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Mortgages for Florida real estate brokers — the supervisory license tier above sales associates — qualifying on commission overrides, own production, and brokerage equity through multi-source income synthesis adapted to the post-NAR-settlement market.

Florida real estate brokers operate in income economics generalist lenders consistently misunderstand. The Florida broker license under Florida Statutes Chapter 475 Part I is the supervisory tier above sales associate, requiring 24 months active sales associate experience + post-licensing education + Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC) examination. Income structure features distinctive multi-source mix: commission overrides on transactions closed by supervised sales associates (typical 5-15% override on associate commission), own production commission from broker’s personal transactions, brokerage ownership equity for principals operating their own brokerage as S-corp or partnership, property management commission stream from supervised property management activity, and ancillary fees from referral programs + transaction coordination services. The August 17, 2024 NAR settlement ($418M) reshaped the broker compensation landscape with written buyer agency agreements mandatory before showings, MLS systems no longer displaying buyer broker compensation, and broker compensation more openly negotiated — substantially affecting broker income narrative continuity for mortgage qualifying purposes. For mortgage qualifying, the multi-source commission income typically requires synthesis under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 variable income framework with 24-month averaging + continuity narrative addressing post-NAR-settlement compensation environment, B3-3.4-02 partnership / S-corp documentation for brokerage equity holders with K-1 distribution streams, and Bank Statement or P&L Statement Non-QM as alternative paths for brokers with substantial business add-backs. Stairway Mortgage handles Florida real estate broker borrowers on multi-source commission synthesis, brokerage equity K-1 documentation, post-NAR continuity narrative, and HNW Jumbo qualifying for established brokerage owners and senior brokers.

Broker NMLS #1072866 · Florida mortgage broker specializing in real estate broker income synthesis covering commission overrides, own production, brokerage equity K-1, and post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative for FL Statutes Ch 475 Part I licensed brokers
Florida real estate broker reviewing transaction documents
FL Statutes Ch 475
Florida real estate broker licensure under Florida Statutes Chapter 475 Part I regulated by Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC) at Florida DBPR. Supervisory tier above sales associate requiring 24 months experience + post-licensing education + State examination
NAR settlement 2024
National Association of REALTORS settlement (August 17, 2024, $418M) implemented changes: written buyer agency mandatory pre-showing, MLS no longer displays buyer broker compensation, broker compensation openly negotiated. Affects post-settlement income narrative
B3-3.1-01 commission
Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 variable income framework permits commission income with 2-year history + continuity narrative. 24-month averaging typically calculated. Declining trend triggers haircut. Continuity narrative addresses post-NAR-settlement compensation environment for forward-looking qualifying
Multi-source typical
Broker income mix: commission overrides on associate transactions + own production + brokerage equity K-1 if owner + property management commission + ancillary fees. Multi-source synthesis under B3-3.1-01 + B3-3.4-02 with each component documented to its appropriate framework is qualifying foundation
Florida real estate brokerage office

Florida real estate brokers operate as the supervisory license tier above sales associates with distinctive income economics. The Florida broker license under Florida Statutes Chapter 475 Part I requires 24 months active sales associate experience plus 72 hours post-licensing education plus successful Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC) examination. Brokers can: supervise sales associates and broker-associates, register a real estate brokerage entity, hold escrow funds, and operate as principal broker for a brokerage. Income structure features multi-source mix that varies substantially by broker role: principal brokerage owners earn commission overrides on transactions closed by supervised sales associates (typically 5-15% of associate’s commission depending on brokerage compensation structure), own production commission on broker’s personal transactions, brokerage ownership equity reported as K-1 partnership distribution or S-corp distribution depending on entity structure, property management commission stream from supervised property management activity under FREC Rule 61J2 property management regulations, and ancillary fees from referral programs + transaction coordination + buyer agency services. Broker-associates (brokers licensed as associates under another principal broker) earn higher commission splits than sales associates plus override compensation on referrals + transaction coordination but typically lack brokerage equity stake. The August 17, 2024 NAR settlement ($418M) reshaped the post-settlement broker compensation landscape with three substantive changes: (1) written buyer agency agreements mandatory before MLS-listed property showings, (2) MLS systems no longer displaying buyer broker compensation publicly, (3) broker compensation more openly negotiated between parties rather than commission-pool model. Florida MLS systems (Stellar MLS covering Central + South Florida, MIAMI Association of REALTORS MLS, BeachesMLS covering Palm Beach + Broward + Treasure Coast) adapted to new requirements. Florida broker compensation models continuing evolution post-settlement. For mortgage qualifying, the multi-source commission income synthesizes under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 variable income framework for commission + override + own production components with 24-month averaging + continuity narrative addressing post-NAR-settlement environment. B3-3.4-02 partnership / S-corp documentation applies to brokerage equity K-1 distributions. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level applies. For high-add-back brokers running brokerage with substantial business expenses, Bank Statement or P&L Statement Non-QM alternative paths expand qualifying capacity. Stairway Mortgage handles Florida real estate broker borrowers across all license tiers and business structures with deep understanding of commission income mechanics, brokerage equity K-1 documentation, post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative, and HNW Jumbo qualifying for established brokerage owners. Or skip ahead: Jumbo loan details, every loan program, mortgage calculators, or today's rates.

