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Nutritionist & Dietitian Mortgages

Nutritionist and dietitian mortgage from a lender who reads hospital W-2, MNT insurance billing, telehealth platform 1099s, corporate wellness consulting, and Schedule C cash-pay as one income picture.

Working Registered Dietitians (RDs) and Registered Dietitian Nutritionists (RDNs) carry a multi-source income file that mainstream lenders consistently mishandle. A single year can include W-2 wages from a hospital, dialysis center, school, or long-term care facility ($55K–$95K typical), Medical Nutrition Therapy (MNT) insurance billing through CPT codes 97802/97803/97804 for diabetes, CKD, and post-transplant patients, 1099-NEC income from telehealth platforms (Healthie, Nourish, Berry Street, Fay), corporate wellness consulting retainer contracts ($15K–$80K per client annually), Schedule C cash-pay private practice income for performance nutrition or eating-disorder specialty work, supplement and meal-plan digital product revenue, and student loan balances of $60K–$120K from the Bachelor’s plus accredited Dietetic Internship pathway under CDR (Commission on Dietetic Registration). The Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02 self-employment treatment of telehealth and consulting 1099s, B3-3.4-02 for S-corp practice owners, and the proper documentation of MNT insurance billing alongside cash-pay income — these together can swing $300K–$600K of qualifying loan amount on a working RD/RDN file. Generalist lenders see the hospital W-2 and stop reading.

Broker NMLS #1072866 · Specialist in multi-source RD/RDN income, MNT insurance billing, telehealth platforms, & corporate wellness nutritionist mortgages
Registered Dietitian counseling patient on nutrition plan
$69,680
BLS OEWS May 2024 median annual wage for U.S. dietitians and nutritionists (top 10% over $107,710; private practice owners commonly $120K–$280K)
$60K-$120K
Typical RD/RDN student loan burden (Bachelor’s plus accredited Dietetic Internship pathway under CDR)
97802/97803/97804
CPT codes for Medical Nutrition Therapy billing (Medicare covers for diabetes, CKD, and post-transplant patients)
Multi-source
Most working RDs combine 3+ income streams: hospital W-2 + telehealth 1099 + private practice + corporate wellness
Registered Dietitian Nutritionist working with food and meal planning

Stairway Mortgage qualifies Registered Dietitians and Registered Dietitian Nutritionists on the full income picture — W-2 wages from hospital, clinic, dialysis center, school, or long-term care employment under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01, telehealth platform 1099-NEC income from Healthie, Nourish, Berry Street, Fay and similar platforms under B3-3.3-02, Medical Nutrition Therapy (MNT) insurance billing through CPT codes 97802/97803/97804 for Medicare-covered conditions (diabetes, chronic kidney disease, post-transplant), corporate wellness consulting retainer income from employer wellness programs, Schedule C cash-pay private practice income for performance nutrition, sports nutrition, eating-disorder specialty, and intuitive eating practices, S-corp distributions under B3-3.4-02 for established multi-RD practice owners, supplement and digital meal-plan product revenue, and actual income-driven repayment payments from Federal Student Aid IBR/SAVE/PAYE plans counted in DTI under B3-6-05. A new-RD in a hospital diabetes program with $95K of student loans, a clinical RD building telehealth practice with three platform 1099s, a solo private practice RD specializing in eating-disorder recovery, an established performance nutrition specialist with NFL/NBA team consulting, and a corporate wellness firm owner with employed dietitians each get qualified using methods that fit their actual structure. We pick the right door before we quote. Or skip ahead: browse every loan program, run numbers on 100+ mortgage calculators, or check today's rates. For the parent hub and other dental and wellness paths, see our dental and wellness professionals mortgage hub.

01 · Nutritionist & dietitian mortgage at a glance

Key facts every RD/RDN should know before applying for a mortgage.

Multi-source default

Most working RD/RDNs combine 3+ income streams: hospital or clinical W-2 + telehealth platform 1099 + private practice cash-pay + corporate wellness consulting. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 for W-2 and B3-3.3-02 for self-employment, multi-source income aggregates with 2-year history.

CDR & AND

The Commission on Dietetic Registration (CDR) administers RD/RDN credentialing through accredited Dietetic Internship and exam pathway. The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics (AND), founded 1917, is the largest professional association with 112,000+ members.

MNT covered

Unlike acupuncture, Medicare covers Medical Nutrition Therapy (MNT) for diabetes, chronic kidney disease, and post-transplant patients through CPT codes 97802 (initial assessment), 97803 (reassessment), and 97804 (group). Many private insurers follow Medicare’s lead. This creates a stable insurance-billed income stream for RDs working with these conditions.

