Your loan was approved with conditions. Here's what that means.

You're looking to buy your own place. And you've decided to get pre-approved for a mortgage — rather than just pre-qualified — so that you know how much you can afford and so that when you make an offer, you're more likely to be considered a “serious” buyer. Good for you. That's a smart move.

Or maybe you have already found your dream home and put an offer in that has been accepted. You've applied for a mortgage. And it's been submitted to processing and underwriting.

In either scenario, you might be alerted that you have been approved with conditions before you get the final okay.

Wait. What? What does “approved with conditions” mean?

Home financing and conditional approvals

Approved with conditions is merely a fancy-pants way of saying, “we need to ask you some questions but not in a scary way.” In most cases, borrowers might be asked to provide additional documentation to accompany a mortgage application before the processing department feels it's ready to be submitted to underwriting for final approval.

Once you satisfy these “conditions,” you will be that much closer to being fully pre-approved, or — if you're already under contract, that much closer to closing and getting the keys to your new place.

What's the difference between pre-approval and conditional loan approval?

Once you apply for a mortgage, the lender submits the application to processing, where your financials are reviewed. Pre-approvals are one step better than a pre-qualification letter, where the loan officer just listens to what you tell them your financials are and makes a judgment call on that info alone. At least a pre-approval digs in a little deeper.

The conditionally approved mortgage means that an underwriter — a professional reviewer of your creditworthiness — has evaluated all the documentation you have provided, including income, employment, credit report, etc. and is giving you a thumbs up…once you satisfy requests for additional information.

Common approval conditions you may come across

This list of common conditions that borrowers might face when applying for a mortgage isn't complete by any means, but they're the ones that typically can hold up a home loan approval.