Reverse Mortgage Income Requirements in 2025
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Michael G. Branson, CEO of All Reverse Mortgage, Inc., and moderator of ARLO™, has 45 years of experience in the mortgage banking industry. He has devoted the past 20 years to reverse mortgages exclusively. (License: NMLS# 14040) |
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All Reverse Mortgage's editing process includes rigorous fact-checking led by industry experts to ensure all content is accurate and current. This article has been reviewed, edited, and fact-checked by Cliff Auerswald, President and co-creator of ARLO™. (License: NMLS# 14041) |
Understanding Reverse Mortgage Income Requirements
Welcome to our 2025 guide on reverse mortgage income requirements. This article explains the financial assessment underwriting guidelines, specifically the minimum residual income requirements established by HUD.
These requirements play a crucial role in the lender’s application process, ensuring that you, as a borrower, can comfortably manage ongoing property-related expenses, such as property taxes, homeowners insurance, and maintenance costs, after securing a reverse mortgage.
We will provide clear, easy-to-follow tables that detail the minimum residual income needed based on your family size and the region of the United States where you reside. Additionally, we will clarify what types of income lenders consider acceptable.

2025 Residual Income Requirements (HUD Table):
| Family Size | Northeast | Midwest | South | West |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | $540 | $529 | $529 | $589 |
| 2 | $906 | $886 | $886 | $998 |
| 3 | $946 | $927 | $927 | $1,031 |
| 4 or more | $1,066 | $1,041 | $1,041 | $1,160 |
Eligible Income Sources for Reverse Mortgage
| Income Source | Description | Required Documentation |
|---|---|---|
| Social Security Income | Retirement income used by most reverse mortgage borrowers; counted as soon as benefits begin. | SSA award letter; Bank statement showing deposit |
| Pension or Retirement Income | Long-term or lifetime pension income regularly received. | Pension or benefit award letter; Bank statements showing deposits |
| Asset Dissipation: Retirement Accounts (401k, IRA, Brokerage) | Lender converts verified retirement assets into monthly qualifying income using HUD’s formula. | Most recent account statements (2–3 months); Asset verification |
| Asset Dissipation: Reverse Mortgage Line of Credit | A portion of the available HECM line of credit may be treated as qualifying income. | Loan estimate showing available credit line; Lender-calculated dissipation schedule |
| Existing Annuity Income | Income from an annuity already in force and not subject to modification. | Annuity contract; Proof of ongoing payments |
| Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) Rental | Rental income from a separate unit on the property supported by market rent analysis. | Market rent analysis; Rental agreements; Evidence of deposits |
| Boarder Income (2025 HUD Update) | Income from renting a room inside the home; must document 12 months of history and can count toward up to 30% of qualifying income. | 12 months of deposit history; Rental agreement; Evidence boarder resides in the home |
| Employment Income | Traditional W-2 income; typically requires a 2-year history and likelihood of continuation. | W-2s (past 2 years); Recent pay stubs; Employer verification |
| Part-Time Employment | Less than 40 hours/week; generally requires a 2-year history and stable continuation. | W-2s (past 2 years); Recent pay stubs; Employer confirmation |
| Self-Employment Income | Must show consistent income for 2+ years with full documentation. | Two years tax returns; Year-to-date P&L; Business license if applicable |
| Overtime & Bonus | Additional pay above base wages; must be consistent for at least 2 years. | Pay stubs showing overtime/bonus history; Employer confirmation |
| Seasonal Employment | Recurring seasonal work held for at least 2 years with expected continuation next season. | W-2s or seasonal pay stubs; Employer confirmation of expected return |
Social Security income — This is the most common and most reliable income source for reverse mortgage borrowers. HUD treats Social Security as permanent income, and it can be used immediately once your benefit begins. There is no waiting period or two-year history requirement.
Documentation — Your Social Security award letter and a bank statement showing the deposit.
Pension or retirement income — Monthly pension benefits or retirement-system disbursements are considered dependable long-term income. Many borrowers qualify using Social Security plus a small pension.
Documentation — Your pension or benefit award letter and bank statements showing recent pension deposits.
Asset dissipation: retirement accounts (401k, IRA, brokerage) — If you have retirement savings but limited monthly income, HUD allows lenders to convert those verified assets into an income stream using a calculation based on your age and asset balance. This is often the key to qualifying when income alone falls short.
Documentation — The most recent statements (typically 2–3 months) from your 401k, IRA, or brokerage accounts, along with any required asset-verification forms.