01 · Florida real estate broker mortgage qualifying at a glance

Key facts every Florida real estate broker should know about qualifying.

Multi-source typical

Broker income mix: commission overrides on associate transactions + own production + brokerage equity K-1 + property management + ancillary fees. Multi-source synthesis under B3-3.1-01 + B3-3.4-02 with each component documented to its appropriate framework is the qualifying foundation.

B3-3.1-01 commission

Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 commission income requires 2-year history + continuity narrative + 24-month averaging. Declining trend triggers haircut. Post-NAR-settlement environment addressed in continuity narrative documenting compensation structure adaptation.

Brokerage equity K-1

Brokerage owners receive K-1 partnership or S-corp distributions reported under B3-3.4-02 with 2-year history. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level adds back entity depreciation + non-cash expenses for qualifying.

FREC license verification

Active Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC) broker license under Chapter 475 verification confirms practice continuity. License continuity (no lapses, no disciplinary action) supports continuity narrative under B3-3.1-01 for commission income qualifying.

02 · Florida broker license tiers + roles

The five broker license tiers and roles Florida real estate brokers operate within.

Florida real estate broker licensure under Florida Statutes Chapter 475 Part I spans broker-associate through principal brokerage owner. Five primary roles cover the full broker license spectrum.

01

Broker-Associate

"Broker licensed but operating as associate under another principal broker. Higher commission splits than sales associates (typical 70/30 to 90/10 split vs 50/50 for sales associates). No brokerage equity stake typically. Distinct from sales associate by license tier."

  • Broker license + associate operation
  • 70/30 to 90/10 commission splits
  • No brokerage equity stake typically
  • W-2 or 1099 employment structure
See broker-associate qualifying below
02

Principal Broker (Solo)

"Solo principal broker operating one-broker brokerage with potentially supervised sales associates. Schedule C or single-member LLC structure typical. Multi-source income: own production + override on associate transactions (if any) + ancillary fees."

  • Solo brokerage operation
  • Schedule C / single-member LLC
  • Own production + associate overrides
  • Bank Statement Non-QM alternative
See solo principal broker qualifying
03

Brokerage Owner (S-corp / Partnership)

"Brokerage owner operating multi-associate brokerage as S-corp or partnership. Income structure: W-2 from brokerage + K-1 distribution from brokerage equity + override on associate transactions + own production. Multi-source synthesis under B3-3.1-01 + B3-3.4-02."

  • Multi-associate brokerage S-corp / partnership
  • W-2 + K-1 + override + own production
  • Form 1084 brokerage entity-level
  • Brokerage equity ownership stake
See brokerage owner qualifying
04

Property Management Broker

"Broker operating property management activity under FREC Rule 61J2. Property management commission stream from ongoing rental property management (typical 8-12% of monthly rent) + leasing commission per lease (typical 1 month rent). Recurring revenue stream beyond transaction-based income."

  • FREC Rule 61J2 property management
  • 8-12% monthly rent commission
  • Recurring revenue stream supplement
  • Continuity narrative supported
See property management broker qualifying
05

Multi-State Broker (NCREN)

"Broker licensed in multiple states via reciprocity or independent state licensure. Florida + neighboring states (Georgia, North Carolina, South Carolina, Alabama) common. Multi-state revenue stream + practice diversification. Recently-relocated brokers from California, New York bringing prior practice."

  • Multi-state license portfolio
  • Practice diversification + continuity
  • Recently-relocated broker pathway
  • Multi-state revenue documentation
See multi-state broker qualifying
03 · Business structure + income analysis

How Florida real estate broker income structure maps to mortgage qualifying.

Florida real estate broker income operates across distinct components each with specific Fannie Mae documentation requirements. Five primary income components cover the full multi-source broker picture.

Component 1 — Own production commission

Broker’s personal transaction commission from listings + buyer representation closed under broker’s personal practice. Variable year-to-year commission income depending on transaction volume + transaction value + market conditions. Commission qualifies under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 with 2-year history + 24-month averaging. Continuity narrative documents practice tenure + market positioning + post-NAR-settlement adaptation. Declining trend triggers haircut; stable / growing trend supports qualifying.

Component 2 — Override commission on associate transactions

Principal brokers earn override commission on transactions closed by supervised sales associates (typical 5-15% of associate commission depending on brokerage compensation structure). Override stream depends on brokerage roster size + associate productivity + retention. Override income qualifies under B3-3.1-01 with continuity narrative documenting brokerage stability + associate retention. Override may be reported as W-2 + bonus or as K-1 distribution depending on brokerage entity structure.

Component 3 — Brokerage equity K-1 distribution

Brokerage owners with S-corp or partnership structure receive K-1 reporting share of brokerage ordinary business income + actual distributions received. B3-3.4-02 documentation: 2-year personal returns + 2-year brokerage entity returns (Form 1065 or 1120-S + K-1 schedules) + partnership / shareholder agreement excerpt + ownership %. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level adds back entity depreciation + amortization + business use of brokerage office + non-cash expenses.

Component 4 — Property management commission

Brokers operating property management activity earn ongoing monthly commission stream from managed rental properties (typical 8-12% of monthly rent collected) + leasing commission per new lease (typical 1 month rent). Recurring revenue stream supplements transaction-based commission. Property management income qualifies under B3-3.1-01 with continuity narrative documenting management portfolio size + retention. Stable recurring revenue supports continuity narrative.

