Physician Mortgage Loans Guide
How Banks Really Underwrite Doctors, Why These Loans Exist, and What to Watch Out For

TLDR
A true bank physician mortgage is not just “a mortgage with a doctor label on it.” It is a portfolio-style loan many banks use to win a long-term relationship with a high-income borrower early in the borrower’s career. That is why these programs often allow no to low down payments, no PMI, future-dated employment contracts, and more flexible treatment of student loans than standard loans. But the details vary a lot by bank, by designation, and by income structure. The biggest mistakes physicians make are assuming all doctor loans are the same, assuming a broker’s “physician mortgage” is the same as a bank’s in-house program, and not understanding how banks view contracts, guarantees, RVUs, and timing. Program details vary significantly across lenders, with real differences in eligibility, down-payment tiers, student-loan treatment, and future-income rules -- reading the fine print matters.
Most physicians hear about physician mortgages at the surface level.
Low down payment. No PMI. Buy before you start. Better fit for doctors.
That is all true, but it barely scratches the surface.
If you really want to understand physician mortgages, you have to understand how banks think. These loans are not charity. They are not just a niche marketing gimmick. They are a deliberate banking product aimed at borrowers banks expect to become strong long-term clients. That design choice affects everything: the underwriting, the pricing, the contract rules, the student-loan treatment, and the difference between a real bank physician mortgage and a broker trying to sell something under that label.
This is the part most articles skip.




Why physician mortgages are best when it's a portfolio loan
A lot of true physician mortgages are portfolio loans, meaning the bank keeps them on its own balance sheet rather than trying to force them into the standard agency box or sell them off on a secondary market.
That matters because conventional conforming guidelines are built to be broadly standardized and saleable into the secondary market. Physician mortgages often are not. They may allow:
lower down payments without PMI
future-dated employment contracts
more favorable treatment of deferred student loans
broader DTI flexibility
special designation-based eligibility
Those are exactly the kinds of features that often do not fit neatly into ordinary agency underwriting. Atlantic Union’s official doctor program, for example, still advertises up to 100% financing, no mortgage insurance, exclusion of deferred student loans in some cases, and qualification using future income within 90 days of closing. Fulton similarly advertises 100% financing up to $1.5 million, no PMI, and exclusion of deferred student-loan payments of 12 months or longer from credit approval.
That is one of the clearest signs you are dealing with a real physician product rather than just a dressed-up conventional loan: the bank is willing to hold a product built around physician-specific exceptions.
The pain points physicians are trying to avoid
Physician mortgages are popular because they directly address the pain points most doctors run into when they try to use a standard mortgage.
That matters because conventional conforming guidelines are built to be broadly standardized and saleable into the secondary market. Physician mortgages often are not. They may allow:
lower down payments without PMI
future-dated employment contracts
more favorable treatment of deferred student loans
broader DTI flexibility
special designation-based eligibility
Those are exactly the kinds of features that often do not fit neatly into ordinary agency underwriting. Atlantic Union’s official doctor program, for example, still advertises up to 100% financing, no mortgage insurance, exclusion of deferred student loans in some cases, and qualification using future income within 90 days of closing. Fulton similarly advertises 100% financing up to $1.5 million, no PMI, and exclusion of deferred student-loan payments of 12 months or longer from credit approval.
That is one of the clearest signs you are dealing with a real physician product rather than just a dressed-up conventional loan: the bank is willing to hold a product built around physician-specific exceptions.
Read More Here: Bank Physician Mortgage vs. Broker Physician Mortgage: What Doctors Need to Know


How banks really look at employment contracts
Employment contracts are one of the most misunderstood parts of physician-mortgage underwriting.
Many doctors hear “you can buy with a contract” and stop there. But the real answer is more nuanced.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.
Guarantees vs. RVUs: where deals start to separate
A contract structured heavily around variable comp might look lucrative on paper but create real friction at underwriting. Understanding the difference can save you time and frustration.
A contract that says “expected earnings are $500,000” is not the same as a contract that says “base salary guaranteed at $500,000 for two years.” Banks care about what is guaranteed, not what is merely projected.
A few practical examples:
Stronger file
$325,000 base salary
12- or 24-month guarantee
start date within the lender’s contract window
no major contingencies
Weaker file
“Compensation based on RVUs”
draw subject to production reconciliation
projected earnings shown in recruiting materials, not in the employment agreement
bonus-heavy structure with little guaranteed floor
In-between file
Guaranteed base for a period, then RVU conversion later – can often work if the guaranteed period is long enough (12 months or more) and the rest of the file is clean.
This is why some new physician contracts work smoothly and others do not. It is not just about the number. It is about how bankable the number is.

How designations change eligibility
Not all physician programs cover the same professionals. This is one of the most overlooked variables when shopping for a physician mortgage.
TD’s current Medical Professional Mortgage page lists practicing physicians (MD, DO, DPM), dentists (DDS, DMD), oral surgeons, and licensed medical or dental residents and fellows. Alliant’s physician-loan eligibility is broader in current public materials, commonly including MD, DO, DDS, DMD, DPM, DVM, residents, and fellows. Wintrust’s current physician-mortgage marketing is broader still, listing MD, DO, DPM, DDS, DMD, plus certain other doctorate-level professionals such as pharmacists, chiropractors, veterinarians, along with fellows and physicians exiting residency. Huntington’s public doctor-loan marketing remains narrower, focused on MD, DO, DDS, DMD, and DVM. Different banks clearly draw the eligibility line in different places, which is one more reason physicians should never assume every “physician mortgage” means the same thing.
In practice, the designation questions usually break down like this:
Commonly included
MD
DO
DDS
DMD
residents
fellows
Sometimes included, sometimes not
DPM
oral surgeons
DVM
CRNA
DC
PA/NP in some specialty programs
pharmacists or optometrists in select programs
Why this varies
Because these are portfolio products. Banks choose the risk box they want. Some banks will expand eligibility because they like the borrower profile. Others will keep it tight around the most conventional physician categories.
That is why a doctor should never assume “physician mortgage” means universal eligibility. The label is less important than the actual underwriting guide.
Who Qualifies for a Physician Mortgage? Eligible Degrees and Designations Explained