Asset dissipation: reverse mortgage line of credit funds — If you’re applying for a HECM, a portion of the available line of credit itself can also be treated as income under HUD’s dissipation formula. This can close the gap for borrowers with low fixed income.
Documentation — Your loan estimate showing the projected line-of-credit amount and a lender-generated dissipation schedule.
Annuity income (existing only) — Income from an established, non-modifiable annuity can be counted. HUD does not allow borrowers to create a new annuity solely for qualification.
Documentation — The annuity contract and proof of ongoing payments.
Employment income — This is the most traditional type of income. It’s the income you earn through working for an employer.
Documentation — Your lender will request your IRS Form W-2 (for the past 2 years), pay stubs covering at least the most recent 30 days, and an additional employment verification, such as an HR statement. Alternative documentation may apply in specific cases.
Non-borrowing spouse or household member income — If someone lives in the home but will not be on the loan, their income cannot be used for qualification. However, it can help present a fuller financial picture to the lender.
Documentation — Their Social Security number and the same income documents listed for employment income, if applicable.
Part-time employment income — Work performed less than 40 hours per week. To count, the job generally needs a two-year history and a likelihood of continuing. If pay varies, lenders average the income over time.
Documentation — W-2s for the past two years, recent pay stubs, and employer confirmation.
Overtime and bonus income — Income above your base pay. To qualify, overtime or bonuses must have been received consistently for at least two years and are likely to continue.
Documentation — Pay stubs showing overtime or bonus history and employer confirmation.
Seasonal employment income — Income earned in a recurring seasonal job. HUD requires at least a two-year history and a reasonable expectation you’ll return next season.
Documentation — W-2s or seasonal pay stubs, plus employer confirmation of continued employment.
Accessory Dwelling Unit (ADU) rental income
FHA now allows lenders to use rental income from a single ADU on the property to help you qualify, including for HECM. The lender will look at what a typical tenant would pay and will usually count up to 75% of the lower of the market rent or your lease amount as effective income, subject to internal caps on how much of your qualifying income can come from rent.
Documentation — Market rent analysis forms, rental agreements (if any), and evidence of rental deposits.
Boarder income (2025 HUD update)
Income from a person renting a room inside your home (not a separate ADU). HUD now allows this to count as effective income if you have at least a 12-month history of receiving the rent, you are currently receiving it, and the income does not make up more than about 30% of your total qualifying income.
Documentation — Proof of 12 months rental history; evidence of rent received for at least 9 of the past 12 months (bank statements, tax returns, canceled checks, or deposit slips); confirmation that the boarder’s address matches yours; and a signed rental agreement.
Additional Income Types
There are other types of income and benefits that the lender will consider, which are worth noting.
These include things like:
- Employer housing subsidy
- Income from employment from a family-owned business
- Self-employment income
- Commission income
- Rental income
- Disability benefits
- Annuity income
- VA benefits
- Disability
- Workman’s compensation
- Public assistance
- Interest, dividend, and trust income
Reverse Mortgage Income Requirements Compared to Other Loans
| Loan Type | Income Requirements | Credit Review | Debt Obligations | Employment Verification |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| HECM Reverse Mortgage | Enough income or assets to cover taxes insurance and upkeep; residual income or asset dissipation allowed | No minimum score; credit history reviewed | No formal DTI; obligations evaluated and set-aside possible | No formal employment required if Social Security income/Pension meets residual income requirements |
| Traditional Mortgage | Steady documented income (W-2s pay stubs tax returns) | Credit score strongly affects approval and rate | Must meet lender DTI limits (often 43–50%) | Yes |
| HELOC / Home Equity Loan | Verifiable income required | Typically mid-600s or higher for approval | DTI reviewed; equity requirements apply | Yes |
| Personal Loan | Income must show ability to repay | Credit score heavily influences approval and terms | DTI reviewed | Yes (unless asset-based) |
Wondering If Your Income Qualifies? Get a free quote with expert help from All Reverse Mortgage—America’s #1 with a 4.99/5-star rating! Call (800) 565-1722 or click here for your free quote —simple, trusted, 100% secure!
Income FAQs
What are the residual income requirements for a reverse mortgage?
Is a debt-to-income ratio (DTI) required for a reverse mortgage?
Can assets count as a source of income?
Why do lenders care about income if there are no monthly payments?
Is there a maximum income that would keep you from qualifying for a reverse mortgage?

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Michael G. Branson
Cliff Auerswald

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