers with no credit score applying for an FHA loan must be manually underwritten. In these cases, the underwriter will rely entirely on non-traditional credit documentation to establish creditworthiness. This is common among borrowers who have avoided traditional credit products and instead have histories of paying rent, utilities, and insurance on time.

VA Manual Underwriting Guidelines

The Department of Veterans Affairs also permits manual underwriting for VA-guaranteed home loans, and VA is generally considered the second most flexible program for this process. VA loans do not have a minimum credit score requirement set by the VA itself, though most lenders impose overlays typically in the 580-620 range. When the AUS returns a Refer finding on a VA loan, the underwriter conducts a manual review.

VA manual underwriting places heavy emphasis on residual income, which is the amount of money a borrower has left over each month after paying all major obligations including the proposed mortgage, taxes, insurance, and all installment and revolving debts. VA publishes residual income tables based on geographic region, family size, and loan amount. Meeting or exceeding the VA residual income guideline is one of the strongest compensating factors for a VA manually underwritten loan.

VA does not impose strict DTI caps the way FHA does. Instead, VA guidelines state that a DTI ratio above 41% requires the underwriter to document compensating factors that justify the higher ratio. In practice, VA underwriters have more flexibility than FHA underwriters to approve loans with higher DTI ratios when strong compensating factors are present, such as significant residual income above the guideline, tax-free military income, or a long history of managing similar debt levels successfully.

Why Conventional Loans Rarely Allow Manual Underwriting

Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two government-sponsored enterprises that set the rules for conventional conforming loans, have largely moved away from manual underwriting. Fannie Mae’s Selling Guide does permit manual underwriting in limited circumstances, but the requirements are so restrictive that very few lenders offer it. Freddie Mac’s Seller/Servicer Guide requires that loans receive an Accept or A-minus risk classification from Loan Product Advisor for purchase eligibility, making manual underwriting effectively unavailable for most Freddie Mac-delivered loans.

The practical reality is that if you cannot obtain an Approve/Eligible finding from DU or an Accept finding from LPA, a conventional loan is extremely difficult to obtain. This is a key reason why FHA and VA loans are the primary vehicles for borrowers who need manual underwriting. The conventional loan market is designed around automated risk assessment, and the pricing adjustments (loan-level price adjustments, or LLPAs) for loans that do not receive automated approval make them economically unattractive for most lenders.

Compensating Factors That Strengthen a Manual Underwriting Case

Compensating factors are the backbone of a successful manual underwrite. These are documented strengths in the borrower’s financial profile that offset weaknesses such as low credit scores, limited credit history, or higher debt-to-income ratios. The following compensating factors carry the most weight with underwriters:

  • Cash reserves: Having three or more months of mortgage payments saved in verified accounts after closing demonstrates financial stability. Some underwriters view reserves as the single strongest compensating factor because they show the borrower can sustain payments even if income is disrupted.
  • Low debt-to-income ratio: If your DTI is well below the program maximum, it signals that you have sufficient income capacity to handle the mortgage payment. A borrower with a 28% back-end DTI is a much easier manual approval than one at 43%.
  • Residual income: Particularly important for VA loans, residual income shows the underwriter how much disposable income remains after all obligations. Exceeding the VA residual income guideline by 20% or more is a strong compensating factor across all loan programs.
  • Employment stability: Two or more years of continuous employment with the same employer, or in the same field, demonstrates income reliability. Underwriters favor borrowers with consistent, predictable income over those with variable or recently started income.
  • Minimal payment shock: If your proposed mortgage payment is close to or less than your current rent payment, the underwriter can reasonably conclude you can manage the payment. A payment shock of less than 5% is considered a compensating factor under FHA guidelines.
  • Conservative loan-to-value (LTV): Making a larger down payment reduces the lender’s risk exposure and shows the borrower has significant skin in the game. An LTV of 90% or lower on a manual underwrite is a positive factor.
  • No discretionary debt: Having minimal revolving debt or consumer installment debt beyond the mortgage suggests disciplined spending habits, even if the credit score does not fully reflect that discipline.

