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Flight Attendant Home Loans

Flight attendant mortgage, built around your real pay.

A generalist lender sees a first-year reserve W-2 of $28,000 and stops reading. They miss the per diem, the override pay, the trip-pickup premium, the holiday differentials, and the contract clause that doubles your hourly between year one and year three. We read your CBA, qualify your flight attendant home loan on what you actually earn, and close it in the program — conventional, FHA, VA, jumbo, or bank statement — that gets you the right house, not the smallest one.

Jim Blackburn · NMLS #1072866 · Specialist in aviation-industry & variable-income mortgages
Real flight attendant in blue uniform saluting, professional portrait
31%
Pay raise United FAs ratified in May 2026 — the biggest income reset in years
3
Income methods we use to qualify flight attendant base + premium + per diem pay
6
Loan programs we pair to FA pay structures by seniority and base
48
States where we close flight attendant home loans
Two flight attendants in blue uniforms saluting together

Stairway Mortgage qualifies flight attendants on the income they actually earn — not the W-2 number that scares off generalist lenders. A first-year reserve, a senior line-holder, a wide-body purser, a dual-airline household, and a military-spouse FA each get a loan built on the income method that fits their pay structure: hourly base + per diem + override, twelve-month average for established FAs, or the future-rate method for confirmed promotions, base swaps, and the post-ratification raises now flowing through United, American, and Southwest contracts.

Smiling flight attendant in blue uniform indoors
Real pay. Real career arc. Real underwriting.
Key Facts & Highlights

Key facts every flight attendant should know about a flight attendant mortgage.

Each point below is sourced from federal, regulatory, or industry authorities. Verify any of them directly through the linked references.

01 · Who this page is for

We work with flight attendants at every seniority level.

New hire on reserve. Year-eight line-holder. Senior international purser. Military spouse. Career-changer. Each gets qualified differently.

Smiling flight attendant in blue uniform, studio portrait
First-year reserve FA
Confident flight attendant in blue uniform with white gloves
Senior line-holder
Flight attendant in blue uniform saluting against white background
International purser
Career stage Typical pay (2026) Where the qualifying complexity is
First-year reserve FA $28K – $42K + per diem Low base year-one, heavy reliance on per diem and trip pickups, sign-on bonus timing
Years 2–4, junior line-holder $45K – $70K + per diem Reserve-to-line transition, schedule bid changes, override pay starts mattering
Years 5–10, senior line-holder $70K – $110K + per diem Stable income, full per diem documented, premium pay (Sunday/holiday/galley) adds up
International purser / wide-body $95K – $180K + premiums Layover per diem (foreign currency), language premium, lead/purser override
Dual-FA household Combined $110K – $200K+ Both incomes qualify; bidding patterns affect documentation timing
Military-spouse flight attendant FA pay + military spouse benefits VA loan eligibility through spouse, BAH counts as additional income
Furloughed / on leave Variable — UI, recall protection, leave pay Different qualifying strategy; conservative on recall income
Career-changer (second career) $40K – $90K + outside income Pension from prior career often qualifies as supplemental, treated as stable income
02 · The methods

Three flight attendant mortgage income methods, picked to fit your pay structure.

We don't pick a method first and hope the math works. We read your contract, look at the pay stubs you have, and choose the path that gets the highest defensible qualifying income on the file.

01

Minimum guarantee × current rate

Best for reserves and new hires

Lenders take the contractual minimum monthly guaranteed credit hours (usually 75–85 for most US FA contracts) and multiply by your current hourly rate. This is the most conservative method — and the one that gets a first-year reserve to closing when no other path will. Documented via your offer letter or pay scale plus a recent pay stub.

Worked example · First-year reserve, United (post May 2026 contract)
Minimum guarantee75 hrs/mo
Year-1 hourly (post-ratification)$37.10
Monthly qualifying base$2,782
Annualized$33,390
02

12-to-24-month average

Best for established line-holders

If you consistently fly above guarantee, pick up extra trips, or earn holiday, Sunday, and galley premiums, we average your total year-to-date plus W-2 earnings. Fannie Mae's March 2026 update simplified this — for variable hourly base income, the most recent W-2 plus one pay stub is often enough. Override pay and premiums get added back in as qualifying base under Fannie B3-3.1-03.

