"Series regular on a streaming drama, three-season tenure. Loan-Out S-corp set up four years ago. The first lender looked at the W-2 wages from my Loan-Out, ignored the K-1 distributions, refused to count the residuals from prior projects, and offered $720K. Jim’s team ran the Loan-Out 1120-S through Form 1084, added back depreciation and home office, included residuals, qualified the full $480K income. $1.65M close on a Sunny Isles condo."
Actor and entertainer mortgage from a lender who reads SAG-AFTRA W-2s, Loan-Out S-corp K-1s, residuals, and 1099 commercial work as one coherent income picture.
Working actors, entertainers, voiceover artists, theatrical performers, and commercial talent carry the most fragmented income file in American mortgage qualifying. A single calendar year can include seven W-2s from different production payroll services, three 1099-NECs from commercial sessions, residual checks from SAG-AFTRA, foreign royalty 1099s, and an S-corp K-1 if the actor uses a Loan-Out corporation — with no two years looking remotely alike in dollar amount. The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act permanently eliminated the Schedule A 2% miscellaneous itemized deduction (made permanent by OBBBA in July 2025), effectively forcing serious working actors into Loan-Out S-corp structures to preserve deductions for agent commissions, manager fees, training, headshots, and audition expenses. Generalist lenders see the messy file, count the lowest-denominator W-2, and decline. We read the SAG-AFTRA payment record, the Loan-Out 1120-S, the residuals statement, and the Schedule C side income as a single qualifying picture.
Stairway Mortgage qualifies actors and entertainers on the full income picture — SAG-AFTRA scale wages, residuals from multiple productions, Loan-Out S-corp distributions, foreign royalty 1099s, commercial and voiceover 1099 sessions, theatrical Equity income, and the Schedule C deductions that make the math work. An emerging actor with three years of mixed W-2 and Schedule C, a working actor with a recurring TV role channeled through a Loan-Out corporation, a commercial voiceover specialist with a steady 1099 book of business, and an established theatrical performer with mixed SAG-AFTRA + Equity income each get qualified using the methods that fit their actual production-cycle. We pick the right door before we quote. Or skip ahead: browse every loan program, run numbers on 100+ mortgage calculators, or check today's rates. For the parent hub and other creative earner paths, see our creative earners mortgage hub.
Key facts every actor and entertainer should know before applying for a mortgage.
Under SAG-AFTRA tax guidance and IRC Section 3402(g), principal performer residuals come as W-2 supplemental wages from the production payroll service — not from SAG-AFTRA itself. Foreign royalties typically arrive on 1099.
Under Fannie Mae Selling Guide B3-3.1-01, variable W-2 income from SAG-AFTRA scale and residuals qualifies on a 24-month average with documented continuity. Generalist lenders often refuse to average across multiple production payroll W-2s — specialty lenders accept it.
Under Fannie Mae B3-3.2-01 self-employed rules, Loan-Out S-corp distributions and W-2 wages combine with 2-year 1120-S history. The Loan-Out structure became essentially mandatory after TCJA killed Schedule A miscellaneous deductions.
The Qualified Performing Artist deduction under IRC Section 62(b) still allows above-the-line business expense deduction via Form 2106 — but only for actors with AGI under $16,000. Effectively useful only for emerging actors.
Actor and entertainer mortgage solutions for every career stage.
Each stage of an acting or entertainment career has its own qualifying logic. An emerging actor with three years of mixed W-2 has a different mortgage path than a series regular channeled through a Loan-Out corporation.
Emerging actor (Years 1–5)
"SAG-AFTRA member 2 years. Mix of W-2 scale gigs and 1099 commercial work. Side income from teaching/coaching."
- Annual income $40K–$120K, highly variable by project cycle
- Qualifies on 2-year average W-2 + Schedule C combined
- QPA deduction useful if AGI under $16K (limited applicability)
- Conventional conforming with co-borrower income often essential
Working actor with Loan-Out (Years 5–15)
"Recurring TV role + commercial work. Loan-Out S-corp set up. Residuals consistent."
- Annual income $150K–$500K through Loan-Out S-corp + direct W-2
- 1120-S Form K-1 distributions + W-2 wages combine in Fannie Mae self-employed analysis
- Residuals from prior seasons add stable supplemental income
- Conventional jumbo or conforming with full income documentation
Series regular / established
"Lead or supporting role on a streaming series. Year-round shooting. Significant residuals tail."
- Annual income $500K–$3M through Loan-Out S-corp
- Series contract provides predictable W-2 + back-end residuals
- Loan-Out distributions support jumbo or super-jumbo qualifying
- Residuals from prior projects support reserves and income continuity
Commercial / VO specialist
"Voiceover or commercial talent. Steady 1099 book of business. Less project volatility."