Non-Traditional Credit Documentation Requirements

One of the most documentation-intensive aspects of manual underwriting is establishing creditworthiness through non-traditional credit when the borrower lacks a sufficient traditional credit history. Non-traditional credit refers to recurring financial obligations that are not reported to the major credit bureaus (Equifax, Experian, TransUnion) but demonstrate a pattern of responsible payment behavior.

FHA and VA both accept the following as non-traditional credit references, provided the borrower can document at least 12 months of on-time payments:

  • Rent payments: The most important non-traditional tradeline. The underwriter needs 12 consecutive months of on-time rent payments, verified by canceled checks, bank statements, or a verification of rent (VOR) from the landlord. Paying rent to a family member typically does not qualify.
  • Utility payments: Electric, gas, water, phone, or internet bills paid on time for 12 months. These must be in the borrower’s name and documented with account statements or a letter from the provider.
  • Insurance payments: Auto insurance, renter’s insurance, or health insurance premiums paid monthly for at least 12 months. Annual lump-sum payments may not count as they do not demonstrate monthly payment discipline.
  • Other recurring obligations: Cell phone bills, streaming service subscriptions paid via bank draft, childcare payments, or tuition payments may be considered if properly documented.

Borrowers with thin credit files who have some traditional tradelines but not enough for a reliable credit score may be able to supplement their profile with non-traditional credit references. Similarly, borrowers who have used authorized user tradelines to build credit may still need manual underwriting if those tradelines are not sufficient for AUS approval.

The underwriter typically requires a minimum of three non-traditional credit references with 12 months of payment history each. At least one of these should be a housing-related payment (rent). Under FHA manual underwriting guidelines, borrowers using non-traditional credit must provide at least three references covering 12 consecutive months each, with no more than one 30-day late payment permitted across all references (HUD Handbook 4000.1).

The Manual Underwriting Process Step by Step

Understanding the manual underwriting process helps set expectations for timeline and documentation requirements. Here is how it typically unfolds:

  • Step 1, AUS submission and Refer finding: Your loan officer submits the application to DU or LPA. If the system returns a Refer, Refer with Caution, or the borrower has no credit score, the file is flagged for manual underwriting.
  • Step 2, Lender eligibility check: Not all lenders perform manual underwriting. Your loan officer confirms that the company is approved to manually underwrite loans and has underwriters trained for the process. If not, you may need to find a lender that specializes in manual underwrites.
  • Step 3, Enhanced documentation collection: The loan officer requests additional documentation beyond the standard package. This includes non-traditional credit verification, letters of explanation for derogatory credit events, proof of compensating factors, and any other documentation the underwriter will need to build a case for approval.
  • Step 4, File submission to underwriting: The complete file is submitted to the underwriter. Unlike an AUS submission that returns results in seconds, the manual review begins with the underwriter reading the entire file.
  • Step 5, Underwriter review and conditions: The underwriter evaluates income, assets, credit, property, and compensating factors. They document their analysis and either issue a conditional approval (approval with conditions that must be met before closing), a suspension (more information needed), or a denial.
  • Step 6, Condition clearance: The borrower and loan officer work to satisfy any conditions the underwriter has imposed. This may include additional documentation, updated bank statements, or verification of specific items.
  • Step 7, Clear to close: Once all conditions are satisfied, the underwriter issues a clear to close, and the loan proceeds to the closing process.

How Interest Rates and Pricing Differ for Manually Underwritten Loans

Borrowers going through manual underwriting should expect some differences in pricing compared to loans that receive automated approval. The extent of these differences depends on the loan program:

FHA loans: FHA does not impose a rate premium for manually underwritten loans. The interest rate is primarily determined by your credit score, market conditions, and the lender’s pricing. However, some lenders add their own pricing adjustments (overlays) for manual underwrites because these files require more work and carry perceived higher risk. Shopping multiple lenders is critical to avoid paying an unnecessary premium.

