If you have ever been told your borrowing is limited because you are “only a contractor”, you have already seen the problem. Getting a mortgage for IT contractors should not be harder than it is, especially when your day rate and track record often put you in a stronger position than many salaried applicants. The issue is not your income. It is how the wrong lender chooses to read it.
High street underwriting still trips up too many IT professionals. One lender looks at salary and dividends only and ignores retained profit. Another wants years of accounts when your current contract shows strong ongoing earnings. A third applies a cautious affordability model that bears no relation to what you actually earn. That is how good applicants end up with low loan offers, delays or an outright decline that should never have happened.
For IT contractors, the route to the right mortgage is rarely about forcing your income into a standard employed box. It is about placing the case with a lender that already understands contract-based earnings.
Why a mortgage for IT contractors is different
IT contracting often combines high income with a non-standard structure. You might work on a day rate through your limited company, move between fixed-term contracts, draw a modest salary and top it up with dividends, or retain profit in the business for tax efficiency. None of that makes you a poor mortgage applicant. It simply means your income needs to be assessed properly.
This is where mainstream advice often falls short. Many banks still default to employed or self-employed checklists that do not reflect how contractors are paid. If they treat you as a conventional self-employed applicant, they may ask for two or three years of accounts and base affordability on net profit, salary and dividends alone. That can slash your apparent income even when your actual earning power is far higher.
Specialist contractor lenders take a more commercial view. Instead of fixating on a low salary drawn for tax purposes, they may assess affordability from your contract rate. In practical terms, that can make a dramatic difference to how much you can borrow.
How lenders assess contractor income
There is no single approach across the market, which is exactly why lender choice matters.
Some lenders will use your day rate calculation. A common method is to multiply your daily rate by the number of working days in a week and then annualise it over a set number of weeks. If you are on £500 a day, that can produce a very different income figure from the salary and dividends you choose to extract from your company.
Others will look at salary and dividends in the usual way. That can still work well in some cases, especially if your accounts are strong and stable, but it is not always the best route if you want to maximise borrowing.
Then there are lenders willing to consider a broader picture, including retained profits or a pattern of contract renewals. These cases need to be packaged carefully, because the difference between an underwriter who understands contractors and one who does not can be the difference between a smooth approval and a frustrating dead end.
That is why the best outcome often depends less on your headline income and more on how that income is presented.
What matters most to underwriters
For most IT contractors, underwriters are trying to answer a few straightforward questions. Is the income sustainable? Does the applicant have a credible history in their line of work? Is there enough evidence that the current contract is genuine and likely to continue, whether through renewal or future work?
A long contracting history helps, but it is not the only route to approval. Some lenders are comfortable with applicants who have recently moved from permanent employment into contracting, particularly where the role, sector and earnings are clearly established. If your CV shows years in IT and you have moved into a contract role at a strong day rate, that can still be a good case.
Gaps between contracts are another area where context matters. Short breaks do not automatically cause a problem, especially in a sector where project-based work is normal. The key is whether those gaps are reasonable and whether the overall pattern supports affordability.
Credit profile, deposit size and existing commitments also matter, of course. A strong income does not override everything. But contractor-friendly lenders are far less likely to reject a good applicant simply because their payslip does not look conventional.
The common mistakes that reduce borrowing
The biggest mistake is going straight to a lender that does not specialise in contractor cases. You may be perfectly mortgageable and still be offered far less than you should be.
Another common issue is applying before your income has been positioned correctly. If you submit documents without a clear contractor case strategy, the lender may default to the least favourable interpretation. Once a case is declined, that can create unnecessary complications for your next application.
Some applicants also assume they need to restructure their income to fit lender expectations. That might mean increasing salary, changing dividend strategy or waiting for another year of accounts. In many cases, that is unnecessary. A lender that understands IT contractors should be able to assess what you already earn without asking you to abandon a tax-efficient structure.
There is also the problem of wasted time. In a purchase chain or remortgage deadline, the wrong application can cost you more than a better rate ever saves. Speed matters, but only if the case is placed correctly from the start.
Mortgage for IT contractors through a limited company
If you operate through a limited company, your mortgage options are often better than you have been led to believe. The challenge is that many lenders still focus too narrowly on salary and dividends, which can understate affordability for directors who leave profit in the business.
That is especially frustrating in IT, where contract income may be high and consistent while drawings are deliberately modest. You should not be penalised for running your company efficiently.
The solution is not always one lender type over another. It depends on your accounts, contract terms, time trading, deposit and borrowing target. For some applicants, a day-rate lender will clearly produce the strongest outcome. For others, a lender using salary, dividends and wider company performance may be just as competitive. The key is knowing which route gives you the best chance of both approval and the loan size you actually need.
What you will usually need
Contractor mortgages do involve paperwork, but the process should not feel excessive when it is handled properly. Most lenders will want to see your current contract, proof of income, bank statements, ID, address history and details of your deposit or equity position. If you trade through a limited company, accounts or SA302s may also be relevant, depending on the lender.
What matters is not just collecting documents. It is presenting the right ones to the right lender in the right order. A well-packaged case answers underwriter questions before they become problems.
That is one of the reasons specialist broker support makes such a difference. Instead of sending your application into a generic system and hoping it lands with someone who understands contractor income, your case is matched to lenders and underwriters already familiar with it.
Why specialist advice changes the outcome
This is where contractor clients usually see the biggest gain. A whole-of-market broker with contractor expertise can compare lenders that use day rate calculations, lenders that work well with limited company directors, and lenders that are flexible on contract history or recent role changes.
That wider access matters because the market is not uniform. One lender may cap your borrowing based on salary and dividends. Another may offer significantly more by using contract income. A third may be the right fit if your credit profile is not spotless or your income structure is more complex.
Just as important is the speed of the process. When a case is packaged well and sent to a lender with the right criteria, decisions are usually quicker and cleaner. That reduces the chance of repeated document requests, avoidable delays and last-minute surprises.
For many applicants, the real value is confidence. You stop second-guessing whether your contract type, company structure or recent move into contracting will cause a problem. You know the case has been assessed on its real merits.
The Residential Mortgage Hub works in this space because too many capable borrowers are still being underserved by lenders and advisers who do not understand contractor income properly. For IT contractors, that specialist approach can mean higher borrowing, fewer delays and a far more straightforward path to approval.
If you are earning well, contracting successfully and looking for a mortgage that reflects real affordability, do not let outdated lending assumptions make the decision for you. The right lender will look at the substance of your income, not just the shape of your paperwork.