- Annual income $80K–$400K through 1099 sessions + commercial residuals
- Schedule C or Loan-Out S-corp documentation
- Bank-statement Non-QM bridges variable months
- Conventional jumbo with 2-year Schedule C history
A-list / wealth-tier performer
"Established performer with significant accumulated wealth. Episodic high-comp projects."
- Project comp $500K–$15M+ but episodic and unpredictable
- Asset-depletion against accumulated post-tax wealth
- Pledged-asset against publicly-traded portfolio
- Super-jumbo or specialty Non-QM for primary and additional properties
How we calculate qualifying income for your actor and entertainer mortgage.
Four methods cover almost every actor and entertainer file we’ve closed. The right method depends on whether you have a Loan-Out S-corp, the balance of W-2 vs 1099 in your income mix, and your accumulated reserves.
Method 1 — Loan-Out S-corp self-employed (the working-actor default)
For actors with a Loan-Out S-corporation receiving project payments. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.2-01, qualifying income combines: (1) W-2 wages paid by the Loan-Out to the actor (reasonable compensation), plus (2) S-corp distributions reflected on Form 1120-S K-1 with 2-year history, plus (3) addback for documented non-cash expenses (depreciation, amortization). The Loan-Out structure typically yields higher qualifying income than treating the actor as a W-2 employee directly, because business deductions remain effective.
Method 2 — W-2 variable income (the SAG-AFTRA scale + residuals path)
For actors without a Loan-Out where multiple W-2s come from different production payroll services. Under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01, all SAG-AFTRA covered W-2 income (scale wages + residuals + streaming bonuses) qualifies on a 24-month average. SAG-AFTRA tax guidance explicitly confirms residuals are wages, not passive income — they belong in the W-2 averaging calculation. Multiple W-2s from different production payroll services (Entertainment Partners, Cast & Crew, Disney, Warner Bros) sum together.
Method 3 — Schedule C self-employed (the no-Loan-Out path)
For commercial talent, voiceover artists, and emerging actors operating as sole proprietors on Schedule C. Qualifying income equals 2-year average net Schedule C profit, with addbacks for documented non-cash expenses (depreciation, business-use-of-home, vehicle Section 179) under Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02. Form 1084 cash-flow analysis recalculates the qualifying number from the tax return. Most generalist lenders mistakenly use Schedule C line 31 net profit as qualifying income — missing $20K-$60K of legitimate addbacks.
Method 4 — Bank-statement Non-QM (the steady-deposit path)
For actors and entertainers with consistent monthly deposits from residuals, 1099 commercial sessions, and ongoing Loan-Out payments but without the tax-return continuity that conventional underwriting requires. Under CFPB Reg Z’s Ability-to-Repay rule, non-QM bank-statement programs qualify based on 12 or 24 months of personal bank deposits at 50–75% counting. Particularly useful for VO specialists with steady residual streams and commercial actors with predictable session work.
Which loan program fits your actor and entertainer mortgage situation.
Seven loan-program categories cover essentially every actor and entertainer file we’ve closed. The mix is dominated by self-employed Loan-Out S-corp structures for established actors and bank-statement Non-QM for steady-1099 specialists.
Loan-Out S-corp Conventional
- Working actors and entertainers with established Loan-Out structure
- 2-year 1120-S history + K-1 distributions + reasonable comp W-2
- Conforming or jumbo depending on accumulated income
Schedule C Self-Employed Conventional
- Commercial talent and VO specialists without Loan-Out
- 2-year Schedule C with Form 1084 cash flow analysis
- Form 1084 addbacks recover legitimate non-cash deductions
W-2 Variable Income Conventional
- Actors with multiple SAG-AFTRA W-2s but no Loan-Out
- 24-month average of scale + residuals + streaming bonuses
- Multiple production payroll services sum together
Bank-Statement Non-QM
- Actors with steady residual + 1099 deposits but variable tax returns
- 12 or 24 months of personal deposits at 50–75% counting
- Rate 0.5–1.0% higher than conforming
Asset-Depletion Non-QM
- A-list and established performers with accumulated post-tax wealth
- Liquid reserves amortized over 360 months as implied income
- Bridges episodic project income with predictable monthly qualifying
1099 Non-QM
- Voiceover, commercial, and foreign royalty 1099-driven files
- 2-year 1099 history at consistent levels
- Useful when Schedule C deductions are aggressive enough to lower conventional qualifying
Conventional Conforming
- Emerging actors with combined income at conforming tier
- 5–20% down, loan limits up to $766,550 (FL) for 2024-25
- Co-borrower income (spouse, parent) often essential at this stage
The actor and entertainer mortgage in context: 6 forces shaping how performers qualify.