03

Future-rate method

Best for upcoming raises & promotions

About to hit a longevity step? Awarded an international base? Just ratified a contract with retro pay and a new rate? Specialized lenders can qualify you on the upcoming higher rate provided the raise kicks in before your first mortgage payment. This is critical right now — United's 31% increase, American's 20.5% jump, and Southwest's 22.3% raise all create future-rate qualifying opportunities.

Worked example · United FA, 6 weeks before rate step-up
Current annualized base$64,800
Confirmed post-step rate$84,950
First mortgage paymentDay 35 post-step
Qualifying income used$84,950
03 · The per-diem catch

Per diem is real money. It just isn't qualifying income — unless we use a portfolio loan.

Per diem covers meals and incidentals from the moment you check in until you debrief, and it's non-taxable reimbursement under IRS Publication 463's special rule for transportation workers ($80/day CONUS, $86/day OCONUS in 2025). Because it isn't taxable, Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA, and VA all exclude it from qualifying income — full stop. Freddie Mac's Stable Monthly Income FAQ entry FA1753 spells this out specifically for per diem and stipends.

For a senior international FA where per diem can hit $15K–$25K a year, this matters. That's $1,250–$2,100/month of real cash flow the GSE rules pretend doesn't exist. Our move: a portfolio bank-statement loan that underwrites against 12–24 months of deposits — capturing per diem plus base plus premiums. Different documentation, different program, different rate sheet — and a meaningfully larger approval.

04 · Loan programs

Six flight attendant mortgage programs we use for home loans.

Each program has a different income, asset, and credit profile. We pick the one that gets you the right house at the right monthly payment — not whichever program your lender is currently incentivized to push.

Program Down payment Best for which FA
Conventional (Fannie / Freddie) From 3% down (HomeReady / Home Possible) Credit 620+, documentable base + override income, target home under 2026 conforming limit of $832,750 baseline.
FHA From 3.5% down Newer FAs with lower credit or higher DTI; Handbook 4000.1 governs the variable-income calc.
VA 0% down, no PMI Military-spouse FAs (entitlement through service member) or veteran FAs themselves.
Jumbo (above conforming) 10–20% typical Senior international pursers, dual-FA households, high-cost-area buyers above $1,249,125.
Bank statement / portfolio 10–25% typical Senior FAs whose per diem and unreported override are a meaningful share of liquid cash flow.
DSCR / investor 15–25% typical Established FAs buying a crashpad-near-base rental or second home as investment.
05 · Industry context

What's actually happening in the flight attendant profession right now.

Underwriting a flight attendant home loan well means understanding the profession around it — labor structure, current contracts, regulatory backdrop, and pay trajectory. These are the seven things shaping the FA mortgage market in 2026.

01

The 2024–2026 contract reset is the largest in a generation

Southwest's TWU Local 556 ratified +22.3% with $364M retro in April 2024. American's APFA ratified +20.5% plus industry-first boarding pay in September 2024. United's AFA-CWA ratified +31% with $741M retro in May 2026. For mortgage qualifying, every one of these contracts pushes recurring base income up — and the retro creates a documentable asset event.

AFA-CWA contract announcement · APFA ratification announcement

02

Boarding pay is a new income line — and it qualifies

For decades US flight attendants weren't paid until the boarding door closed. Delta broke the model in 2022, American codified it in the 2024 contract, and the August 2025 Air Canada strike pushed the rest of North America forward. Boarding pay shows on your stub as base hourly — which means it counts as qualifying base under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-03 and Freddie 5303.1.

CBC News on the Air Canada flight attendant strike

03

Three unions, four major carriers, one non-union holdout

AFA-CWA represents 55,000+ FAs across 20 airlines including United, Alaska, Hawaiian, Spirit, and Frontier. APFA is independent and represents American Airlines FAs. TWU Local 556 represents Southwest. Delta is the only major US carrier whose 28,000 flight attendants aren't unionized — an active AFA-CWA organizing campaign is running there now. Knowing which body governs your contract tells us where to read your CBA for qualifying-pay language.

AFA-CWA Delta organizing campaign · TIME on the Delta union fight

04

FAA Final Rule (2022) means more rest, more career stability

Effective November 2022, the FAA's Final Rule on Flight Attendant Duty Period Limitations & Rest Requirements implemented Section 335(a) of the FAA Reauthorization Act of 2018 — establishing a 10-hour minimum rest period for cabin crew (up from 9, and non-reducible). Underwriters look favorably on regulatory environments that improve job longevity over a 24-month window. This rule shifted the entire industry's staffing math.

