You found a house you love. Your agent says you need a pre-approval letter before the sellers will consider your offer. Now what?
A lot of first-time buyers freeze at this step -- not because it is hard, but because nobody told them exactly what to expect. Here is what pre-approval actually requires, how it is different from pre-qualification, and the steps that follow after you get your letter.
Pre-qualification is an informal estimate. You tell a lender your income, debts, and assets -- they give you a rough range. No documents are reviewed. No credit is pulled (or only a soft pull). It is useful for planning, not for making offers.
Pre-approval is a formal review. The lender pulls your credit, verifies income and assets with actual documents, and issues a conditional commitment to lend up to a specific amount. In a competitive market like West Chester or Exton, sellers expect a pre-approval letter -- not a pre-qualification.
At Zurn Mortgages, I can start with a soft-pull estimate so you see ballpark numbers without any credit impact. Once you are ready to make offers, we move to full pre-approval with a hard pull.
Gather these before you apply and the process moves significantly faster. Missing documents are the number-one reason pre-approvals take longer than expected.
Pre-approval is not just a document collection exercise. Your lender is running your profile against four underwriting categories -- credit, capacity (debt-to-income ratio), capital (down payment and reserves), and collateral (the property). Most conventional loans require a 620+ credit score and cap DTI around 45-50%.
For more on how your credit score affects pricing, see our guide on credit scores and home buying in Chester County.
Getting the letter is the beginning, not the end. You shop within your budget (not your limit), make an offer with the letter attached, then move into full loan application once you are under contract. An appraiser assesses the property, underwriting reviews your full file, and you receive a clear to close before heading to settlement.
In Pennsylvania, closings typically involve a settlement agent or title company. For a full timeline breakdown, see our Pennsylvania home closing timeline.
Pre-approvals typically expire after 60-90 days. Until closing, avoid opening new credit accounts, making large unverified deposits, switching jobs, or co-signing any loans. Your financial picture needs to stay stable from pre-approval through settlement.
Disclosure: Zurn Mortgages LLC (NMLS #2462161) is a licensed mortgage broker in Pennsylvania. Alexander Zurn (NMLS #1753707) arranges loans through wholesale lending partners including UWM, Rocket, and Dart Bank. Pre-approval is subject to credit review, income verification, and property appraisal. This is not a commitment to lend. Equal Housing Opportunity.
Start your application or text me directly. I'll have a pre-approval decision back to you fast -- no credit pull required to get started.