Actor income sits at the intersection of W-2 wages, 1099 self-employment, S-corp distributions, and royalty streams — with collective bargaining contract rules layered on top. Each structural force shapes what a working actor’s qualifying picture looks like.
Force 1 — The TCJA permanent suspension of Schedule A miscellaneous deductions
The 2017 Tax Cuts and Jobs Act eliminated the Schedule A 2% miscellaneous itemized deduction floor — including unreimbursed employee business expenses. The One Big Beautiful Bill Act (July 2025) made this suspension permanent. For W-2 actors this meant agent commissions (10%), manager fees (10–15%), training costs, headshots, audition expenses, and union dues stopped being deductible. The structural workaround: form a Loan-Out S-corporation under IRC Section 1361, run all production payments through the corp, and deduct the business expenses there. This is why nearly all serious working actors now operate through Loan-Outs.
Force 2 — SAG-AFTRA collective bargaining drives W-2 treatment
Under SAG-AFTRA collective bargaining agreements, principal performer engagements on signatory productions must come through W-2 payroll because the union contracts require employer withholding for pension, health, and unemployment contributions. This is why working actors typically have multiple W-2s from different production payroll services (Entertainment Partners, Cast & Crew, Disney, Warner Bros) in a single calendar year — each production is a separate W-2 employer. Commercial work, voiceover sessions, and non-signatory indie work tend to come on 1099 instead.
Force 3 — The Qualified Performing Artist deduction (narrow but real)
Under IRC Section 62(b), qualified performing artists can deduct unreimbursed employee business expenses above-the-line via IRS Form 2106 — surviving the TCJA Schedule A elimination. The catch: AGI must be under $16,000 (a threshold not adjusted for inflation since the 1986 statute). The QPA deduction therefore practically applies only to emerging actors in their first 1–3 years. SAG-AFTRA has been lobbying Congress to raise the threshold but no legislation has passed.
Force 4 — Residuals are wages, not passive income
The SAG-AFTRA position — explicitly stated in their tax FAQ — is that residuals constitute payment for past services performed. Under IRC Section 3402(g), the production payroll service reports them as supplemental W-2 wages. The Earned Income Credit treats them as earned wages. This matters for mortgage qualifying: residuals are not "passive" income that lenders should discount — they are W-2 variable wage income subject to the same 24-month averaging as primary scale wages under Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01.
Force 5 — The 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike contract reset
The 2023 SAG-AFTRA strike settlement restructured streaming residuals, introducing the streaming success bonus for shows hitting defined viewership thresholds. Eligible cast members received retroactive lump-sum bonus checks in 2024-2025 covering multiple prior periods. The lump-sum nature creates underwriting friction — some lenders see the spike-then-normal pattern and mis-categorize the spike year as "one-time." We document the underlying contract structure so the bonus is read correctly as ongoing residual exposure on hit streaming series.
Force 6 — The IRC Section 199A QBI complication for actor S-corps
Under IRC Section 199A, pass-through S-corp owners can deduct 20% of qualified business income — but the Specified Service Trade or Business (SSTB) phase-out applies to performing arts. The deduction phases out between $191,950 and $241,950 for single filers (2024 thresholds; indexed annually). Working actors with Loan-Out S-corps in the phase-out band face complex tax math. From a mortgage perspective, the QBI deduction reduces the AGI line that some underwriters use for affordability calculations — we coordinate with the tax advisor to document the right number.
Actor and entertainer mortgage by career stage.
A timeline view of how the right mortgage program changes as you progress from emerging actor through working-actor with Loan-Out to series regular or A-list status.
Emerging actor
Comp profile: $40K–$90K annual mix of SAG-AFTRA scale W-2s, commercial 1099s, side income from teaching, hosting, or unrelated work. Dominant qualifying method: 2-year W-2 average + Schedule C net profit, often with co-borrower. Common purchase: $250K–$500K primary residence, often with parent or partner co-signing. Watch-out: Below $16K AGI, QPA deduction works; above, all employee deductions are lost unless Loan-Out is set up.
Working actor with Loan-Out
Comp profile: $150K–$400K annual through Loan-Out S-corp combining production payments, residuals, and commercial 1099s. Dominant qualifying method: Loan-Out S-corp self-employed analysis with 2-year 1120-S history. Common purchase: $600K–$1M primary residence. Watch-out: Loan-Out setup typically takes 12–18 months to produce the 2-year 1120-S history required for self-employed mortgage qualifying — plan ahead before the Loan-Out year begins.