B3-6-05 IDR

Under Fannie Mae B3-6-05, the actual income-driven repayment payment from Federal Student Aid IDR plans counts in DTI instead of 1% of balance. For RDs with $60K–$120K student loans, actual payments are often $100–$400/month vs $600–$1,200 under the 1% rule.

02 · Where you are in your dietetics career

RD/RDN mortgage solutions for every career stage.

Each stage of a dietetics career has its own qualifying logic. A new-RD in a hospital diabetes education program has a different mortgage path than a clinical RD building telehealth practice across three platforms, or an established specialty practice owner with NFL team consulting and an eating-disorder treatment focus.

01

New-RD post-internship (Years 1–3)

"Just completed CDR-accredited Dietetic Internship and passed RD exam. Working in hospital, dialysis center, clinic, school, or long-term care facility."

  • Annual income $55K–$80K W-2 clinical employment
  • Student loans $60K–$120K on IBR/SAVE/PAYE plans
  • Fannie Mae B3-6-05 actual IDR payment in DTI
  • Conventional conforming with documented IDR payment
See new-RD mechanics
02

Clinical RD building private practice (Years 3–7)

"W-2 hospital position plus telehealth platform 1099s and growing private practice. Multiple income streams developing simultaneously."

  • Annual income $85K–$160K W-2 + 1099 mix
  • Telehealth platform 1099s (Healthie, Nourish, Berry Street) aggregate
  • Schedule C for private practice with home-office deduction
  • Mixed B3-3.1-01 W-2 + B3-3.3-02 Schedule C qualifying
See clinical + private mechanics
03

Solo private practice RD/RDN (Years 5–12)

"Established solo private practice. Mix of MNT insurance billing, cash-pay, telehealth, and digital products. Possibly transitioned away from W-2 entirely."

  • Annual practice revenue $120K–$280K through Schedule C
  • MNT insurance billing through CPT 97802/97803/97804
  • Cash-pay private practice for specialty work
  • Schedule C Self-Employed Conventional with Form 1084 addbacks
See solo private mechanics
04

Specialty / niche practice RD/RDN

"Built specialty around sports nutrition, eating disorder treatment, intuitive eating, performance nutrition, or pediatric specialty. Premium cash-pay rates."

  • Annual practice income $180K–$400K through specialty positioning
  • Premium per-session rates ($175–$350) and program packages
  • Often sports team or athletic department consulting contracts
  • S-corp election typical at this scale (B3-3.4-02)
See specialty practice mechanics
05

Multi-RD practice owner / corporate wellness firm

"Established practice with 2-5 employed or contracted dietitians. Multi-stream practice revenue plus corporate wellness consulting contracts."

  • Annual income $250K–$600K through S-corp + K-1 distributions
  • Practice revenue + corporate wellness consulting + digital products
  • 2-year 1120-S history with retained earnings as reserves
  • S-corp Self-Employed Conventional jumbo
See multi-RD owner mechanics
03 · The qualification mechanics

How we calculate qualifying income for your RD/RDN mortgage.

Four methods cover almost every RD/RDN file we’ve closed. The right method depends on your career stage, whether you maintain W-2 clinical employment alongside private practice, the role of telehealth platforms, and how MNT insurance billing fits into your revenue mix.

Method 1 — Mixed W-2 + 1099-NEC self-employment (the RD/RDN default)

The dominant pattern for working RDs. W-2 hospital or clinical employment under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 provides base stability with 24-month average. Telehealth platform 1099-NECs (one each from Healthie, Nourish, Berry Street, Fay, and similar platforms) plus corporate wellness consulting 1099s aggregate under B3-3.3-02 as continuing Schedule C self-employment with 2-year history. The two methods combine into a stronger qualifying picture than either stream alone, particularly during the practice-building years when neither stream alone would suffice.

Method 2 — Schedule C with Form 1084 cash-flow analysis

For RDs who have transitioned out of W-2 clinical employment into full-time private practice. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02, qualifying income equals 2-year average net Schedule C profit with Form 1084 addbacks for non-cash deductions: depreciation under IRC Section 167 on practice equipment, business-use-of-home for telehealth practice setup, continuing-education amortization, and vehicle. RD/RDN practices have lower equipment depreciation than other healthcare specialties but the business-use-of-home and CE addbacks still matter.