Component 5 — Ancillary fees + referral commission

Brokers earn ancillary fees from referral programs (referring buyer / seller to other broker for commission share), transaction coordination services (per-transaction fee for paperwork management), buyer agency services (per-engagement fee post-NAR-settlement), and other practice ancillary revenue. Ancillary fees qualify under B3-3.1-01 if substantial + 2-year history. Often documented as part of broader brokerage income synthesis.

04 · Post-NAR-settlement broker compensation landscape

Six things every Florida broker should understand about post-NAR-settlement income narrative.

The August 17, 2024 NAR settlement reshaped broker compensation. Six clarifications shape post-settlement broker income + mortgage qualifying continuity narrative.

A

NAR settlement $418M three substantive changes

August 17, 2024 NAR settlement ($418M) implemented three substantive changes: (1) written buyer agency agreements mandatory before MLS-listed property showings, (2) MLS systems no longer displaying buyer broker compensation publicly, (3) broker compensation more openly negotiated between parties. Florida MLS systems adapted to new requirements. Substantial reshaping of broker compensation landscape.

B

Buyer agency mandatory pre-showing

Post-settlement buyer broker requires written buyer agency agreement before showing MLS-listed properties. Buyer agency agreements document compensation terms upfront. Florida brokers operating buyer representation practice adapted procedures + documentation systems. Buyer agency engagement now formalized vs prior informal arrangement standard.

C

MLS no longer displays buyer broker compensation

Pre-settlement: MLS publicly displayed seller’s offered compensation to buyer broker. Post-settlement: MLS no longer displays buyer broker compensation. Compensation negotiated separately. Affects broker practice marketing + compensation discovery + negotiation dynamics. Florida MLS systems (Stellar MLS, MIAMI MLS, BeachesMLS) adapted display requirements.

D

Compensation negotiation evolution

Post-settlement compensation model continues evolution: open negotiation between parties, written buyer agency at engagement, seller offers to buyer broker handled outside MLS. Various compensation models emerging: traditional commission pool, hourly buyer representation, flat-fee buyer agency, hybrid models. Florida broker compensation environment continuing to settle into new patterns.

E

Continuity narrative addresses post-settlement

For mortgage qualifying continuity narrative under B3-3.1-01, post-NAR-settlement environment addressed through documentation of: broker’s adaptation to new compensation model, post-settlement transaction volume + commission revenue, brokerage adaptation procedures, and forward-looking expectations. Underwriter scrutiny of post-settlement income continuity is appropriate; documentation of adaptation supports narrative.

F

Florida market continues despite reform

Florida real estate market continues robust activity despite compensation reform. Florida Realtors market data shows continued transaction volume in 2025-2026. Florida wealth migration sustains demand. Broker practice adapts to new compensation model with maintained or growing income for established brokers. Strong continuity narrative possible despite reform.

05 · B3-3.1-01 commission income deep dive

How Stairway handles commission income qualifying for Florida brokers post-NAR-settlement.

Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 establishes the variable income framework that governs commission income qualifying. Five documentation components combine to support broker commission qualifying with post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative.

Component 1 — 2-year personal tax returns

2-year personal tax returns (Form 1040) including Schedule C if Schedule C broker structure, Schedule E Part II if K-1 brokerage equity holder, or W-2 employed broker structure for broker-associates. Commission income reported per applicable schedule. Schedule SE self-employment tax flows from Schedule C operations. Personal returns establish broker’s personal qualifying picture combining all income sources across the multi-source structure.

Component 2 — 24-month averaging mechanics

Commission income averaged across 24-month window per B3-3.1-01 variable income guidance. Year 1 (more recent) and Year 2 (prior) commission totals averaged. Declining trend (Year 2 less than Year 1) typically triggers haircut to lower of average or Year 1 amount. Stable trend supports 24-month average qualifying. Growing trend supports 24-month average with positive forward-looking narrative. Critical for commission-driven income to demonstrate stability or growth over the 24-month window.

Component 3 — Post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative

Continuity narrative documents broker’s adaptation to post-settlement compensation environment. Components: documentation of broker’s post-settlement transaction volume + commission revenue trends, brokerage adaptation procedures (buyer agency agreement workflows + compensation negotiation models), forward-looking compensation model that broker has implemented, Florida market activity context supporting continued transaction volume, and any structural changes in broker’s practice (split changes, brokerage entity moves) addressed transparently.

Component 4 — Override + ancillary income synthesis

For principal brokers with override commission stream on supervised associate transactions, override income synthesized with own production commission. Override income may flow through brokerage entity (S-corp or partnership) as W-2 + K-1 or distributed as separate 1099 income depending on brokerage structure. Ancillary fees (referrals, transaction coordination, buyer agency engagement fees) added to overall commission income picture. 24-month averaging applied to combined commission + override + ancillary stream.

Component 5 — FREC license + practice tenure verification

Florida Real Estate Commission (FREC) broker license verification confirms active license under FL Statutes Ch 475 Part I. License continuity (24 months sales associate experience prior to broker license + active broker license tenure without lapses or disciplinary action) supports continuity narrative. Florida Realtors membership documentation supports professional standing. NAR membership documentation supports continuing education compliance + professional standards adherence.

