Conventional mortgages from the likes of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac work for most mortgage shoppers. While these financial instruments offer the lowest interest rates, they also come with the toughest lending standards.
Not everybody fits into the conventional mortgage box. For those borrowers, one possible solution is the so-called exotic mortgage.
Industry vernacular distinguishes the conventional mortgage as qualified mortgage, or QM. The exotic mortgage is the non-QM or non-qualified mortgages.
Today’s exotic mortgage avenue is defined by borrowers with limited income documentation, irregular income streams or alternative forms of income documentation.
Exotic mortgages should not be confused with the subprime paper mortgages that were a big part of the 2008 mortgage meltdown.
With weak credit standards and features like prepayment penalties, interest-only payments, balloon payments and negative amortization, the subprime mortgage space was not concerned about the borrowers’ ability to repay the mortgage. Exotic mortgages, for the most part, have to demonstrate the borrowers’ ability to repay, no matter how creatively.
“The good news is that non-QM borrowing has changed a lot in 20 years,” said Archana Pradhan, a principal economist at Cotality. “The typical non-QM borrower today has non-standard documentation because they earn income from gig work and side hustles. Risky lending has almost disappeared from the scene.”
Before I get into some comparisons between conventional and exotic mortgages, I want to be clear about the application process. Borrowers should always first apply for a conventional mortgage.
For example, if you don’t have enough income, perhaps there is a co-signer like the “bank of mom and dad” that can boost your income standings. Only if you are turned down should you go the exotic route.
Banks and credit unions typically do not offer exotic mortgages. So, you’ll have to apply with a mortgage broker. If you go to a mortgage broker, you won’t have to re-apply if you were turned down for a conventional mortgage. If you go to a mortgage banker, you may or may not have to reapply with a mortgage broker as some mortgage bankers, but not all, offer exotics.
Let’s dig into the nuts-and-bolts differences between conventional and exotic offerings.
—The likes of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac in the conventional box generally want at least two years of proof of self-employment history via tax returns. The exotic box offers a minimum one year of self-employment without tax returns. Typically, a business license or a CPA attestation letter will suffice as proof of self-employment.
—For self-employed borrowers, conventional financing will typically average the net income (after business expenses) of one’s personal tax returns for the most recent two years. Exotic allows the self-employed borrower to add up the most recent 12 or 24 months of business bank statement deposits, less an overhead expense, divided by 12 or 24 months to come up with a monthly income.
—Conventional lending quantifies excess liquid assets named asset depletion (besides down payment and closing costs) as income by taking the dollar amount and dividing by 360 months. For example, $500,000 divided by 360 equals $1,389 of additional monthly income. Exotic offers are as little as a 36-month divide ($500,000 divided by 36 equals $13,889 of additional monthly income).
—Conventional requires private mortgage insurance when the down payment is less than 20% of the sales price. Exotics never require PMI, even with as little as 10% down.
—Conventional loans do not offer interest-only or 40-year terms. Exotic offers both.
—Conventional lenders do not accept profit and loss statements as income without the accompanying tax returns. Exotic lenders do accept profit and loss statements as long as they are counter-signed by a tax preparer.
—Conventional loans cannot be used to finance Fannie Mae non-warrantable condo associations. Exotic mortgages can finance non-warrantable condo associations.
—Conventional mortgages have a complicated formula for qualifying rental property income as part of the borrower’s broader income. Exotic mortgages will isolate that investment property on its own, without going into the borrower’s other income and debts. If the local rents for the subject property are at least $1 more than the total house payment, then the property income qualifies. In some cases, the income can be less than the total house payment and still qualify.
Exotic interest rates can run anywhere from one-quarter percent higher in rate to a couple of points higher. Pricing largely depends on down payment, credit score and what type of exotic mortgage it is.
The exotic mortgage market is growing with 9% of all mortgages (by dollar volume) in 2025 in that category, according to Cotality. That’s up 1.7% compared with 2024.
Be careful when taking on an exotic mortgage. Make sure you can afford the monthly payments even though the qualifying bar is lower. According to Fitch Ratings, as of March 26, 7.26% of exotic mortgages are 30 days late.
The delinquency rate for conventional mortgages as of Q4 2025 was 2.89%, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
Freddie Mac rate news: The 30-year fixed rate averaged 6.37%, seven basis points higher than last week. The 15-year fixed rate averaged 5.72%, eight basis points higher than last week.
The Mortgage Bankers Association reported a 4.4% mortgage application decrease compared to one week ago.
Bottom line: Assuming a borrower gets an average 30-year fixed rate on a conforming $832,750 loan, last year’s payment was $214 more than this week’s payment of $5,193.
What I see: Locally, well-qualified borrowers can get the following fixed-rate mortgages with one point: A 30-year FHA at 5.49 %, a 15-year conventional at 5.25%, a 30-year conventional at 5.99%, a 15-year conventional high balance at 5.5% ($832,751 to $1,249,125 in LA and OC and $832,751 to $1,104,000 in San Diego), a 30-year high balance conventional at 6.125% and a jumbo 30-year fixed at 5.99%.
Eye catcher loan program of the week: A 30-year mortgage, 30% down, fixed for the first five years at 5.25% at 1 point cost.
Jeff Lazerson, president of Mortgage Grader, can be reached at 949-322-8640 or jlazerson@mortgagegrader.com.