Method 3 — S-corp self-employed with W-2 + K-1 (the mature owner path)

For RD/RDNs who have elected S-corp treatment under IRC Section 1361 — typically appropriate above $150K of net practice profit, common for specialty practice owners and multi-RD practice founders. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.4-02, qualifying income combines W-2 reasonable compensation (typically $60K–$100K for RDs) plus K-1 distributions from Form 1120-S with 2-year history, plus Form 1084 addbacks at the entity level.

Method 4 — Bank-statement Non-QM (the cash-pay specialty path)

For RDs whose private practice is heavily cash-pay (sports nutrition, eating disorder cash-pay programs, intuitive eating membership models) and whose Schedule C aggressively suppresses through legitimate but heavy deductions. Under CFPB Reg Z’s Ability-to-Repay rule, non-QM bank-statement programs qualify based on 12 or 24 months of personal or business bank deposits at 50–75% counting. Less common for RDs than acupuncturists because RD income tends to be more multi-source and W-2 anchored, but useful for specialty cash-pay practices.

04 · What generalist underwriting misses

The income most lenders refuse to count on an RD/RDN file.

Six income streams that show up consistently on working RD/RDN files and that generalist lenders typically either ignore, mis-categorize, or refuse to apply correctly. Each one is documentable; the lender just has to read the multi-source pattern properly.

A

Multi-source income aggregation across W-2 + 1099 + private practice

The defining qualifying mechanism for RDs. A typical working dietitian has 3+ income streams: hospital or clinical W-2, 1-3 telehealth platform 1099s, possibly corporate wellness consulting 1099, plus Schedule C private practice. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 for W-2 and B3-3.3-02 for self-employment, all streams aggregate with 2-year history. Generalist lenders see the W-2 and miss the rest. The result: $60K-$120K of qualifying income disappears.

B

Telehealth platform 1099-NEC income

The telehealth nutrition platform market exploded post-COVID. Platforms like Healthie, Nourish, Berry Street, Fay, OurNutrition, and similar services contract with RDs as independent contractors, providing patient referrals, scheduling, and insurance billing infrastructure in exchange for revenue share. Each platform issues a separate 1099-NEC. For RDs with consistent platform income, under B3-3.3-02 these aggregate as continuing self-employment with 2-year history. Generalist lenders see multiple 1099s and refuse.

C

MNT insurance billing income (CPT 97802/97803/97804)

Unlike acupuncture, Medical Nutrition Therapy has established insurance coverage. Medicare covers MNT for diabetes (CPT 97802/97803), chronic kidney disease, and post-transplant patients. Private insurers (Aetna, Cigna, BCBS, UnitedHealthcare) commonly follow Medicare’s lead. For RDs working with these populations, MNT insurance billing creates a documented insurance-paid income stream that flows through Schedule C gross revenue or 1120-S practice revenue with reliable continuity.

D

Corporate wellness consulting retainer income

Mid-career and senior RDs frequently contract with employer wellness programs, providing on-site nutrition education, employee health coaching, and program development. Contracts typically run as annual retainers ($15K–$80K per client) with 1099-NEC reporting. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02, corporate wellness 1099s qualify as continuing self-employment with 2-year history showing renewed contracts. For RDs with 2-4 active corporate clients, this stream alone can add $60K–$200K to qualifying income.

E

Supplement, meal-plan, and digital product revenue

Many RDs generate revenue from supplement affiliate programs (Fullscript, Wellevate, FoodScripts), digital meal plan products, online course sales, and membership communities. Revenue flows through Schedule C as product sales or service revenue. Under B3-3.3-02, this digital product stream qualifies with 2-year history. The challenge is documenting digital product revenue clearly — we work with merchant processor reports from Stripe, Kajabi, Teachable, and similar platforms.

F

Sports team and athletic department consulting

Specialty sports nutrition RDs commonly hold contracts with athletic departments (NCAA programs), professional teams (NFL, NBA, MLB), Olympic training centers, or specific athletes. Contracts run as W-2 (Title IX requirements at some universities) or 1099-NEC (most common). Annual contract values $35K–$200K depending on scale. Multi-year contracts support continuity documentation under B3-3.3-02.

05 · Match the program to your RD/RDN practice

Which loan program fits your nutritionist mortgage situation.

Seven loan-program categories cover essentially every RD/RDN file we’ve closed. The mix tilts toward Mixed W-2 + 1099 Conventional (the RD default given the multi-source income pattern) and Schedule C Self-Employed for solo private practice owners.