Federal Register · FAA Final Rule

05

The shortage is the structural backdrop

BLS projects 19,400 net new flight attendant openings annually through 2033 — roughly 10% growth, faster than the average occupation. Add long-haul expansion plans at United, Delta, and American and the hiring math gets tighter still. For mortgage underwriting, that hiring pressure translates to faster pay progression and stronger employment-stability assumptions on younger FAs' files. Regional carriers feeding the majors are also competing harder for crew, which has pulled up entry-level wages even at the smaller operators. The result is a labor market where new hires hit qualifying base hours faster than they did five years ago, and where re-hire rates after furlough are climbing across nearly every major. Underwriters who track the industry adjust for these realities; underwriters who don't, look at last year's W-2 and miss the trajectory entirely.

BLS Occupational Outlook Handbook

06

FAA Part 121 certification — the "stability tier"

Major-airline flight attendants are FAA-certificated through Part 121 operators under eCFR Title 14 Subparts M, N, and O. Recurrent training, qualification continuity, and the certification itself are what underwriters treat as evidence of employment stability — closer to a pilot's certificate than to a typical hourly-service role. It's also why we're comfortable using the future-rate method on confirmed promotions.

eCFR · 14 CFR Part 121 Subpart O

07

Per diem & the IRS transportation-worker rule

IRS Publication 463 grants flight attendants a special per diem rate ($80/day CONUS, $86/day OCONUS in 2025) and an 80% meals-deduction allowance reserved for transportation workers. That non-taxable status is what creates the qualifying-income puzzle — and what makes bank-statement portfolio loans the right tool for FAs whose per diem is a meaningful chunk of total cash flow.

IRS Publication 463 · Freddie Mac FAQ FA1753 on per diem

06 · Life stage playbook

The flight attendant mortgage, mapped to your career arc.

Career stage drives qualifying method, loan program, and how aggressive we get on premium-pay add-backs. Here's how we approach each.

Stage 1

New-hire reserve (months 0–18)

The play: Method 1 (minimum guarantee × current rate), FHA or 5%-down conventional, manageable target price. We use an unconditional offer letter to bridge the documentation gap and conservative on per-diem-heavy months. Sign-on bonus timed correctly so it lands in qualifying assets, not income.

Stage 2

Line-holder year 2–4

The play: Method 2 (12-month average), Fannie HomeReady or standard conventional. We start counting override pay and premium pay as documented add-backs. If you've just gone off probation, file a fresh W-2 and recent pay stub — that's enough under the 2026 Fannie simplified rule.

Stage 3

Senior line-holder year 5–10

The play: Method 2 with full premium-pay capture, standard conventional or jumbo depending on market. This is where the file looks like a salaried buyer — high stability, full documentation, low DTI. If your purser/lead override is consistent, it's straight-up qualifying base under Fannie B3-3.1-03.

Stage 4

International purser / wide-body

The play: Jumbo or bank-statement portfolio. Layover per diem in foreign currency, language premium, and lead/purser override add up to a markedly different income picture than the W-2 suggests. If per diem is 20%+ of cash flow, the portfolio loan unlocks meaningfully more buying power.

Stage 5

Furlough / recall / leave

The play: Conservative on recall income, full documentation of leave pay, careful asset structuring. For active leaves of absence, we use the contractual return date to position the file. Furlough-with-recall-rights is treated differently from a permanent layoff — we read your CBA's recall clause carefully.

Stage 6

Military-spouse FA

The play: VA loan through spouse's entitlement — zero down, no PMI, BAH counts as qualifying income alongside your FA pay. Frequent PCS moves are accommodated through occupancy and rent-back structuring on the existing home.

07 · How it actually goes

Real flight attendants. Real closings.

Smiling young female flight attendant client headshot
"Six months into reserve at a major. Two other lenders pre-approved me for $185K with the standard W-2 math. Jim read the contract, ran the future-rate method on my year-two step-up that was 90 days out, and got me approved at $312K. Bought the house I actually wanted."
Mid-career male flight attendant client headshot
"Five years on the line at a major, Air Force spouse, three PCS moves in six years. Each one blew up our mortgage shopping. Stairway ran my FA pay through the twelve-month average, layered my wife's BAH, used her VA entitlement for zero down — closed on our Pensacola home in 19 days."
Senior female international flight attendant client headshot
"Wide-body international, lead galley, fifteen years at the airline. Per diem is roughly $22K of my real cash flow that conventional lenders flat-out ignore. Stairway pivoted us into a bank-statement portfolio loan — captured the per diem, hit the jumbo we needed, closed in 28 days."

