Advisers who can help self-employed residential mortgage applicants
These adviser results are based on your selected mortgage need: self-employed and looking for residential mortgage advice.
Self-employed income can be assessed differently from employed income. Depending on your circumstances, lenders may look at accounts, tax calculations, tax year overviews, salary, dividends, retained profit, contracts, business bank statements or trading history.
An adviser experienced with self-employed residential mortgage cases can help you understand what documents may be needed and how your income may be presented to lenders.
Find mortgage advisers who can help self-employed people looking for a residential mortgage. These results show advisers listed on Connect Experts who may support sole traders, freelancers, contractors, limited company directors, business partners and applicants with mixed income.
Use the adviser profiles below to compare location, language, adviser preferences and experience before choosing who to contact. Connect Experts is a mortgage adviser directory and matching platform. Mortgage advice is provided by the adviser or firm you choose.
What can a self-employed mortgage adviser help with?
A self-employed residential mortgage adviser may help you understand how lenders could assess your income and what evidence may be needed before you apply.
This may include:
- Sole trader income
- Limited company director salary and dividends
- Retained profit
- Contractor income
- Freelance income
- Partnership income
- Mixed employed and self-employed income
- Accounts and tax documents
- Deposit and affordability questions
- Residential remortgage options
- Buying a home while self-employed
For more details on income evidence and documents, read the UK self-employed mortgage guide.
Why these results are relevant
This page is designed for people who are self-employed and looking for a mortgage on a home they live in, or plan to live in.
You may be:
- Buying your first home
- Moving home
- Remortgaging your current home
- Reviewing your mortgage before your current rate ends
- Applying with income from a business
- Combining employed and self-employed income
- Unsure how lenders may view your accounts or tax documents
For broader residential mortgage information, visit the residential mortgage advice guide.
FAQ: Self-Employed Residential Mortgage Advisers
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| Can I get a residential mortgage if I am self-employed? | Yes, self-employed people can apply for residential mortgages. Lenders usually need to understand your income, affordability, credit history, deposit and property details before making a decision. |
| What documents might I need? | You may need tax calculations, tax year overviews, accounts, business bank statements, personal bank statements, accountant details, proof of deposit and identification. The exact documents depend on your income structure and lender requirements. |
| Is it harder to get a mortgage when self-employed? | It can feel more complex because income may not be shown through standard payslips. A mortgage adviser can help explain how different lenders may assess your income and what evidence may support your application. |
| Can I choose a local or online adviser? | Yes. You can review adviser profiles and choose whether location, language, gender preference or communication style matters most to you. Some clients prefer a local adviser, while others prefer online or telephone advice from an adviser with relevant self-employed mortgage experience. |
Important Information
Connect Experts is a mortgage adviser directory and matching platform. We do not provide mortgage advice directly. Advice is provided by the adviser or company you choose.
We are an FCA-approved broker network and not a lender. Advisers may have access to a range of lenders. If a lender is introduced, commission may be received after completion. The commission amount may vary by lender and product, but it should not affect the amount you pay under your credit agreement.
A fee may be payable for arranging your mortgage. Your adviser will confirm the amount before you choose to proceed.
Your home or property may be repossessed if you do not keep up repayments on your mortgage or loans secured on it.