VA loans: Similar to FHA, the VA does not mandate higher rates for manually underwritten loans. VA loans carry a funding fee that varies based on down payment and prior VA loan usage, but this fee is the same regardless of whether the loan was approved through AUS or manual underwriting.

Conventional loans: On the rare occasion a conventional loan is manually underwritten, loan-level price adjustments (LLPAs) can be significant. Combined with the low credit score LLPAs that often accompany manual underwrite candidates, the effective rate can be substantially higher than a borrower with strong credit would pay.

As a general rule, the rate difference for FHA and VA manually underwritten loans is modest, often zero to 0.25% above what an AUS-approved borrower with the same credit score would receive. The bigger cost consideration is often the time value: manual underwrites take longer, which can delay closing and potentially affect rate lock timing.

Common Reasons for Denial in Manual Underwriting

Not every manually underwritten loan is approved. Understanding the most common denial reasons helps borrowers prepare and address weaknesses before applying:

  • Insufficient compensating factors: The underwriter cannot approve a high DTI ratio or low credit score without documented compensating factors. If the file has risk factors but nothing to offset them, denial is likely.
  • Inadequate non-traditional credit: For borrowers without a credit score, failing to provide at least three non-traditional credit references with clean 12-month histories is a common reason for denial.
  • Unresolved derogatory credit: Active collections, judgments, or liens that have not been paid or set up on a payment plan can prevent approval. The underwriter needs to see that past credit problems have been addressed.
  • DTI exceeds program limits: Even with compensating factors, exceeding the maximum DTI ratio for the loan program and credit score combination results in denial. FHA is strict about its DTI caps for manual underwrites.
  • Unstable income: Gaps in employment, declining income trends, or income that cannot be adequately documented (such as unreported cash income) undermine the underwriter’s ability to approve the loan.
  • Recent major derogatory events: Bankruptcy, foreclosure, short sale, or deed-in-lieu of foreclosure that occurred too recently (within the required waiting period for the loan program) will result in denial regardless of compensating factors.
  • Property issues: Appraisal problems, title defects, or properties that do not meet minimum property standards for the loan program can cause denial independent of the borrower’s qualifications.

Timeline Expectations for Manual Underwriting

Manual underwriting takes longer than the automated process. When an AUS issues an approval, the underwriter primarily verifies that the documentation matches what was submitted to the system. With a manual underwrite, the underwriter performs the full analysis from scratch, which requires significantly more time.

Typical timeline differences include:

  • Initial underwriting review: 3-7 business days for a manual underwrite compared to 1-3 business days for an AUS-approved file
  • Condition review rounds: Each round of conditions may take 2-5 business days to review, and manual underwrites typically have more conditions than AUS-approved loans
  • Total timeline impact: Expect the overall closing timeline to be 45-60 days for a manually underwritten loan compared to 30-45 days for an AUS-approved loan

To minimize delays, prepare your documentation package thoroughly before applying. Have your non-traditional credit references, bank statements, letters of explanation, and compensating factor documentation ready before the loan officer requests them. The most common cause of delay in manual underwriting is incomplete documentation that requires multiple rounds of back-and-forth between the borrower and the underwriter.

Working with a loan officer who has experience with manual underwriting is essential. An experienced loan officer knows exactly what documentation the underwriter will need, how to package the file to highlight compensating factors, and how to write effective letters of explanation. This expertise can shave days or even weeks off the process by reducing the number of condition rounds.