Testimonial photos are representative stock imagery from Pexels — photo 1, photo 2, photo 3. Stories are composites based on actual flight attendant clients.

Jim Blackburn, Founder of Stairway Mortgage

Jim Blackburn

Founder, Stairway Mortgage · NMLS #1072866
"I've spent years figuring out what makes aviation-industry mortgages different — and how to structure them so the people who actually fly, fix, and direct the system qualify for the homes their careers can afford."

Flight attendant pay is one of the most misunderstood income structures in U.S. consumer lending, and most loan officers either default to a generic conventional play (and miss half your income) or refuse the loan entirely. Neither works for a first-year reserve whose minimum guarantee under-represents her actual cash flow, or a senior international purser whose per diem is a quarter of his real income, or a year-3 line-holder about to walk into a 31% post-ratification raise.

At Stairway, we read your CBA, decode your pay stub, and pick the qualifying method that gets you to the right home — not the home a generalist lender thinks you can afford based on a single W-2 line. Whether you're new on reserve, mid-career on the line, lead on the wide-body, or a military spouse using your partner's VA entitlement, we structure your financing like a flight plan: efficient, compliant, and built for the destination.

Read more about my approach · Or browse case studies

08 · Frequently asked

Flight attendant mortgage questions, answered.

01
Can I get a flight attendant mortgage as a first-year reserve?
Yes. The standard play is Method 1 — your contractual minimum monthly guarantee multiplied by your current hourly rate, documented via your offer letter and a recent pay stub. We avoid relying on per-diem-heavy months you haven't documented yet, and we time any sign-on bonus to land in qualifying assets rather than income. Most first-year reserves close on FHA or 5%-down conventional. Fannie Mae's base income guidelines permit this directly.
02
I just got hired and don't have a W-2 yet — can my airline's offer letter qualify me for a flight attendant mortgage?
Yes, with the right format. We need an unconditional offer letter from your airline's HR — not a conditional one — that states your training completion date, your contract's minimum monthly guarantee, and your hourly rate. Conditional offers (contingent on background check, drug test, training pass) don't qualify on their own under Fannie Mae's offer-letter rules. We help you get the letter language right before submission.
03
How do I explain the 4–8 weeks of unpaid initial training on a flight attendant mortgage application?
This trips up generalist lenders every time. The fix is to (1) document the training period explicitly in your file via the airline's training calendar, (2) show sufficient liquid reserves to cover housing, food, and travel through the unpaid window — usually 2–3 months of mortgage payment plus living expenses, and (3) avoid large cash withdrawals or transfers during training that can't be sourced. Lenders are looking for evidence the gap is structural to the profession, not financial instability.
04
Is my sign-on or training-completion bonus treated as income or assets on a flight attendant mortgage?
Assets, almost always. Sign-on bonuses are typically one-time and conditional, which means they don't meet the "stable, ongoing, and likely to continue" test for qualifying income under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-03. But they count as reserves — and reserves matter for LLPAs, jumbo files, and FAs whose first-year income is still ramping. We help you time when the bonus hits your account relative to application so it lands in the right column.
05
Does my per diem count as qualifying income on a flight attendant mortgage?
Not under conventional, FHA, or VA rules. Per diem is non-taxable reimbursement under IRS Publication 463, which is why GSE guidelines exclude it. Freddie Mac's FAQ FA1753 spells this out. The workaround: a bank-statement portfolio loan that underwrites against 12–24 months of deposits, which captures per diem plus base plus premiums. Different documentation, different rate sheet — meaningfully larger approval for FAs whose per diem is 15%+ of cash flow.
06
How does the May 2026 United contract affect my flight attendant mortgage qualifying income?
Two ways. First, the recurring 31% increase pushes your hourly rate up the day the new pay scale takes effect — and we can use the future-rate method to qualify you on the higher number if the rate kicks in before your first mortgage payment. Second, the $741M retroactive pay creates a documentable asset event that strengthens your reserves and can push you into a more favorable LLPA tier. Read the AFA-CWA ratification announcement for the full terms.
07
Does the new boarding pay count as qualifying base income on a flight attendant mortgage?