06 · Brokerage owner K-1 B3-3.4-02 deep dive

How Stairway handles brokerage equity K-1 qualifying for Florida brokerage owners.

Brokerage owners operating as S-corp or partnership receive K-1 distributions documented under Fannie Mae B3-3.4-02. Five documentation components combine to support brokerage equity K-1 income qualifying.

Step 1 — Brokerage entity returns

2-year brokerage entity returns (Form 1065 partnership or Form 1120-S S-corp) at entity level showing brokerage’s gross commission revenue + operating expenses + ordinary business income flowing through to owners. K-1 Schedule K reporting owner’s share of each income / deduction / credit item. Schedule M-1 and M-2 reconciling book-to-tax differences + capital accounts. Brokerage entity returns establish entity-level economic picture.

Step 2 — Shareholder / partnership agreement

Shareholder agreement (S-corp) or partnership agreement (partnership) excerpt documenting owner’s ownership %, capital contribution, distribution policy, profit allocation method, and capital account treatment. Critical documentation establishing owner’s economic interest in brokerage. For multi-principal brokerages, ownership tier classification + economic terms documented. Confidentiality respected through excerpt approach (relevant sections only).

Step 3 — Form 1084 brokerage entity-level analysis

Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level adds back: depreciation (office equipment + technology + brokerage assets), amortization (intangibles + organizational costs), business use of brokerage office space, entity-level non-cash expenses. Resulting cash flow available to owners exceeds K-1 ordinary income face value. Owner’s share computed at ownership % to derive qualifying cash flow per owner.

Step 4 — W-2 + K-1 layering for active broker owners

Brokerage owners actively producing transactions earn W-2 wages from brokerage entity (subject to payroll tax) plus K-1 distributions from ownership equity. For mortgage qualifying, W-2 wages count directly under B3-3.1-01 + K-1 distributions qualify under B3-3.4-02. Form 1084 analysis layered with W-2 + commission overrides + own production. Multi-source synthesis combines all components into single qualifying income figure.

Step 5 — Brokerage continuity narrative

Continuity narrative documents expected continuation of K-1 distribution stream + brokerage business stability + broker’s ownership role. Components: brokerage tenure (years of operation), associate roster stability (retention metrics), market positioning (Florida MLS coverage + specialization), post-NAR-settlement adaptation, and forward-looking practice outlook. Strong continuity narrative supports B3-3.4-02 K-1 qualifying with appropriate underwriter confidence.

07 · Property management commission stream qualifying

How property management commission income strengthens broker qualifying.

Brokers operating property management activity under FREC Rule 61J2 earn recurring monthly commission stream that supplements transaction-based commission income. The recurring revenue characteristic supports continuity narrative substantially.

Property management commission structure

Florida property management broker commission structure: typical 8-12% of monthly rent collected (varies by market + property type + management scope), leasing commission per new lease (typical 1 month rent), late fee + administrative fee components, vendor commission for coordinating contractor services. Monthly recurring revenue from managed property portfolio. Portfolio size + property types + retention drive total monthly commission revenue.

Recurring revenue continuity strength

Property management commission has recurring revenue characteristic distinct from transaction-based commission. Monthly revenue stream from existing managed portfolio supports strong continuity narrative under B3-3.1-01. Portfolio retention rate + average client tenure document predictable revenue. Recurring revenue characteristic often counted with less underwriter scrutiny than purely transaction-based commission given inherent stability.

Documentation requirements

Property management commission documented through: 2-year personal returns reflecting management income, brokerage entity returns if separate entity, property management agreements representative sample (anonymized for confidentiality if appropriate), portfolio summary documenting managed property count + average monthly commission per property, retention metrics if available. CPA-prepared YTD reflects current management activity.

FREC Rule 61J2 compliance

Florida property management activity under FREC Rule 61J2 requires broker supervision of property management operations + escrow account management for security deposits + rent collection. Compliance with property management regulations + active broker license under FL Statutes Ch 475 + FREC verification supports qualifying. Property management broker subject to broker oversight requirements + escrow audit procedures.

Investment property scaling synergy

Brokers operating property management often build personal investment property portfolio alongside management practice. Brokers understand investment property economics from management work. Personal investment property purchases scaled via DSCR Non-QM (property rental income only qualifying) bypassing personal qualifying capacity constraints. Common pattern: property management broker building personal investment portfolio scaled beyond what personal commission income would otherwise support.

08 · Loan programs for Florida real estate brokers

Loan program options for broker borrowers.

Florida real estate brokers access multiple financing paths depending on license tier, business structure, income mix, and qualifying needs. Eight loan programs commonly used.