Student loans: one of the biggest real differentiators
Student-loan treatment is one of the clearest ways to separate a true physician mortgage from a generic offering.
Atlantic Union says student loans deferred at least one year may be excluded from DTI qualifications. Fulton says deferred student-loan payments of 12 months or longer are not included in the credit approval process. Those are meaningful physician-friendly accommodations.
This matters because standard mortgage underwriting can hit a physician one of two ways:
use the actual student-loan payment
or, if no payment is showing, impute a payment based on the balance
That second path is where conventional underwriting can become especially painful for doctors. A physician mortgage is often trying to solve exactly that mismatch.
But this is not universal. Some physician programs are far more flexible than others. If a lender is vague on student-loan treatment, that is a red flag worth digging into.
Why Down Payment and PMI Matter So Much
A core selling point of physician mortgages is high-LTV financing without PMI. This is not a minor perk. It can completely change the cash needed to close and the monthly payment structure. Public bank pages and current program references continue to show meaningful differences by lender.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.
The table above illustrates how meaningfully programs differ. A physician buying a $1.2M home faces very different down-payment requirements depending on which lender they choose – and that difference can translate to six figures in cash at closing.
Why does that matter?
Because the doctor is usually trying to avoid one of two bad outcomes:
draining reserves to hit a conventional down-payment threshold
or paying PMI on top of an already large monthly payment
Physician mortgages exist because some banks are willing to say: we would rather keep this borrower’s relationship and waive the PMI than lose the deal to a standard framework.

Why rates on physician mortgages can look different
Physician mortgages are priced differently than conventional conforming loans – but 'differently' does not mean 'higher.' A lender who tells you the rate is higher than a conventional loan deserves a harder look; in many cases, that is a sign the product is not a true physician program.
The reason rates can vary comes down to several factors:
portfolio loan economics
bank cost of funds / deposit costs
risk appetite
ARM versus fixed structure
how much relationship value the bank expects
loan size and LTV tier
A bank that holds the loan is pricing not just to a rate sheet but to its own balance-sheet goals and relationship strategy. That is one reason physician ARM products often price more aggressively than fixed options inside these programs.
The right comparison is always total structure, not just the note rate:
no PMI
lower cash needed to close
better student-loan treatment
easier future-income qualifying
preserved liquidity
Sometimes that combination is clearly worth it. Sometimes it is not. But you have to compare the whole structure, not just the note rate.
More about how banks look at Residents and Fellows can be found here.
Why banks like these borrowers long term
Employment contracts are one of the most misunderstood parts of physician-mortgage underwriting.
Many doctors hear “you can buy with a contract” and stop there. But the real answer is more nuanced.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.

Bank physician mortgage vs. broker “physician mortgage”
Employment contracts are one of the most misunderstood parts of physician-mortgage underwriting.
Many doctors hear “you can buy with a contract” and stop there. But the real answer is more nuanced.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.
If you want to dive deeper into how banks differ from mortgage brokers you can read more here.
How to tell if a lender actually knows physician mortgages
Employment contracts are one of the most misunderstood parts of physician-mortgage underwriting.
Many doctors hear “you can buy with a contract” and stop there. But the real answer is more nuanced.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.
Learn more about researching your physician mortgage lender here


A simple visual: how banks think about physician borrowers
Employment contracts are one of the most misunderstood parts of physician-mortgage underwriting.
Many doctors hear “you can buy with a contract” and stop there. But the real answer is more nuanced.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.
Learn About How Banks Look at You and How Much House You Can Afford
Why liquidity matters more than most doctors think
Employment contracts are one of the most misunderstood parts of physician-mortgage underwriting.
Many doctors hear “you can buy with a contract” and stop there. But the real answer is more nuanced.
Banks are generally trying to answer a handful of questions:
Is the income clearly defined?
Is the start date close enough to closing?
Are there contingencies that make the income uncertain?
Is the compensation stable enough to use as qualifying income?
Is the borrower truly employed, or is the deal too dependent on future performance metrics?
Atlantic Union’s public page is a good example of how banks set outer guardrails: it explicitly says borrowers may qualify using future income with an employment contract and a start date within 90 days of closing. TD’s public physician page also frames the product around doctors early in career, including residents and fellows less than 10 years out of training.

Final takeaway
The best way to think about a physician mortgage is this:
It is a relationship-banking product built for a borrower profile banks want early.
That is why these loans can look so attractive. But it is also why doctors should slow down and understand the details. The term “physician mortgage” covers a wide range of real products, credit policies, and borrower experiences. The differences in contracts, guarantees, RVUs, designation eligibility, student-loan treatment, and who is actually underwriting the deal can change the whole outcome.
The doctors who use these loans best are usually the ones who understand two things at once: why the bank wants them, and how to use the product without being fooled by a generic version of it.
Jessica · Dr. Home Finance