Mixed W-2 + 1099 Conventional (primary)

  • RDs combining hospital W-2 + telehealth + private practice
  • B3-3.1-01 W-2 + B3-3.3-02 self-employment combined
  • Most common RD qualifying structure
Best for: Clinical + private practice mix

Schedule C Self-Employed Conventional

  • Solo private practice RDs without W-2 anchor
  • 2-year Schedule C with Form 1084 cash-flow addbacks
  • MNT insurance billing flows through Schedule C gross revenue
Best for: Full-time private practice

Conventional Conforming (IDR-aware)

  • New-RDs with hospital W-2 and student loan IDR
  • Fannie Mae B3-6-05 uses actual IDR payment in DTI
  • Loan limits to $766,550 (FL) 2024-25
Best for: New-RD clinical employment

S-Corp Self-Employed Conventional

  • Mature specialty practices and multi-RD owners
  • W-2 reasonable comp + K-1 distributions under B3-3.4-02
  • Form 1084 addbacks at entity level
Best for: Specialty or multi-RD owner

Bank-Statement Non-QM

  • Heavily cash-pay specialty practices (sports, eating disorders)
  • 12 or 24 months of deposits at 50–75% counting
  • Rate 0.5–1.0% higher than conforming
Best for: Cash-pay specialty practice

Asset-Depletion Non-QM

  • Senior RDs with accumulated reserves
  • Liquid assets amortized over 360 months as implied income
  • Useful when transitioning between W-2 and full private
Best for: Senior / transitioning RD

SBA 7(a) Coordination

  • Multi-RD practice or corporate wellness firm acquisition
  • SBA 7(a) practice loan separate from personal mortgage
  • Conventional or jumbo paired with acquisition financing
Best for: Practice acquirer
06 · Why this mortgage requires specialty expertise

The RD/RDN mortgage in context: 6 forces shaping how dietitians qualify.

RD/RDN income sits at the intersection of multi-source W-2 plus self-employment patterns, MNT insurance coverage growth, telehealth platform proliferation post-COVID, eating disorder treatment specialization, corporate wellness consulting market expansion, and sports nutrition niche premium positioning. Each force shapes what a working RD’s qualifying picture looks like.

Force 1 — MNT insurance coverage growth

Per CMS Medicare coverage policy, Medical Nutrition Therapy has established insurance coverage for diabetes (CPT 97802/97803), chronic kidney disease (CKD), and post-transplant patients. The Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics advocates for expansion to additional conditions including obesity, prediabetes, hypertension, and cardiovascular disease. Private insurers (Aetna, Cigna, BCBS, UnitedHealthcare) increasingly follow Medicare’s lead. The mortgage implication: RDs working with covered populations carry stable insurance-billed income alongside cash-pay private practice, with both streams documenting through Schedule C or 1120-S practice revenue.

Force 2 — Telehealth platform proliferation

The COVID-era telehealth expansion permanently reshaped RD/RDN practice patterns. Platforms like Healthie (practice management + insurance billing), Nourish (insurance-covered nutrition therapy), Berry Street (employer wellness + telehealth), and Fay (in-network insurance billing) connect dietitians with patients while handling scheduling, documentation, and insurance billing infrastructure. RDs work as independent contractors on these platforms, receiving 1099-NEC compensation. Many working RDs combine 2-3 platform 1099s alongside private practice. The mortgage implication: multi-platform 1099 aggregation is the norm.

Force 3 — CDR credentialing and accredited internship pathway

The Commission on Dietetic Registration (CDR), the credentialing arm of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, administers RD/RDN certification through accredited Dietetic Internship and exam pathway. Starting January 2024, the CDR has required a Master’s degree for new RD applicants (in addition to the Bachelor’s plus accredited Dietetic Internship requirement). This change is reshaping new-RD entry economics — new RDs carry slightly higher student loan burdens than prior cohorts, with implications for B3-6-05 IDR documentation requirements.

Force 4 — Eating disorder treatment specialization

Eating disorder treatment is a growing premium specialty for RDs. CEDRD (Certified Eating Disorder Registered Dietitian) certification from the International Association of Eating Disorders Professionals (IAEDP) is a recognized advanced credential. Eating disorder treatment programs (inpatient, residential, intensive outpatient, partial hospitalization) employ specialty-certified RDs at premium rates. Private practice ED specialists command $185–$350 per session. For RDs in this specialty, the income profile shifts heavily toward cash-pay (since ED treatment insurance coverage remains contested and treatment programs often require extensive prior authorization).