Conventional Conforming

  • Standard Fannie / Freddie with tax returns
  • Multi-source commission + K-1 synthesis
  • Best rate for documented brokers
Best for: Mid-career brokers, stable income

Conventional Jumbo

  • Above-conforming-limit residential
  • HNW established brokerage owner pricing
  • Multi-source synthesis required
Best for: HNW brokerage owners

Bank Statement Non-QM

  • 12-24 months business bank deposits
  • Typical 50% expense ratio
  • Solo Schedule C broker alternative
Best for: High-add-back solo brokers

P&L Statement Non-QM

  • CPA-prepared P&L statement qualifying
  • Established brokerage + documented financials
  • Alternative to bank statement path
Best for: Established brokerage owners

Asset-Depletion Non-QM

  • Liquid portfolio balance ÷ 360 months
  • HNW brokerage owner accumulated wealth
  • Useful when commission timing in trough
Best for: Senior brokers + post-sale wealth

DSCR Non-QM Investor

  • Property rental income only qualifying
  • Standard ratio 1.0-1.25+ required
  • LLC ownership accommodated
Best for: Investment portfolio scaling

Cash-Out Refinance

  • Extract equity from existing property
  • Fund brokerage expansion + acquisition
  • Conventional or Non-QM underwriting
Best for: Brokerage expansion + acquisition

Construction-to-Perm

  • Single-close construction + permanent
  • Custom home for self + future flip
  • Florida construction lien coordination
Best for: Brokers building own home
09 · Six forces shaping Florida real estate broker industry

How Florida real estate broker industry operates in 2026.

Florida real estate broker industry operates at the intersection of post-NAR-settlement compensation reform, Florida MLS system landscape evolution, broker compensation negotiation model emergence, Florida wealth migration sustaining transaction volume, Miami residential market dynamics, and post-Surfside condo broker work.

Force 1 — NAR settlement effects continuing 2025-2026

August 17, 2024 NAR settlement ($418M) implementation effects continuing through 2025-2026 as broker compensation models settle into post-settlement patterns. Buyer agency agreement workflows now standard. MLS compensation display removed. Compensation negotiation more open. Various compensation models emerging across Florida brokerages: traditional commission pool, hourly buyer representation, flat-fee buyer agency, hybrid models. Continuing evolution affecting broker income narrative.

Force 2 — Florida MLS system landscape

Florida operates multiple substantial MLS systems: Stellar MLS covering Central + South Florida (largest Florida MLS), MIAMI Association of REALTORS MLS, BeachesMLS covering Palm Beach + Broward + Treasure Coast. Each MLS adapted to post-NAR-settlement display requirements. Broker MLS coverage + multi-MLS membership expanding practice geography. Florida MLS system landscape continues evolution.

Force 3 — Broker compensation negotiation model emergence

Post-settlement compensation negotiation models emerging across Florida broker community: written buyer agency at engagement with compensation terms documented upfront, seller offers to buyer broker handled outside MLS, various flat-fee + hourly + traditional commission hybrid models. Brokerages developing compensation transparency procedures + standardized buyer agency forms. Substantial broker practice adaptation underway.

Force 4 — Florida wealth migration sustaining transaction volume

Florida HNW + UHNW migration from California, New York, Illinois, New Jersey continues at substantial volume. Residential transaction demand sustained across all price tiers. Florida Realtors market data showing continued robust transaction activity 2025-2026. Florida brokers experiencing maintained or growing transaction volume despite compensation reform. Strong income continuity narrative possible.

Force 5 — Miami residential market dynamics

Miami-Dade + Broward + Palm Beach residential market substantial with HNW + UHNW concentration. Miami Beach, Coral Gables, Pinecrest, Coconut Grove premium residential markets. Brokers specializing in Miami HNW market segment experiencing sustained activity. Multilingual + international client capability valuable in Miami market given international buyer concentration. Florida wealth migration combined with international buyer activity sustaining Miami broker practice.

Force 6 — Post-Surfside condo broker work

Post-Surfside condo collapse (June 2021) and Florida SB 4-D (May 2022) created substantial condo unit owner education + transaction coordination demand. Brokers handling condo transactions managing SB 4-D milestone inspection + Structural Integrity Reserve Study (SIRS) disclosure + remediation assessment coordination. Specialized condo broker practice growing. Condo market activity continues despite reform pressures.

10 · Mortgage qualifying timeline for brokers

The Stairway underwriting timeline for broker applications.

A timeline view of how Stairway underwrites Florida real estate broker mortgage applications across pre-qualification multi-source analysis, documentation gathering, post-NAR continuity narrative development, and final approval + closing.

Pre-qualification

Multi-source income structure + license tier analysis

Stairway work: License tier identification (broker-associate / solo principal / brokerage owner / property management / multi-state). Income component identification (commission + override + K-1 + property management + ancillary). Conventional vs Non-QM path selection. Pre-approval letter sized to verified qualifying capacity. Borrower work: FREC broker license verification + initial income overview.

Documentation

Commission + K-1 documentation gathering

Borrower work: 2-year personal tax returns + 2-year brokerage entity returns (Form 1065 / 1120-S + K-1 schedules) if owner, shareholder / partnership agreement excerpt, CPA-prepared YTD P&L, FREC broker license verification, Florida Realtors / NAR membership documentation, property management agreements representative sample if applicable, 12-24 months business bank statements if Bank Statement Non-QM path. Stairway work: Documentation completeness audit.

Continuity narrative

Post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative development

Stairway work: Continuity narrative drafting addressing post-NAR-settlement compensation environment, broker’s adaptation procedures, post-settlement transaction volume + commission revenue trends, brokerage workflows for buyer agency agreements + compensation negotiation, forward-looking compensation model. Borrower work: Provide post-settlement practice updates + commission revenue documentation.