Key Factors

Factors relevant to Manual Underwriting for Low Credit
Factor Description Typical Range
Credit Score FHA allows manual underwriting for scores as low as 500 with 10% down or 580 with 3.5% down. VA has no VA-mandated minimum but lender overlays typically require 580-620. Lower scores require stronger compensating factors. 500-620 for FHA/VA manual underwrites
Compensating Factors Documented strengths that offset risk, including cash reserves, low DTI, residual income, employment stability, minimal payment shock, and conservative LTV. FHA requires specific compensating factors to approve higher DTI ratios. Minimum 1-2 required for FHA DTI exceptions
Loan Program FHA is the most flexible for manual underwriting with clear guidelines in HUD 4000.1. VA is the second most flexible with emphasis on residual income. Conventional loans from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac rarely allow manual underwriting. FHA and VA are primary options
DTI Ratio FHA manual underwriting caps DTI at 31/43 with one compensating factor and 37/47 with two for scores 580 and above. Scores below 580 are limited to 31/43 regardless. VA allows DTI above 41% with documented compensating factors. 31-37% front-end / 41-47% back-end
Non-Traditional Credit History Required for borrowers without a credit score. Must provide at least three non-traditional credit references (rent, utilities, insurance) with 12 months of on-time payment history. At least one reference must be housing-related. Minimum 3 references with 12-month history
Cash Reserves Verified savings remaining after closing that cover multiple months of mortgage payments. Considered one of the strongest compensating factors because it demonstrates ability to sustain payments during income disruption. Minimum 3 months PITI recommended

Examples

FHA manual underwriting with compensating factors

Scenario: A borrower with a 590 FICO score applies for an FHA loan on a $210,000 home with 10% down ($21,000). The borrower has a DTI of 43%, stable employment for four years, and three months of cash reserves. The automated system returns a Refer finding.
Outcome: The lender's manual underwriter approved the loan based on three compensating factors: the 10% down payment (exceeding FHA's 3.5% minimum), verified cash reserves covering three months of payments, and no late payments of any kind in the past 24 months. The rate was 7.0%, approximately 0.75% above what a 700-score borrower would receive.

VA manual underwriting for veteran with thin credit

Scenario: A veteran with 8 years of service applies for a VA loan on a $275,000 home with zero down. The veteran has a 620 FICO score built on only two accounts (a credit card with 10 months of history and a small auto loan). The automated system issues a Refer due to limited credit depth.
Outcome: Manual underwriting accepted the application after reviewing 12 months of non-traditional credit (rent, utilities, auto insurance), all paid on time. The veteran's residual income exceeded VA guidelines by $420 per month, providing an additional compensating factor. The loan closed at 6.5% with no down payment.

Manual underwriting denied due to recent derogatory credit

Scenario: A borrower with a 560 FICO score applies for FHA manual underwriting on a $175,000 purchase. The borrower has a collection account from 14 months ago ($2,400 medical debt) and a 60-day late payment on a credit card 11 months ago. DTI is 48% with the new mortgage.
Outcome: The manual underwriter denied the application. FHA manual underwriting guidelines require no late payments exceeding 30 days in the past 12 months. The 60-day late at 11 months was disqualifying. The borrower was advised to wait until the late payment aged past 12 months and to either pay or establish a payment plan on the collection before reapplying.

Borrower with non-traditional credit qualifies through manual review

Scenario: A 45-year-old borrower who has never had a credit card or loan applies for an FHA mortgage on a $155,000 home. The borrower provides 12 months of documented rent payments ($1,050/month by check), 18 months of electric utility payments, 24 months of auto insurance payments, and 12 months of cell phone payments.
Outcome: The manual underwriter accepted three of the four non-traditional references (rent, utility, and insurance). With a DTI of 38%, six months of reserves ($9,200 in savings), and five years at the same employer, the loan was approved. No credit score was generated, so the underwriter relied entirely on the non-traditional profile and compensating factors.

Common Mistakes to Avoid

  • Assuming manual underwriting is available at every lender

    Many lenders do not offer manual underwriting because it requires specialized staff and carries higher risk. Borrowers should confirm a lender's manual underwriting capability before submitting an application and paying fees.

  • Applying for manual underwriting without gathering documentation first

    Manual underwriting requires 12 months of verifiable payment history for all non-traditional references, plus evidence of compensating factors. Incomplete documentation is the most common reason for delays and denials.

  • Expecting the same rate and terms as automated approvals

    Manually underwritten loans typically carry interest rates 0.25% to 0.75% higher than automated approvals, and some lenders impose additional overlays such as lower maximum DTI or higher reserve requirements.

