Large national banks have the strictest underwriting criteria in the mortgage industry. Among real applicants, they deny at a 72% rate for borderline profiles. Here's exactly why โ and what to do about it.
Why National Banks Are the Strictest Lenders
Large national banks sell most of their mortgages to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac on the secondary market. To do this, every loan must meet strict conforming guidelines โ no exceptions, no flexibility. A loan officer at a national bank can't approve you even if they personally believe you're a great borrower. The system says no, the answer is no.
This is fundamentally different from credit unions and portfolio lenders, who keep loans on their own books and can make judgment calls.
The Exact Criteria That Gets You Denied
The 5 Most Common National Bank Denial Reasons
1. DTI over 43%. This is the #1 reason. Your total monthly debts (including the new mortgage) exceed 43% of gross monthly income. Even $50/month over the limit is an automatic denial.
2. Credit score below 680. Most national banks won't manually review applications below this threshold. It's algorithmic โ the system rejects before a human sees it.
3. Less than 2 years employment. Changed jobs recently? Even to a higher-paying role in the same field? Many national banks require 2 full years of W-2 history at the same employer.
4. Self-employed under 2 years. Self-employment income requires 2 years of tax returns. Even if you're making more money than ever, national banks need the paper trail.
5. Recent late payments. One 30-day late payment in the last 12 months can kill a national bank application. They have zero tolerance for recent delinquencies.
Your Best Alternatives After a National Bank Denial
The problem is usually the lender type, not your finances. Here are your best next steps.
If You Want to Reapply to a National Bank Later
The most common path: fix the specific issue, wait the required time, reapply. Here's what moves the needle fastest:
For credit score: Pay credit cards below 10% utilization (fastest impact โ 30โ60 days). Dispute any errors on all 3 bureaus. Become an authorized user on an old, clean account.
For DTI: Pay off the smallest debt first (eliminates monthly payment from DTI). Avoid taking any new credit. Consider a co-borrower with income.
For employment: Wait the 2-year mark. Document any raises or promotions. If self-employed, file 2 full years of returns showing stable or increasing income.