Force 5 — Corporate wellness consulting market

The corporate wellness market has expanded substantially over the past decade as employers seek to manage healthcare costs and employee productivity. Mid-career and senior RDs contract with employers (often Fortune 500 health plans, mid-market companies with self-funded health plans) providing on-site nutrition education, employee health coaching, and program development. Contract values $15K–$80K per client annually. RDs with 2-4 active corporate clients can add $60K–$200K of qualifying income through this consulting stream alone, with the consulting income documenting through 1099-NEC reporting.

Force 6 — Sports nutrition and performance niche premium positioning

Sports nutrition and performance specialty RDs command premium income tiers. Certifications include CSSD (Certified Specialist in Sports Dietetics) through CDR. Career pathways include NCAA athletic department sports nutrition positions (full-time W-2 at Division I programs), professional team consulting (NFL, NBA, MLB, NHL), Olympic training center positions, and individual athlete consulting. The premium positioning shifts income from clinical-tier averages toward $150K–$280K typical for established sports nutrition specialists. Multi-year team contracts support continuity documentation for mortgage qualifying.

07 · The mortgage shifts as your RD/RDN practice develops

Nutritionist/dietitian mortgage by career stage.

A timeline view of how the right mortgage program changes as you progress from new-RD in hospital employment through multi-source clinical + private practice to specialty practice owner or multi-RD firm proprietor.

Years 1–3

New-RD post-internship

Comp profile: $55K–$80K W-2 hospital, dialysis, school, or long-term care employment. Dominant qualifying method: Conventional Conforming with Fannie Mae B3-6-05 IDR-aware DTI treatment. Common purchase: $250K–$450K primary residence. Watch-out: $60K–$120K of student loans require IDR enrollment AND properly-documented servicer statement showing actual monthly payment for B3-6-05 treatment. Lower burden than dental/medical specialists but still material at this income tier.

Years 3–7

Clinical RD building private practice

Comp profile: $85K–$160K mix of hospital W-2 + telehealth platform 1099s + emerging private practice. Dominant qualifying method: Mixed B3-3.1-01 W-2 + B3-3.3-02 self-employment combined. Common purchase: $350K–$650K primary residence. Watch-out: Multiple 1099s require 2-year history of each platform arrangement. New telehealth platform engagements within the past 24 months may not yet count toward qualifying.

Years 5–12

Solo private practice RD/RDN

Comp profile: $120K–$280K through Schedule C combining MNT insurance billing, cash-pay private practice, telehealth platforms, and possibly digital products. Dominant qualifying method: Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02 Schedule C self-employed with Form 1084 addbacks. Common purchase: $450K–$800K primary residence. Watch-out: S-corp election decision typically arises around $150K–$200K of net profit. Coordinate with practice CPA on timing relative to mortgage qualifying year.

Specialty / multi-RD tier

Specialty practice or multi-RD firm owner

Comp profile: $180K–$600K through S-corp combining $80K–$120K reasonable-comp W-2 plus $100K–$480K K-1 distributions, with possibly multiple revenue streams (specialty cash-pay, corporate wellness consulting, digital products, employed RDs in multi-practitioner firm). Dominant qualifying method: Fannie Mae B3-3.4-02 S-corp self-employed with Form 1084 addbacks. Common purchase: $700K–$1.4M primary residence. Watch-out: Multi-stream documentation requires careful upfront organization — surface all entity returns, K-1s, 1099s, and consulting agreements early in underwriting.

08 · What RDs say

What dietitians say about their Stairway mortgage.

Names abbreviated for client privacy. Practice details anonymized. Numbers are real.

Dr. Megan H., clinical RD with telehealth practice
"Five years post-internship. Hospital W-2 at $72K plus three telehealth platform 1099s (Healthie, Nourish, Berry Street) totaling $48K plus a small private practice generating $22K. Total $142K across four income sources, but the first lender saw the W-2 alone, called the telehealth 1099s ‘gig income,’ and offered me $325K. Jim’s team aggregated the hospital W-2 under B3-3.1-01 and the three telehealth 1099s plus private practice under B3-3.3-02 as continuing Schedule C self-employment. $620K close on a Plantation townhouse. Multi-source income is the RD default; the file just needs to be read that way."
Megan H., RD
Clinical + telehealth + private · Plantation
Dr. Sarah J., eating disorder specialty RD
"Built an eating disorder treatment specialty practice over 9 years. CEDRD certified. Premium cash-pay rates at $245/session. Schedule C reported $158K with significant continuing-education, supervision, and conference deductions. Plus consulting retainer with two residential ED treatment programs paying $35K each annually as 1099-NEC. The first lender called the ED consulting work ‘niche income, not stable’ and offered me $385K. Jim’s team treated the consulting 1099s as continuing self-employment under B3-3.3-02 with the 2-year contract history, ran Form 1084 addbacks on the Schedule C, and qualified me at the full picture. $745K close on a Coral Springs home."
Sarah J., RDN, CEDRD
ED specialty RD + program consulting · Coral Springs
Dr. Maya R., sports nutrition specialist with athletic department contract
"Sports nutrition specialist for 11 years. CSSD certified. Multi-year athletic department contract with a Division I university at $85K W-2 plus private practice and individual athlete consulting at $95K through Schedule C. Plus a small share of consulting revenue with a professional team performance program at $40K through 1099-NEC. The first lender treated the athletic department position as ‘academic employment’ and the team consulting as ‘side work,’ offered me $380K. Jim’s team aggregated the W-2 under B3-3.1-01 and both self-employment streams under B3-3.3-02 with the multi-year contract documentation. $695K close on a Weston home in 42 days."
Maya R., RDN, CSSD
Sports nutrition w/ NCAA + pro team · Weston
09 · RD/RDN mortgage FAQs

