Loan Document Checklist

AAPL Member · Direct Lender Since 2016 · NMLS #1979189

The fastest closings come down to one thing: a borrower who has their documents ready. Because we underwrite the property rather than your income, the list is far shorter than a bank’s — no two years of tax returns, no W-2s, no pay stubs — but the items we do need, we need complete and accurate. Use this checklist to assemble your file before you apply, and you’ll close on the fast end of our funding timeline instead of waiting on yourself. Here’s exactly what to gather, by category.

On the Borrower / Entity

Most investor loans close in an entity, so we start there.

Notably absent: tax returns, W-2s, and pay stubs, because we don’t underwrite personal income.

On the Property

This is the heart of an asset-based file.

For a Rehab or Construction Loan

If you’re renovating or building, add the project package. For a fix and flip or hard money loan, that’s a scope of work and a line-item rehab budget. For a ground-up construction loan, add architectural plans, a detailed construction budget, permits (or a clear path to them), and a timeline — plus your contractor / GC details and track record, especially important where you’re newer to building. These drive the draw schedule, so the more accurate and phased the budget, the smoother your draws.

For a DSCR / Rental Loan

For a long-term rental, the income side replaces personal income docs: a lease agreement (for a tenanted property) or a market rent estimate / appraisal Form 1007 (for a vacant one), used to calculate the DSCR; a rent roll and operating statement for a multifamily building; and property tax and insurance figures to complete the payment side of the ratio.

The Checklist at a Glance

The Checklist at a Glance

Borrower / entityLLC docs, ID, proof of funds, credit authorization
PropertyContract or ownership proof, comps, insurance, title
Rehab / constructionScope & budget, plans, permits, contractor details
DSCR / rentalLease or rent estimate, rent roll, taxes & insurance
Not requiredTax returns, W-2s, pay stubs

A Few Tips to Close Faster

Assemble the file before you apply, not as we ask for pieces — that single habit is the difference between a one-week and a three-week close. Make your comps and budget realistic; numbers that don’t hold up at valuation cause the most delays. Keep your proof of funds current (most recent statements). And stay responsive — a signature or a missing page you return same-day keeps the file moving. The full step-by-step is on our lending process page, and the qualifying standards behind each item are on the requirements page.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. Because we underwrite the property rather than your personal income, there are no tax returns, W-2s, or pay stubs required on any of our investor loans. The file centers on the property, your entity, and proof of funds instead.

A clean comps package that supports your value or after-repair value, alongside a complete file submitted up front. Valuation is usually the gating step, so comps that hold up — and having every other document ready — are what speed things along.

The income side: a signed lease for a tenanted property, or a market rent estimate (appraisal Form 1007) for a vacant one, plus property tax and insurance figures to complete the DSCR calculation. No personal income documentation.

The project package — architectural plans, a detailed phased construction budget, permits or a clear path to them, a timeline, and your contractor’s details and track record. These also drive your draw schedule once the loan funds.

Most investor loans close in an LLC, since they’re business-purpose loans, and we’ll need your entity documents. It’s not always strictly required, but it’s standard and recommended for liability protection, so most borrowers have one in place before applying.

Get your file ready.

The more of this short, asset-based list you have ready, the faster we close — often days, not weeks. We’ve helped investors close quickly since 2016.