Cash-flow synthesis

Multi-source qualifying calculation

Stairway work: Commission income 24-month averaging under B3-3.1-01. K-1 brokerage equity income synthesis under B3-3.4-02. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level. Multi-source synthesis combining commission + override + K-1 + property management + ancillary components. DTI calculation. Underwriter conditions delivery.

Approval + closing

Final approval + closing coordination

Stairway work: Underwriter clear-to-close with broker multi-source income documentation aligned. FREC broker license verification confirmed. Florida Realtors / NAR membership confirmed. Closing coordination with title company or attorney depending on county practice. Insurance binder coordination. Closing-day execution. Post-closing relationship for brokerage expansion, investment property scaling, or referral partnership.

11 · What Florida real estate brokers say

What Florida real estate brokers say about Stairway qualifying.

Names abbreviated for client privacy. Transaction details anonymized.

Patricia D., Florida brokerage owner with multi-source W-2 + K-1 + override qualifying
"Florida brokerage owner operating S-corp brokerage in Miami-Dade with 18 supervised sales associates. Purchasing $2.95M Pinecrest primary residence. Income structure: $185K W-2 from brokerage + $245K K-1 distribution from brokerage equity + $145K override commission on associate transactions + $85K own production commission 2-year average. Jim’s team synthesized multi-source income under B3-3.1-01 for commission components + B3-3.4-02 for K-1 partnership documentation. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level adding back $42K depreciation + business use of brokerage office. Post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative documenting brokerage’s buyer agency workflow + compensation negotiation procedures. $2.95M Conventional Jumbo close in 43 days. Multi-source brokerage synthesis worked perfectly."
Patricia D.
Brokerage owner + multi-source · Pinecrest
Robert L., Solo principal broker with B3-3.1-01 commission averaging and post-NAR continuity narrative
"Solo principal broker operating single-member LLC brokerage in Fort Lauderdale focused on luxury Broward County waterfront residential. Purchasing $1.65M Las Olas primary residence. Tax returns showed commission income with substantial variability across 2022 ($385K) and 2023 ($425K) years — growing trend supporting 24-month averaging. Prior lender rejected over post-NAR-settlement uncertainty. Jim’s team built thorough continuity narrative documenting my buyer agency workflow adaptation + post-settlement transaction volume continuing through 2024-2025 + forward-looking compensation model. B3-3.1-01 with 2-year commission history + Florida Realtors membership + FREC license verification. $1.65M Conventional close in 38 days. Continuity narrative made it work."
Robert L.
Solo principal broker + post-NAR · Fort Lauderdale
Susan K., Property management broker with recurring revenue stream and DSCR investment scaling
"Property management broker operating Palm Beach County rental property management practice with 142 managed units generating $185K annual management commission + $245K transaction commission from sales activity. Purchasing $1.85M Boca Raton primary residence + scaling personal investment portfolio. Recurring property management commission supported strong continuity narrative under B3-3.1-01. Jim’s team also structured DSCR Non-QM financing for investment property #3 + #4 + #5 with property rental income qualifying alone — LLC ownership across each, DSCR ratios 1.22-1.38. Personal residence + 3 investment properties $4.2M total financed across 4 separate closings. Recurring revenue stream + DSCR scaling combination."
Susan K.
Property management broker + DSCR scaling · Boca Raton
12 · Real estate broker FAQs

Questions Florida real estate brokers ask, answered.