Nutritionist and dietitian mortgage questions, answered.

01
I work hospital W-2 plus three telehealth platforms plus private practice. Is that a problem?
Not for a specialty lender. Multi-source income is the RD/RDN default. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01, the hospital W-2 qualifies with 24-month average. Under B3-3.3-02, the telehealth platform 1099s and private practice aggregate as continuing Schedule C self-employment with 2-year history. Combined, the multi-source picture qualifies you for substantially more than the W-2 alone.
02
My MNT insurance billing makes up about 40% of my practice revenue. How does that document?
MNT insurance billing through CPT codes 97802/97803/97804 flows through Schedule C gross revenue (or 1120-S practice revenue if S-corp) as ordinary practice income. The fact that a portion is insurance-billed vs cash-pay doesn’t change the qualifying treatment under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02. The 2-year history of practice revenue qualifies as continuing income.
03
I’m a new-RD with $95K of student loans. Can I buy a house?
Yes. Under Fannie Mae B3-6-05, the actual monthly payment from your income-driven repayment servicer statement counts in DTI — not 1% of balance. If you’re on IBR/SAVE/PAYE, that payment may be $150–$350/month instead of $950. The rule swings $200K–$350K of qualifying loan amount for new-RDs.
04
My private practice income varies seasonally (slow in summer, busy January). Is that an issue?
The 24-month average smooths seasonal variation effectively. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02, 2-year average net Schedule C profit handles within-year variation by definition. Significant year-over-year decline trend (greater than 25%) requires explanation but doesn’t automatically disqualify. We document the practice patterns honestly with the underwriter upfront.
05
I run two corporate wellness consulting contracts at $35K each. How are those treated?
Corporate wellness 1099-NECs aggregate as continuing Schedule C self-employment under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02 with 2-year history. Multi-year contracts (typical for corporate wellness retainers) support continuity documentation. For RDs with 2-4 active corporate clients, this stream can add $60K–$200K of qualifying income that generalist lenders frequently miss.
06
When should I elect S-corp instead of staying Schedule C?
Generally above $150K of net practice profit, when self-employment tax savings on K-1 distributions justify the additional 1120-S compliance cost. Under IRC Section 1361, S-corps pay a "reasonable" W-2 to the owner and distribute remaining profit as K-1 (avoiding SE tax on distribution). For RDs this threshold typically hits at Years 7-12 of established practice, particularly for specialty practitioners and multi-RD firm owners. We don’t advise on tax election — that’s your practice CPA’s call — but we structure the mortgage around whichever election you’ve made.
07
I sell digital meal plans and online courses. Does that revenue count?
Yes when documented. Digital product revenue flows through Schedule C as product sales or service revenue. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02, this stream qualifies with 2-year history. We work with merchant processor reports from Stripe, Kajabi, Teachable, Gumroad, and similar platforms to document the digital product revenue.
08
Are mortgage rates higher for nutritionists/dietitians?
Base conventional rates are the same for RDs as for any other borrower at the same credit profile. Non-QM bank-statement programs carry a 0.5–1.0% rate premium because of looser documentation. For most RDs with W-2 anchor and multi-source pattern, Conventional conforming or jumbo at standard rates is the typical path.
09
What documentation do I need?
Typically: two years of complete federal 1040s with all schedules including Schedule C if applicable; if S-corp owner, Form 1120-S returns with K-1s and Schedule L; all W-2s from clinical or hospital employment; all 1099-NECs from telehealth platforms, corporate wellness, sports teams, and consulting; current servicer statement showing actual IDR payment if applicable; 60 days of personal and business bank statements; RD/RDN credential documentation.
10
My telehealth platform 1099 income is only 18 months old. Can it still count?
Conventional qualifying typically wants 2-year history. Workarounds: (1) qualify primarily on W-2 + Schedule C private practice with the platform income as supplementary information; (2) if other multi-source streams (hospital W-2, corporate wellness, other 1099) cover the qualifying gap, the platform 1099 doesn’t need to count yet; (3) wait the additional months. We model the trade-offs.
11
Does my AND membership or specialty certification affect my application?
No — Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics membership and specialty certifications (CEDRD, CSSD, CDCES) are not mortgage-relevant credentials per se. What matters is documented income from active RD/RDN practice. Specialty certifications support the case for higher per-session premium positioning but don’t directly affect rate or eligibility.
12
I’m an eating disorder specialty RD. The work is intense but income is high. How does that file?
Eating disorder specialty RDs typically combine private practice cash-pay sessions ($185–$350 per session) with consulting retainers at residential or intensive outpatient treatment programs (1099-NEC, often $25K–$60K per program annually). Under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02, both streams aggregate as continuing self-employment with 2-year history. CEDRD certification supports the premium positioning.
13
I have a sports nutrition contract with a college athletic department. How does that count?
