By Credit Booster Team | Published April 10, 2026 | Updated April 11, 2026
Got denied for a mortgage or turned down after pre-approval? Learn why it happened, how to fix your credit, and the exact steps to get approved for a home loan.
# Denied a Mortgage? Here's Exactly What to Do Next
*By Credit Booster Team | April 18, 2026 | 13 min read*
You found the house. You pictured your furniture in the living room. Maybe you even told your friends and family. And then the lender said no.
A mortgage denial is one of the most emotionally devastating financial experiences you can go through. Unlike a credit card rejection, which stings for an afternoon, a mortgage denial can feel like your entire future has been put on hold. And if you were denied after pre-approval — after being told you were good to go — the whiplash is even worse.
Take a breath. This is fixable. Thousands of people get denied mortgages every year and go on to buy homes. This guide explains exactly what happened, why it happened, and the precise steps to take so that the next time you apply, you get the keys.
Why Mortgages Get Denied
According to the Home Mortgage Disclosure Act (HMDA) data from the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, approximately 14% of mortgage applications were denied in 2024. The most common reasons include:
Credit Score Below the Minimum
Different loan types have different minimum score requirements:
| Loan Type | Minimum Credit Score |
| Conventional | 620 (typically 680+ for best rates) |
| FHA | 580 (500 with 10% down) |
| VA | No official minimum (most lenders require 620) |
| USDA | 640 |
| Jumbo | 700-720 |
If your score falls below these thresholds, the application is typically denied before a human even reviews it.
Debt-to-Income Ratio Too High
Your DTI ratio is your total monthly debt payments divided by your gross monthly income. For most mortgage programs:
If you earn $6,000 per month and already have $2,000 in car payments, student loans, and credit card minimums, adding a $1,800 mortgage payment pushes your back-end DTI to 63% — well above the limit.
Employment or Income Issues
Lenders want stable, verifiable income. Red flags include:
Negative Items on Your Credit Report
Collections, judgments, charge-offs, and foreclosures are serious red flags. A foreclosure typically requires a 3-7 year waiting period before you can qualify again, depending on the loan type. Even a single 30-day late payment within the past 12 months can sink an otherwise solid application.
Denied After Pre-Approval: What Happened?
Pre-approval is not a guarantee — it is conditional. Between pre-approval and closing, lenders verify everything again. Common reasons for post-pre-approval denial:
The cardinal rule between pre-approval and closing: change nothing. Do not open new accounts. Do not close old accounts. Do not make large purchases. Do not change jobs.
What to Do Right Now
Step 1: Get the Specific Reason
Under ECOA, your lender must provide a written adverse action notice explaining why you were denied. This document is gold — it tells you exactly what to fix. Do not guess. Do not assume. Read the letter.
Step 2: Pull All Three Credit Reports
Your lender typically uses a tri-merge report that combines data from Equifax, Experian, and TransUnion. Pull your own reports from AnnualCreditReport.com and review each one carefully.
Look specifically for:
Step 3: Dispute Every Error
The FTC found that 1 in 4 consumers identified errors on their credit reports that might affect their scores. For a mortgage applicant, even a 20-point score increase from error removal can mean the difference between denial and approval.
File disputes with each bureau for every error you find. Under the FCRA, bureaus must investigate within 30 days. For complex disputes or multiple errors, working with a professional credit repair service ensures nothing falls through the cracks and disputes are crafted for maximum effectiveness.
Step 4: Create a Credit Recovery Plan
Based on your adverse action notice, build a targeted plan:
If the issue is credit score:
If the issue is DTI:
If the issue is employment:
How Long Before You Can Reapply
The timeline varies significantly depending on the reason for denial:
The fastest fix is credit report errors. If your denial was caused by inaccurate information, removing those errors can restore your score within 30-45 days. Credit Booster specializes in exactly this: our team reviews your full credit profile, identifies every disputable item, and manages the entire process.
Alternative Mortgage Options
While you work on fixing the underlying issues, explore these alternatives:
FHA Loans
FHA loans accept scores as low as 500 (with 10% down) or 580 (with 3.5% down). If you were denied a conventional mortgage, FHA might be within reach.Non-QM Loans
Non-qualified mortgages use alternative documentation like bank statements instead of tax returns. They are especially useful for self-employed borrowers or those with non-traditional income. Rates are higher, but they can bridge the gap.Rent-to-Own Agreements
Some sellers offer lease-option agreements where you rent the property with an option to buy it after a set period. This gives you time to improve your credit while locking in the home.Co-Signer
A co-signer with strong credit can help you qualify. But understand the risk: if you default, it destroys their credit too. This is a serious ask.Down Payment Assistance Programs
Many state and local programs offer down payment assistance, grants, and favorable loan terms for first-time buyers. Check your state's housing finance agency website.Mistakes to Avoid After a Mortgage Denial
Your Credit Action Plan for Mortgage Approval
Here is a month-by-month plan:
Month 1: Pull credit reports, identify errors, file disputes, read adverse action notice thoroughly, get your credit score from all three bureaus.
Month 2: Begin paying down credit card balances aggressively. Set up autopay on all accounts. Review and contest any inaccurate negative items.
Month 3: Follow up on disputes. Continue paying down balances. Begin saving additional funds for a larger down payment (a bigger down payment can offset a lower score).
Month 4-5: Monitor score changes. If errors have been removed, assess whether your score now meets minimum thresholds. Continue on-time payment streak.
Month 6: Re-evaluate. If your score has improved sufficiently and the other denial reasons have been addressed, begin the pre-approval process with a new lender. Consider a mortgage broker who can shop multiple lenders for you.
Throughout this process, Credit Booster's team can be your guide. We monitor your progress, help prioritize which items to tackle first, and ensure your disputes are handled properly. Many of our clients went from mortgage denial to holding their keys within six months.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does a mortgage denial affect your credit score? The denial itself does not affect your score, but the hard inquiry from the application typically lowers it by 5-10 points. If you were denied after full underwriting, the inquiry is already on your report regardless. Focus on the fix, not the inquiry.
Can I get a mortgage with collections on my credit report? It depends on the loan type and the collections. FHA loans may allow collections to remain if the total balance is under $2,000 or if you set up a payment plan. Conventional loans are stricter. Medical collections under $500 are no longer included in credit reports as of 2023. Getting non-medical collections removed through disputes is often the cleanest path.
What credit score do I need to buy a house? The absolute minimum is 500 for an FHA loan with 10% down. Realistically, a score of 620+ opens up most loan options, and 740+ gets you the best interest rates. Even a 20-point difference can save tens of thousands of dollars over the life of a 30-year mortgage.
Should I fix my credit before applying for a mortgage? Absolutely. Applying with unresolved credit issues leads to either denial or significantly higher interest rates. A 0.5% higher interest rate on a $300,000 mortgage costs you over $30,000 in extra interest over 30 years. Fixing your credit first is almost always worth the wait.
How long after bankruptcy can I get a mortgage? Chapter 7 bankruptcy: 2 years for FHA/VA loans, 4 years for conventional. Chapter 13 bankruptcy: 1 year into repayment plan for FHA (with court approval), 2 years after discharge for conventional. Rebuilding your credit during the waiting period is essential.
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