01
What’s the difference between a Florida broker and a sales associate?
Florida broker license under FL Statutes Ch 475 Part I is the supervisory tier above sales associate. Requires 24 months active sales associate experience + 72 hours post-licensing education + FREC examination. Brokers can supervise associates, hold escrow funds, register brokerages, and act as principal broker. Sales associates must operate under a registered broker.
02
How does Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 treat broker commission income?
B3-3.1-01 variable income framework permits commission income with 2-year history + continuity narrative + 24-month averaging. Declining trend triggers haircut to lower of average or current year. Stable / growing trend supports 24-month average qualifying. Post-NAR-settlement environment addressed in continuity narrative.
03
How did the NAR settlement affect broker mortgage qualifying?
August 17, 2024 NAR settlement ($418M) implemented written buyer agency mandatory pre-showing + MLS removing buyer broker compensation display + open compensation negotiation. For mortgage qualifying continuity narrative, post-settlement environment addressed through documentation of broker’s adaptation procedures + post-settlement transaction volume + commission revenue trends + forward-looking compensation model.
04
Is buyer agency really mandatory before showing now?
Yes — post-settlement NAR-affiliated buyer brokers require written buyer agency agreement before showing MLS-listed properties. Buyer agency agreements document compensation terms upfront. Florida brokers operating buyer representation practice adapted procedures + documentation systems. Standard buyer agency forms widely available through Florida Realtors + brokerage workflows.
05
Does MLS still show buyer broker compensation?
No — post-settlement Florida MLS systems (Stellar MLS, MIAMI Association of REALTORS MLS, BeachesMLS) no longer display buyer broker compensation publicly. Compensation negotiated separately between parties. Seller offers to buyer broker handled outside MLS. Substantial change from pre-settlement standard.
06
How does override commission count toward qualifying?
Override commission on supervised associate transactions (typical 5-15% of associate commission) qualifies under B3-3.1-01 with 2-year history + continuity narrative. May be reported as W-2 + bonus or K-1 distribution depending on brokerage entity structure. Brokerage stability + associate retention support continuity narrative.
07
How does my brokerage equity K-1 qualify?
Brokerage equity K-1 distributions qualify under B3-3.4-02 with 2-year history + brokerage entity returns (Form 1065 / 1120-S + K-1) + shareholder / partnership agreement excerpt + ownership %. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level adds back entity depreciation + business use of brokerage office + non-cash expenses.
08
How does property management commission count?
Property management commission (typical 8-12% monthly rent + leasing fees) qualifies under B3-3.1-01 with continuity narrative. Recurring revenue characteristic distinct from transaction-based commission supports strong continuity. Portfolio retention + management agreements documentation. Monthly recurring revenue often counted with less underwriter scrutiny than pure transaction commission.
09
Can ancillary fees (referral, transaction coordination) count?
Yes — ancillary fees from referral programs + transaction coordination services + buyer agency engagement fees qualify under B3-3.1-01 if substantial + 2-year history documented. Often included as part of broader brokerage commission income synthesis. CPA-prepared YTD reflects current ancillary revenue.
10
I’m a multi-state broker (Florida + Georgia / NC / SC). How does that affect qualifying?
Multi-state license portfolio supports practice diversification + continuity. License documentation across multiple states + transaction documentation reflecting multi-state revenue stream. Multi-state revenue documentation included in commission income synthesis. NCREN reciprocity supports cross-state practice mobility. Diversified revenue across states strengthens continuity narrative.
11
I’m a recently-relocated broker from California / New York. Can I qualify in Florida?
Yes — brokers relocating to Florida use license reciprocity for rapid Florida licensure. For mortgage qualifying, multi-state license documentation + practice tenure history in prior state count toward continuity narrative even though Florida practice may be recent. Multi-source income from continuing prior-state engagements + emerging Florida practice synthesized appropriately.
12
What if my 24-month commission shows declining trend?
Declining trend (Year 2 less than Year 1) typically triggers haircut to lower of average or Year 1 amount under B3-3.1-01. Continuity narrative addressing trend cause (market shift, life event, brokerage change, post-NAR adaptation) may support nuanced underwriter treatment. Bank Statement Non-QM alternative may offer better qualifying capacity if recent bank deposits show stronger trend than tax returns.
13
What if I just made broker post-sales-associate?
New brokers may have limited broker-tier income history. Strategy: continue commission income reporting per pre-broker structure (broker-associate is still earning commission), document 24 months of pre-broker sales associate commission + post-broker commission as continuous practice (FL Statutes Ch 475 Part I license tier is regulatory change but practice continuity maintained). Underwriter typically accepts pre-broker + post-broker commission as continuous if same Florida real estate practice.
14
How does post-NAR-settlement compensation negotiation work?
Post-settlement compensation models include: traditional commission pool (seller offers compensation to buyer broker outside MLS), hourly buyer representation (per-hour engagement fee), flat-fee buyer agency (per-transaction engagement fee), and hybrid models. Brokerages developing standardized buyer agency forms + compensation transparency procedures. Continuing evolution across Florida broker community.
15
How does Form 1084 work at brokerage entity level?
Form 1084 at brokerage entity level adds back: depreciation (office equipment + technology), amortization, business use of brokerage office space, entity-level non-cash expenses. Owner’s share computed at ownership % to derive qualifying cash flow per owner. Layered with W-2 + commission overrides + own production for multi-source synthesis.
16
What credit score do I need as a broker?
Conventional Conforming typically 620-640 minimum; better rates at 740+. Conventional Jumbo typically 700+ with stronger reserves. Bank Statement Non-QM typically 660-680 minimum; competitive pricing at 720+. P&L Statement Non-QM typically 660-680. DSCR Non-QM investor typically 660-680. Higher scores expand program options + improve pricing.
17
How much down payment do I need?
Conventional Conforming: 5% (PMI through 80% LTV), 20% (no PMI). Conventional Jumbo: typically 10-20% depending on loan amount + borrower profile. Bank Statement / P&L Non-QM: typically 10-20%. Asset-Depletion Non-QM: typically 10-20%. DSCR Non-QM investor: typically 20-25%. Construction-to-Perm: typically 20% lot + construction value.
18
How does DSCR Non-QM scale my investment property portfolio?
DSCR (Debt Service Coverage Ratio) Non-QM qualifies on property rental income alone: rental income / PITI = DSCR ratio. Standard 1.0-1.25+ required. No personal income documentation. LLC ownership accommodated. Common for brokers building investment portfolio alongside primary residence + brokerage. Portfolio scaling beyond personal qualifying capacity possible.
19
Can I cash-out refinance to fund brokerage acquisition?
Yes — cash-out refinance extracts equity from existing property for use including brokerage acquisition + brokerage expansion + buying out partner + office space acquisition. Conventional cash-out + Non-QM cash-out paths available. Common broker capital strategy alongside SBA financing + seller financing for brokerage transactions.
20
How does Construction-to-Perm work for brokers building own home?
Single-close Construction-to-Perm financing covers construction phase + permanent mortgage in one closing. Custom home built by separately FL CGC + CRC + CBC licensed builder. Broker role typically as listing agent for own future custom home or principal residence purchaser. Florida construction lien (Ch 713) coordination + construction draws + completion certification + permanent loan conversion all coordinated.
21
How long does broker mortgage qualifying typically take?
Standard timeline 30-45 days from application to closing. Multi-source brokerage documentation may extend timeline given brokerage entity returns + agreement excerpts + entity-level Form 1084 analysis complexity. Bank Statement Non-QM typically 30-38 days. DSCR Non-QM investment property typically 30-40 days. Pre-qualification analysis ahead of contract significantly compresses post-contract timeline.
22
What if I sold my brokerage and have post-sale wealth?
Asset-Depletion Non-QM converts liquid portfolio balance to implied monthly qualifying income (balance ÷ 360 months). Useful for post-sale brokers with substantial liquid wealth but current-year income reduced. Combined with continuing broker activity if applicable. Stairway routinely structures Asset-Depletion qualifying for senior brokers post-brokerage-sale or transitioning toward retirement.
23
Can my spouse’s W-2 income help me qualify?
Yes — spousal W-2 income synthesized with broker commission income produces multi-source qualifying. Both incomes counted toward DTI calculation if both spouses are borrowers. Common for broker borrower with spouse holding corporate W-2 role. Multi-source synthesis combining broker commission + spouse W-2 expands qualifying capacity substantially.
24
How does Florida wealth migration affect broker practice + qualifying?
Florida HNW + UHNW migration sustains substantial residential transaction demand across all price tiers. Florida brokers experience maintained or growing transaction volume despite NAR-settlement compensation reform. Strong forward-looking practice outlook supports continuity narrative. Florida Realtors data shows continued robust market activity 2025-2026.
25
What about Florida MLS membership requirements?
Florida brokers join MLS systems based on practice geography: Stellar MLS (Central + South Florida largest), MIAMI Association of REALTORS MLS (Miami-Dade focus), BeachesMLS (Palm Beach + Broward + Treasure Coast). Multi-MLS membership expands practice geography. MLS membership documents support continuity narrative + practice geography demonstration. Active MLS membership confirms practice activity.
13 · Companion guides & calculators