Athletic department contracts may be W-2 (Title IX requirements at some Division I universities) or 1099-NEC (most common). Under B3-3.1-01 for W-2 or B3-3.3-02 for 1099, athletic department income qualifies with 2-year history. Multi-year contracts (typical for senior sports nutrition positions) support continuity documentation strongly.
14
Can a co-borrower help me qualify?
Yes, significantly. Co-borrower files combine W-2s, 1099s, Schedule C, and S-corp distributions from both parties. For new-RDs and clinical RDs not yet at established income tiers, a co-borrower with stable W-2 income often substantially helps qualifying ratios.
15
How does the new CDR Master’s requirement affect new RDs entering the field?
As of January 2024, the Commission on Dietetic Registration requires a Master’s degree for new RD applicants (in addition to Bachelor’s + accredited Dietetic Internship). This adds 1-2 years and roughly $20K–$40K of additional student loan burden to new RDs. The mortgage implication: new RD cohorts post-2024 carry slightly higher student loan balances, making B3-6-05 IDR documentation even more important for qualifying.
16
I have supplement affiliate income from Fullscript and Wellevate. How does that count?
Supplement affiliate income flows through Schedule C as product/affiliate sales revenue and qualifies under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02 with 2-year history. The supplement affiliate platforms issue 1099-MISC or 1099-NEC at year-end. We document the affiliate income as part of the overall self-employment picture.
17
My S-corp has retained earnings. Are those usable as reserves?
Generally yes if accessible. S-corp retained earnings in the practice business account count as reserves if you have the ability to distribute them. Documented via 1120-S Schedule L (balance sheet). For established multi-RD practice owners or specialty RD S-corps with 5+ years of accumulated retained earnings, the reserve strength supports jumbo qualifying.
18
How does the IRS Section 199A QBI deduction affect my qualifying?
Indirectly. Dietetics practice is a Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB) under IRC Section 199A with phase-out between $191,950 and $241,950 for single filers (2024 indexed). Most working RDs sit BELOW the phase-out and qualify for the full 20% QBI deduction. For high-earning specialty RDs and multi-RD firm owners above the phase-out, the deduction zeroes out. We coordinate with your practice CPA to document the right numbers for qualifying.
19
I’m on PSLF track working at a community hospital. How does that work?
If your hospital qualifies for Public Service Loan Forgiveness (501(c)(3) nonprofit hospital, government hospital), your IDR payments count toward forgiveness AND count in DTI under B3-6-05 during the qualifying years. After 120 qualifying payments and forgiveness, the remaining balance discharges. The 10-year PSLF clock often aligns with the early-career window when home purchase is most likely.
20
Are there mortgage programs specifically for nutritionists/dietitians?
No dedicated "RD/RDN mortgage" product exists in mainstream lending. What matters more is finding a broker who understands multi-source income aggregation across W-2 + telehealth 1099s + corporate wellness + private practice, MNT insurance billing as continuing practice income, Schedule C Form 1084 cash-flow analysis, S-corp distribution treatment under B3-3.4-02 for established owners, and B3-6-05 IDR treatment for moderate student loan burden typical of RDs.
21
My spouse is also a healthcare professional. How does that affect us?
Both files combine as co-borrowers. RD income plus spouse’s healthcare income (physician, dentist, nurse, PA, mental health) produces strong joint qualifying. Both spouses may carry student loans with IDR enrollment — we document each spouse’s actual IDR payment for B3-6-05 treatment.
22
I just transitioned out of hospital W-2 into full-time private practice 6 months ago. Can I qualify now?
Tight but possible. The 2-year self-employment history requirement typically wants 24 months of established Schedule C. Workarounds during the transition period: (1) qualify on the trailing 24-month combined picture (final hospital W-2 + new self-employment) treating the transition as a continuation of same profession; (2) qualify primarily on retained-employment co-borrower income if applicable; (3) wait additional months. We model what works best given the specifics.
23
My practice has a meal-plan delivery service alongside the consulting work. How does that count?
Meal-plan delivery service revenue flows through Schedule C as product sales (or potentially as a separate business depending on structure) and qualifies as ongoing practice revenue with 2-year history under B3-3.3-02. If structured as a separate entity (LLC or S-corp for the meal-plan business), it may qualify under B3-3.4-02 with its own 2-year tax return history.
24
When should I start the mortgage conversation relative to a home purchase?
Ideally 90–120 days before you intend to make an offer. RD/RDN files often take longer than standard files because of multi-source income aggregation (W-2 + multiple 1099s + Schedule C), telehealth platform documentation, possible S-corp 1120-S review, and MNT insurance billing documentation. Starting early prevents close-of-escrow surprises.
25
Why do generalist lenders refuse RD/RDN files when there’s clearly enough income?
Three reasons: (1) The multi-source income pattern (W-2 + multiple 1099s + private practice) feels unfamiliar to lenders who default to single-income borrowers; (2) telehealth platform 1099s get categorized as "gig work" rather than continuing professional self-employment; (3) corporate wellness consulting and sports team contracts get mis-categorized as "side work" rather than legitimate ongoing professional income. The income is all there and verifiable — the file just needs a broker who reads the RD multi-source pattern correctly.
10 · Companion guides & calculators

