
Getting a co-signer
A strong co-signer can be the difference between “not quite” and “approved.”
But it has to be the right kind of strong. Not emotionally strong. Financially strong. 🏦
Here’s how to explain it clearly to clients.
🏠 What Is a Strong Co-Signer?
A co-signer is someone who agrees to be equally responsible for the mortgage.
If the borrower doesn’t pay, the co-signer is legally responsible.
Lenders treat them as fully on the hook, not a backup plan.
💪 What Makes a Co-Signer Strong?
1️⃣ Strong Credit Score
Ideally:
• 700+ for best impact
• Clean recent payment history
• Low utilization
A co-signer with weak credit won’t help much.
2️⃣ Stable Income
Lenders may use their income to strengthen the application.
Especially helpful if:
• Borrower income is tight for qualifying
• Debt ratios are slightly over limit
3️⃣ Low Debt
If the co-signer is already carrying:
• High mortgage
• Car loans
• High credit card balances
It reduces their usefulness.
Low debt = more qualifying power.
4️⃣ Financial Stability
Long employment history
Strong savings
Clean credit bureau
This reassures the lender.
📊 When a Co-Signer Helps Most
• Borrower has thin credit
• Credit score slightly below approval threshold
• Income just shy of qualifying
• Short employment history
⚠️ What Clients Must Understand
A co-signer:
• Is fully liable for the debt
• Has the mortgage appear on their credit bureau
• May have reduced borrowing power for their own purchases
• Cannot easily remove themselves later
Removing a co-signer usually requires:
• Refinancing
• Requalifying on your own
That’s important to explain upfront.
👨👩👧 Common Strong Co-Signer Examples
• Parent with high income and strong credit
• Sibling with stable employment and low debt
• Long-term partner not on title but financially solid
Getting a co-signer is not a forever thing. Once you rebuild your credit you can refinance your home and remove the co-signer.
