So Your Mortgage Is Approved

Tracy Head • March 6, 2026

So Your Mortgage Is Approved… Now Don’t Break It

By the time a buyer gets the call that their mortgage has been approved, the reaction is usually somewhere between relief and a sudden urge to celebrate like they’ve just won the Stanley Cup. After weeks of paperwork, bank statements, document requests, and answering questions about that mysterious $73 e-transfer from your cousin, you’ve made it to the home stretch.


But here’s the thing many buyers don’t realize: a mortgage approval isn’t the finish line. It’s more like the last lap before the ribbon. And in this final stretch, there are a few things that can still trip you up if you’re not careful.


As a mortgage broker who has watched this happen more times than I care to admit, allow me to offer a friendly list of things you absolutely should not do between mortgage approval and possession day.

1. Do Not Finance a New Car (Even If It Smells Amazing)
You might think, “What better way to celebrate a new house than with a new truck in the driveway?”

The lender disagrees.

Taking on new debt before your mortgage funds can change your debt ratios, which were carefully calculated to get you approved in the first place. I once had a client proudly tell me about the brand-new SUV they bought the week before closing. Unfortunately, the lender was less impressed.

Celebrate later. The house comes first. The new car can wait.


2. Do Not Quit Your Job to ‘Follow Your Passion’
I’m a big supporter of people chasing their dreams. But if your dream involves leaving your stable salaried position to start a kombucha brewing company three days before your mortgage funds… perhaps give that dream a couple more weeks.

Lenders like stability. A sudden career change can send underwriting departments into mild panic mode.


3. Do Not Open New Credit Cards for Furniture, Appliances, or “Just in Case”
It’s very tempting. You walk into a furniture store, see the perfect sectional, and suddenly there’s a cheerful salesperson offering “12 months no payments!”

It sounds harmless, but that new credit line can affect your credit score and your debt calculations.

Also, you may be shocked to learn this: the house will still accept furniture purchases after you own it.


4. Do Not Move Money Around Like You’re Running an Offshore Hedge Fund
During the mortgage process, lenders carefully verify where your down payment and funds are coming from. If large, unexplained deposits suddenly start bouncing between accounts, it can raise questions.

Questions lead to paperwork. Paperwork leads to stress. Stress leads to calling your mortgage broker at 9:45 p.m.

Keep things simple and predictable until the deal is done.


5. Do Not Co-Sign a Loan for Someone Else
You may be the generous type. A friend or family member might ask you to co-sign for a car or a line of credit.

As noble as that is, lenders will treat that new obligation as your debt too. Even if your cousin promises they’ll “definitely make the payments.”

Your lender prefers promises backed by math.


6. Do Not Miss Any Bill Payments
Your credit report was likely pulled during the approval process, and lenders sometimes check again before funding the mortgage. A missed payment can ding your credit score at the worst possible moment.

In other words, now is the time to be the most financially responsible version of yourself.


The Bottom Line

Once your mortgage is approved, the best strategy is surprisingly simple: keep everything exactly the same until your home officially closes.


Same job. Same credit habits. Same bank accounts.

Think of it like carrying a tray of drinks across a crowded room. You’re almost there—now is not the time to start dancing.

The good news? Once the keys are in your hand and the deal is finalized, you’re free to celebrate however you like. Buy the couch. Paint the walls. Host the housewarming party.



Just maybe hold off on the kombucha startup for a week or two.

Tracy Head

Mortgage Broker

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