Yes — for the carriers that have it. Boarding pay shows on your pay stub as a separate base-hourly line item paid from boarding through pushback, which means it qualifies under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-03 the same way regular flight time does. Delta introduced it in 2022, American codified it in the September 2024 contract, and United added it in May 2026. For FAs at carriers with documented boarding pay, this can add $4K–$8K/year of qualifying income that wasn't there two years ago.
08
I'm a military-spouse flight attendant. Can I use a VA loan as my flight attendant mortgage?
Yes — through your service member spouse's entitlement, you can use a VA loan with zero down and no PMI. Your FA income qualifies normally on the file, plus BAH counts as additional non-taxable income (grossed up). See the VA eligibility rules for military-spouse home buyers for the specific entitlement language. Frequent PCS moves are accommodated through occupancy structuring on the prior home.
09
How is override pay (galley, lead, purser, language) treated on a flight attendant mortgage?
Override pay appears as a separate line item on your FA pay stub and counts as qualifying income with documented history — typically 12–24 months. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-03, recurring premium and override pay get treated like overtime/bonus income — averaged across the documented period and added to base. For senior pursers with stable language or lead premiums, this can add $8K–$20K/year to qualifying income.
10
How do you read my FA pay stub for a flight attendant mortgage — what should I make sure shows up before I apply?
We're looking for five distinct lines: (1) base hourly × credit hours flown, (2) any override or premium pay broken out separately (galley, lead, purser, language, holiday, Sunday, international), (3) per diem clearly labeled as non-taxable, (4) any trip-pickup or volunteer assignments shown as a separate line, and (5) year-to-date totals for each. The cleaner the line-item structure, the higher our defensible qualifying number. Most US major-carrier stubs already show this — but ask your union or HR for a pay-code key if anything looks aggregated. Bring your three most recent stubs plus the year-end pay summary.
11
I'm at a regional carrier — does that change anything about my flight attendant mortgage?
Slightly. Regional FA pay is generally lower than at majors, but the Part 121 certification structure is identical, so underwriters treat employment stability the same way. We use the same three income methods. The bigger consideration is whether you're targeting a major-airline transition (Delta Connection → mainline Delta is a common path) — if your move is confirmed, future-rate qualifying can apply.
12
What about flight attendant mortgage qualifying at newer ULCCs and regionals — Breeze, Avelo, SkyWest, Endeavor, Envoy, GoJet?
Same playbook, different pay scales. Breeze and Avelo are still building out — newer hires with shorter income histories typically use Method 1 (minimum guarantee) plus FHA. SkyWest, Endeavor, Envoy, and GoJet (regionals feeding the majors) have more pay history available, so Method 2 (12-month average) works well, especially if you've been there 18+ months. If you're planning a major-airline transition with a confirmed start date, we can use that future rate.
13
What about corporate, charter, or private-jet cabin crew — does the same flight attendant mortgage approach work?
The principles transfer, but the documents look different. Corporate/charter cabin crew often get paid via W-2 (NetJets, Flexjet, Wheels Up) or 1099 contractor (smaller operators) — and Part 91 / Part 135 operators don't have the same per-diem structure as Part 121 majors. We adapt: W-2 corporate gets the standard income methods; 1099 cabin crew uses two years of tax returns or a bank-statement portfolio loan. Trip-rate pay and standby pay both count if documented.
14
Can a dual-flight-attendant household combine both incomes on one flight attendant mortgage?
Yes — both incomes qualify normally. The wrinkle is bid-line timing: if one spouse just moved to a new base, premium step, or carrier, we may use different methods for each. We also pay attention to overlapping per-diem patterns on portfolio files so we don't double-count an expense pattern as income.
15
What if I'm on reserve recall after a furlough — does that affect a flight attendant mortgage?
Different qualifying strategy entirely. We use the contractual recall date and your post-recall hourly rate as the income basis, conservatively documented through your union or HR. Furlough-with-recall-rights is treated very differently from a permanent layoff under GSE income-continuity rules — we read your CBA's recall clause carefully. Active leave-of-absence files use a similar approach.
16
Does my Delta status as non-union affect my flight attendant mortgage qualifying?
No — your individual pay structure is what underwriters look at, not the bargaining unit. Delta publishes its FA pay scale and Delta's pay rates are competitive with or exceed unionized peers. The active AFA-CWA Delta organizing campaign doesn't affect current qualifying. We treat Delta FA files the same way we treat United, American, or Southwest files.
17
What loan amount can I actually qualify for as a flight attendant with a flight attendant mortgage?
