How Alimony and Child Support Income Is Verified
The lender begins by reviewing the divorce decree, separation agreement, or court order to confirm the type of payment (alimony, child support, or both), the monthly amount, the start date, and the end date or duration. The lender then calculates whether the remaining duration meets the three-year continuance requirement. If the payment ends within three years of the mortgage closing date, it cannot be used as qualifying income.
Next, the lender verifies actual receipt through bank statements, deposit records, or other financial documentation covering the most recent 6 to 12 months. The lender compares the deposits against the court-ordered amount. If payments have been received in full and on time, the income is accepted at the court-ordered amount. If payments have been sporadic or for less than the ordered amount, the lender may use an average of the amounts actually received, or may decline to use the income entirely if the payment history is too inconsistent.
For non-taxable alimony and child support (applicable to divorce agreements finalized after December 31, 2018), the lender may apply a gross-up factor of up to 25%, which increases the qualifying income. For example, $2,000/month in non-taxable alimony becomes $2,500/month after a 25% gross-up, providing additional DTI capacity for the borrower.
How Existing Joint Mortgages Are Handled in Qualification
When a borrower applies for a new mortgage and has an existing joint mortgage from a prior marriage, the lender must determine how that existing mortgage payment is treated in the DTI calculation. If the divorce decree assigns the home and mortgage to the former spouse, the borrower can request exclusion of the payment from their DTI. The lender requires the divorce decree showing the assignment plus 12 months of documented payments by the former spouse from the former spouse’s own accounts.
If the documentation is available and satisfactory, the existing joint mortgage is excluded from the borrower’s DTI. If the documentation is not available (for example, the divorce was recent and 12 months of post-divorce payments have not yet occurred), the full mortgage payment is included in the borrower’s DTI. This is true even if the borrower is no longer living in the property and has no intent to make the payment. The lender’s concern is that the borrower remains legally liable for the debt until it is refinanced.
How the Buyout Refinance Works
The retaining spouse applies for a refinance as if it were a standard mortgage application, providing income documentation, credit report authorization, and asset statements. The appraisal establishes the current market value of the property. The new loan amount equals the existing mortgage balance plus the equity owed to the departing spouse, plus any applicable closing costs if financed.
The title company disburses the proceeds at closing: the existing mortgage is paid off, the departing spouse receives their equity share, and the retaining spouse signs the new note as the sole borrower. The departing spouse simultaneously executes a quit claim deed or warranty deed transferring their title interest to the retaining spouse. After closing, only the retaining spouse appears on both the new mortgage note and the property title, and the departing spouse’s credit report no longer shows the mortgage obligation.
Related topics include co-signers and co-borrowers on a mortgage, recent job change, relocation, and employment gaps, buying a home after a major credit event, and special borrower situations: a decision guide.