More on real estate broker mortgage qualifying and loan programs.

15 · What broker + Stairway coordination looks like

Real-world broker multi-source mortgage coordination.

A Miami-Dade brokerage owner came to Stairway after the prior generalist lender couldn’t handle post-NAR-settlement commission income continuity narrative + multi-source brokerage equity synthesis. Client: $3.25M Coral Gables primary residence, brokerage owner operating S-corp brokerage with 24 supervised sales associates focused on Miami-Dade luxury residential. Income structure: $225K W-2 from brokerage + $385K K-1 distribution from brokerage equity (15-year established practice) + $185K override commission on associate transactions + $95K own production commission 2-year average + $48K property management commission stream. Multi-source coordination: commission income synthesized under B3-3.1-01 with 24-month averaging documenting stable / growing trend through post-NAR-settlement period (transaction volume continuing through 2024-2025 with adaptation to buyer agency workflow + open compensation negotiation). K-1 brokerage equity income synthesized under B3-3.4-02 with brokerage shareholder agreement excerpt + 2-year S-corp returns + ownership %. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level adding back $58K depreciation + business use of brokerage office + entity non-cash expenses. Post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative documenting brokerage’s buyer agency workflow + compensation transparency procedures + forward-looking compensation model. FREC broker license + Florida Realtors + NAR + MIAMI Association of REALTORS MLS membership all verified. Property management commission documented through 142-unit managed portfolio + management agreements representative sample. Stairway underwrote the multi-source synthesis with all five income components flowing into combined qualifying calculation. $3.25M Conventional Jumbo close in 44 days. The pattern: broker brings post-NAR-settlement narrative complexity + multi-source brokerage equity income, Stairway brings B3-3.1-01 commission expertise + B3-3.4-02 K-1 documentation + entity-level Form 1084 + post-settlement continuity narrative craft to produce clean qualifying.

House keys at broker + Stairway closing
44-day multi-source brokerage close · Coral Gables, FL
Talk to a Florida mortgage specialist about your real estate broker qualifying

Whether you’re a broker-associate, solo principal broker, brokerage owner, property management broker, or multi-state broker — your income structure needs specialty underwriting that handles commission averaging, brokerage K-1 documentation, and post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative properly.

For Florida real estate brokers across all license tiers and business structures: multi-source income synthesis under B3-3.1-01 commission + B3-3.4-02 brokerage equity K-1 frameworks, Form 1084 cash-flow analysis at brokerage entity level with appropriate add-backs, post-NAR-settlement continuity narrative documenting compensation environment adaptation, property management recurring revenue qualifying, Bank Statement Non-QM as alternative for high-add-back solo brokers, P&L Statement Non-QM for established brokerage owners, Asset-Depletion Non-QM for HNW post-sale brokers, DSCR Non-QM for investment property portfolio scaling beyond personal qualifying capacity, Construction-to-Perm for brokers building own custom home, and Cash-Out Refinance for brokerage expansion + acquisition + partner buyout. Stairway coordinates with your CPA + attorney + financial advisor partners.

Jim Blackburn NMLS #1072866 · Stairway Mortgage

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