Depends entirely on income method, debt load, and program. A first-year reserve typically lands $180K–$260K. A year-5 line-holder lands $300K–$475K. A senior international purser commonly lands $550K–$900K — and into jumbo territory above the 2026 conforming limits of $832,750 baseline / $1,249,125 high-cost area. See the FHFA conforming loan limit announcement for your county.
18
Should I use my airline's credit union (AA Credit Union, Wings Financial, Alliant) instead of a broker?
Credit unions are great for unsecured personal loans, signature loans, and auto refinances tied to airline employment — and the AA Credit Union flight attendant loan, Wings Financial, and Alliant all have specific airline-employee programs. For mortgages, the story is different: credit unions are one channel, brokers like Stairway access 200+ lenders including portfolio banks that credit unions don't. For straight-down-the-middle conventional, a CU is fine. For variable income, per-diem-heavy files, jumbo, bank-statement, or future-rate qualifying, a specialist broker usually wins.
19
What's the minimum credit score I need for a flight attendant mortgage?
It depends on program. FHA goes down to 580 with 3.5% down (or 500 with 10% down). Conventional Fannie/Freddie typically requires 620 minimum, with the best pricing at 740+. VA technically has no federal minimum but most lenders set 580–620. Jumbo files generally require 700+ with strong reserves. If your score is in the 580–640 range, the FHA path through the right lender is almost always your best move — and we restructure your file to optimize what's there before pulling credit.
20
How does FAA Part 121 certification factor into my mortgage file?
Underwriters treat Part 121 certification as evidence of professional credentialing and ongoing employment stability — closer to a pilot's certificate than to a generic hourly job. It's also why we're comfortable using the future-rate method on confirmed promotions and base awards. 14 CFR Part 121 Subpart O governs the recurrent-training and qualification rules that keep your certificate active.
21
What about taxes — does mortgage interest still help my situation?
Yes. Mortgage interest is deductible up to $750,000 of acquisition debt under current IRS rules, which combines well with the transportation-worker per diem deduction allowed under IRS Publication 463. We're not your tax advisor, but the combined tax picture for a homeowning FA is typically favorable — talk to a CPA who understands transportation workers.
22
What documents do I need to apply for a flight attendant mortgage?
The short list: (1) two most recent W-2s and tax returns, (2) three most recent FA pay stubs showing full line-item structure, (3) two most recent statements for every account — checking, savings, 401k, IRA, brokerage, (4) your offer letter or current contract if you're a new hire or just had a base/seniority change, (5) photo ID and SSN, and (6) for VA files, your DD-214 or your spouse's military ID and orders. If you have CBA language on your minimum guarantee or boarding pay, bring that too — it strengthens the qualifying argument.
23
Do you close in every state?
48 states. We don't currently close in NY or HI. For everywhere else — including military-spouse FAs at overseas-based service members — we can structure the loan.
24
Can I refinance my flight attendant mortgage after I close?
Yes — and we set up most FA files specifically so a future refinance is clean. The most common refi triggers for FAs are post-ratification rate steps that materially change qualifying income, base transfers that change your local cost of living, and rate-cycle drops. Most files we close are eligible for streamline or rate-and-term refinance within 12 months.
25
What's the next step?
Twenty minutes on the phone with Jim. He'll ask which carrier, base, and seniority you're at, then tell you exactly which income method, loan program, and monthly payment fit your target home. No credit pull, no documentation up front. Schedule the call here or hit the pre-approval link below.
09 · Resources

Tools, calculators, and companion guides.

The fastest paths to a flight attendant mortgage pre-approval, plus the underwriting references we work from.

10 · Sources & further reading

The authoritative references behind this flight attendant mortgage guide.

Every claim on this page is sourced from federal, regulatory, GSE, or established industry authorities. Verify any of them directly through the links below.

Federal regulators & aviation safety

Mortgage underwriting guidelines (GSEs, HUD, VA, FHFA, CFPB)

Industry context, history & profession

11 · The outcome

A flight attendant mortgage, structured around the pay stub you actually fly.

Airline pilot and flight attendant standing together in uniforms
What we're building for
Ready when you are

Talk to a lender who reads your CBA, not just your W-2.

Twenty minutes on the phone with Jim. He'll tell you which income components qualify, what your monthly payment looks like at your target home price, and what to do next. No credit pull, no commitment.

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