Series regular / established
Comp profile: $500K–$3M annual through Loan-Out, with recurring TV role contracts providing predictable W-2 + back-end residuals + streaming bonuses. Dominant qualifying method: Loan-Out S-corp jumbo with full income documentation. Common purchase: $1.5M–$5M primary residence, sometimes additional investment properties. Watch-out: Episodic project years (between contract cycles) may show lower income — 24-month averaging smooths this if continuity is documented.
A-list / wealth-accumulated performer
Comp profile: Project comp $500K–$15M+ episodic, with accumulated post-tax wealth in liquid reserves. Dominant qualifying method: Asset-depletion against accumulated wealth, or pledged-asset against publicly-traded portfolio. Common purchase: $5M–$25M+ primary residence, vacation properties, investment holdings. Watch-out: Concentration of wealth in entertainment-industry assets may limit pledged-asset options; we structure the file to use diversified reserves.
What actors and entertainers say about their Stairway mortgage.
Names abbreviated for client privacy. Production names anonymized. Numbers are real.
"Voiceover specialist for seven years. Steady 1099 book of commercial and animation work. The big bank used my Schedule C line 31 net profit and ignored the home studio depreciation, business mileage, and Section 179 equipment expenses I’d deducted. They came back with $310K. Jim used Form 1084 to add back the legitimate non-cash deductions and qualified me on the real $185K of operating income. $720K close on a Hollywood, FL bungalow."
"Mixed career — Broadway tour stretches plus on-camera supporting roles. SAG-AFTRA + Actors’ Equity dual membership. Six W-2s from different production payroll services and the Equity touring contract. The first three lenders couldn’t reconcile the multiple W-2s and gave me different numbers each time. Jim’s team aggregated all the W-2s with 24-month averaging and the streaming bonus from a 2018 series. $890K close on a Plantation home."
Actor and entertainer mortgage questions, answered.
More actor and entertainer mortgage resources at Stairway
More on actor and entertainer mortgages, SAG-AFTRA, and Loan-Out structures.
Other creative paths
Loan-program details
Calculators & tools
Sources & further reading.
SAG-AFTRA & performer unions
IRS & tax guidance
Cornell Law — statutory references
Mortgage program guidelines
- Fannie Mae B3-3.1-01 — Variable Income (W-2 scale + residuals)
- Fannie Mae B3-3.2-01 — Self-Employed Borrower (Loan-Out S-corp)
- Fannie Mae B3-3.3-02 — Income Analysis Self-Employed (Schedule C)
- Freddie Mac — Income Documentation Guide
- CFPB Regulation Z — Ability-to-Repay (Non-QM)
- Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA)
Actor and entertainer mortgage, structured right.
Series regular on a streaming drama, three-season tenure, working through a Loan-Out S-corporation formed four years prior. Annual income via the Loan-Out: $620K split between $180K reasonable-compensation W-2 paid by the corp to the actor, $440K in K-1 distributions from the corp’s production payments. Plus $58K in residual income from two prior series (W-2 from SAG-AFTRA payroll), $32K in voiceover 1099 commercial work outside the Loan-Out, and $18K in streaming success bonus retroactive checks from the 2023 strike contract. The first lender looked at the $180K W-2 from the Loan-Out alone, refused to include the K-1 (calling it "non-continuing"), ignored the residuals as "passive," and offered $720K maximum. We pulled the Loan-Out 1120-S, the K-1s, the SAG-AFTRA residual W-2s, the 1099-NEC for voiceover, and the bank statements. Ran the Loan-Out through Fannie Mae B3-3.2-01 self-employed analysis with proper Form 1084 addbacks (depreciation, home office), aggregated the residuals as W-2 variable income under B3-3.1-01, and treated the streaming bonus as ongoing per the contract structure. Total qualifying income: $480K. Approved at $1.65M conventional jumbo for a Sunny Isles condo with bay views. Closed in 33 days. The income was all there from day one — the first lender just didn’t know how to read an actor file.
Get an actor and entertainer mortgage from a lender who reads SAG-AFTRA, Loan-Out, residuals, and Schedule C as one file.
No application. No credit pull. A 20-minute conversation where we look at your W-2s from production payroll services, your Loan-Out S-corp 1120-S if you have one, your residuals and foreign royalty 1099s, your Schedule C side income, and your accumulated reserves — then we tell you which loan program fits and roughly what the numbers look like. If we’re not the right shop, we’ll tell you that too.
Stairway Mortgage is a division of NEXA Mortgage LLC. Jim Blackburn NMLS #1072866.