  • Ignoring the 12-month clean payment requirement

    FHA manual underwriting requires no 30-day-or-greater late payments in the past 12 months across all accounts. A single late payment within that window is disqualifying, regardless of how strong other compensating factors may be.

  • Failing to identify and document compensating factors before application

    Compensating factors such as large down payments, significant reserves, minimal payment shock, and long employment tenure are what make manual approvals possible. Borrowers who cannot demonstrate at least two compensating factors face likely denial.

Documents You May Need

  • 12 months of rent payment verification (canceled checks, bank statements, or landlord verification of rent form)
  • Utility payment records for 12 months (electric, gas, water, phone, or internet account statements)
  • Insurance payment records for 12 months (auto, renter, or health insurance premium statements)
  • Bank statements for the most recent 12-24 months showing reserves and savings patterns
  • Employment verification covering at least 2 years (VOE, pay stubs, W-2s, and tax returns)
  • Written letter of explanation for any derogatory credit events (late payments, collections, bankruptcy, foreclosure)
  • Non-traditional credit verification forms completed by each creditor confirming payment history
  • Compensating factor documentation (proof of reserves, residual income calculations, payment shock analysis)

Frequently Asked Questions

What credit score do I need for manual underwriting?
FHA allows manual underwriting for credit scores as low as 500 with a 10% down payment, or 580 and above with 3.5% down. VA loans have no VA-set minimum score, but most lenders require at least 580-620. Borrowers with no credit score at all can also qualify through manual underwriting using non-traditional credit documentation.
How long does manual underwriting take compared to automated approval?
Manual underwriting typically adds 15-30 days to the closing timeline. The initial underwriting review takes 3-7 business days (versus 1-3 for automated), and there are usually more conditions to clear. Expect an overall timeline of 45-60 days from application to closing for a manually underwritten loan.
Will I pay a higher interest rate with manual underwriting?
FHA and VA do not mandate higher rates for manually underwritten loans. Your rate is primarily determined by your credit score and market conditions. However, some lenders add pricing overlays of 0.125% to 0.25% for manual underwrites due to the additional work involved. Shopping multiple lenders can help you avoid unnecessary rate premiums.
What are compensating factors and why do they matter?
Compensating factors are documented financial strengths that offset weaknesses in your loan application. They include cash reserves (3+ months of payments), low debt-to-income ratios, strong residual income, stable employment history, minimal payment shock, and conservative loan-to-value ratios. For FHA manual underwriting, having two compensating factors allows higher DTI limits (37/47 vs. 31/43).
Can I get a conventional loan with manual underwriting?
It is extremely rare. Fannie Mae technically permits manual underwriting in limited circumstances, but the requirements are so restrictive that very few lenders offer it. Freddie Mac generally requires automated approval. If you need manual underwriting, FHA and VA loans are your most practical options.
What is non-traditional credit and how do I document it?
Non-traditional credit consists of recurring obligations not reported to credit bureaus that demonstrate payment responsibility. Common examples include rent, utility bills, insurance premiums, and cell phone payments. You need at least three non-traditional credit references with 12 months of on-time payments, verified by canceled checks, bank statements, or creditor letters. At least one reference should be a housing payment.
What are the most common reasons manual underwriting applications get denied?
The most frequent denial reasons include insufficient compensating factors to offset risk, inadequate non-traditional credit documentation (fewer than three references or late payments within 12 months), DTI ratios exceeding program limits, unstable employment or income gaps, unresolved collections or judgments, and being within the required waiting period after a bankruptcy or foreclosure.
Do all lenders offer manual underwriting?
No. Manual underwriting requires trained underwriters and involves more work than processing AUS-approved loans. Many lenders, especially online-only lenders and some large banks, do not offer manual underwriting. You should specifically ask whether a lender performs manual underwrites before applying. Local mortgage brokers and credit unions are often more likely to offer this service.