More on RD/RDN mortgages, multi-source income aggregation, and MNT insurance billing.

12 · What "right door first" looks like

RD/RDN mortgage, structured right.

Established Registered Dietitian, 5 years post-internship, multi-source income working pattern. Hospital W-2 at a community hospital diabetes education program $72,000 annually. Telehealth platform 1099-NECs from three platforms (Healthie $18K, Nourish $16K, Berry Street $14K) totaling $48K annually with consistent 2-year history. Small private practice generating $22K through Schedule C with MNT insurance billing for diabetes and CKD patients plus cash-pay coaching sessions. Plus $95K of remaining Bachelor’s + Dietetic Internship student loans on PAYE plan with actual monthly payment of $245. Total qualifying income across all four streams: $142K. The first lender looked at the hospital W-2 of $72K alone, called the three telehealth 1099s "gig income, not stable employment," refused to count the small private practice as "too new" (it had a 2.3-year history), applied the 1% rule to student loan balance ($950/month theoretical vs $245 actual), and offered $325K maximum. We pulled the hospital W-2 employment verification, all three telehealth platform 1099s with their continuity documentation (none of the three platforms was less than 24 months active), the Schedule C with private practice MNT billing records, the IDR servicer statement showing the $245 actual payment, and the RD credential documentation. Ran the hospital W-2 through Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01, aggregated the three telehealth 1099s plus private practice Schedule C as continuing self-employment under B3-3.3-02, and used B3-6-05 to count the actual $245 IDR payment in DTI. Total qualifying income: $138K (after Form 1084 normalization). Approved at $620K conventional conforming for a Plantation townhouse with dedicated home-office space for telehealth practice. Closed in 33 days. Multi-source income is the RD default — the first lender just didn’t know how to read the multi-stream pattern.

House keys at closing
33-day close · Plantation, FL
Talk to an RD/RDN mortgage specialist

Get a nutritionist or dietitian mortgage from a lender who reads multi-source W-2 + telehealth + private practice + corporate wellness + MNT insurance billing as one file.

No application. No credit pull. A 20-minute conversation where we look at your hospital or clinical W-2 if applicable, all telehealth platform 1099s and any sports team or athletic department contract, any corporate wellness consulting retainer 1099s, your Schedule C with private practice or 1120-S if S-corp, your IDR servicer statement if you carry student loans, and your RD/RDN credentialing — then we tell you which loan program fits and roughly what the numbers look like. If we’re not the right shop, we’ll tell you that too.

Jim Blackburn NMLS #1072866 · Stairway Mortgage

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