In a market where every deal counts, manual income verification is the silent killer of commissions.
You know the scenario: the borrower is solid, the property appraises and everything looks good—until income verification turns into a bottleneck. Suddenly, you’re chasing paystubs, waiting on HR reps who don’t call back and explaining delays to a frustrated borrower. Best case, the deal closes late. Worst case? It doesn’t close at all.
Manual verification may seem like a back-office problem, but for loan officers, it’s deeply personal. It means lost time, lost trust and lost revenue. And in an industry already squeezed by margin compression and high rates, it’s a risk you can’t afford to keep taking.
Manual verification eats time, and time Is money
Every hour spent collecting documents is an hour not spent prospecting, closing or nurturing new referral relationships. A 2024 HubSpot study found that sales professionals spend just two hours per day actively selling, while the rest of their time is taken up by administrative tasks like documentation and follow-ups—so cutting down manual verification can materially increase sales-facing hours.
According to a 2023 analysis, top-performing loan officers in strong markets can close 5–10 loans per month and earn around 2% of the loan amount in commission. If a single income verification delays a deal by even a few days, that could mean one fewer funded loan in a given month, equivalent to more than $8,000 in lost commission based on typical pay structures and today’s median home sales price.
The problem starts with outdated routines. For decades, production teams have been conditioned to ask borrowers for 30 days of paystubs, two years of W-2s and (if compensation is variable) year-end stubs as well. Underwriters often request even more. That back-and-forth takes time, frustrates borrowers and slows deals to a crawl.
Every delay increases fallout risk
Fannie Mae’s 2023 Consumer Mortgage Understanding Survey found that paperwork and process length were among borrowers’ top frustrations. That’s backed up across industries; HubSpot’s 2024 Sales Trends Report found that 28% of sales professionals say the sales process taking too long is the number one reason prospects back out of deals. Add in today’s high-rate environment, and borrowers are more likely than ever to shop around or abandon the process altogether if they hit friction.
According to ICE Mortgage Technology’s Mortgage Monitor report, the average purchase loan takes 40 days to close. Even modest delays can push borrowers past their rate lock expiration, increase their costs or cause them to second-guess their choice of lender.
Lenders who deploy digital VOIE solutions at the point of sale have found that removing manual document collection early in the loan cycle can shave 5–7 days off the overall process. Those faster cycle times translate directly into fewer abandoned applications and higher pull-through.
Manual means more errors, more conditions and more headaches
Beyond delays, manual income verification increases the risk of human error, outdated documentation and even fraud. That leads to suspensions in underwriting, last-minute conditions and post-close buyback risk—none of which do a loan officer’s reputation any favors.
The truth is simple: source data beats manual every time. Verified income pulled directly from payroll systems with borrower permission is more accurate, more current and more secure. It supports faster lending decisions and can even reduce exposure to repurchase risk thanks to GSE programs like Fannie Mae’s Day 1 Certainty and Freddie Mac’s asset and income modeler (AIM).
Better borrower experience = More referrals = Commission potential
Today’s borrowers expect a digital-first experience, and when they don’t get it, they walk. According to ICE Mortgage Technology’s 2025 Borrower Insights Survey, 55% of borrowers say a quick process is one of the top factors they look for in a lender, and 33% cite uploading documents as one of the most stressful parts of the mortgage process
Manual verification is a major reason why. It leads to duplicate document requests, inconsistent communication and longer wait times. When a borrower has to dig up the same paystub twice, you don’t just risk the deal, you risk the referral.
On the other hand, a borrower who experiences a fast, secure and seamless loan process is far more likely to become a repeat client and tell their friends. Lenders that adopt a digital-first strategy aren’t just gaining efficiency. They’re building a book of loyal, referral-ready customers for life.
Automated VOIE is a commission – Protection strategy
Manual income verification might seem like a back-office problem, but it’s costing you where it counts: your commissions. Delays, fallout, frustrated borrowers and fewer referrals all add up to real money lost.
That makes income verification a front-line concern. When VOIE runs smoothly, loans close faster, borrowers stay happier and you stay in control of your pipeline. Automating it removes the friction that derails deals and keeps you focused on doing what you do best: closing loans and growing your business.
If you’re serious about protecting your earnings, it’s time to switch to automated, embedded VOIE.. Your commission depends on it.
John Hardesty is the VP of Mortgage at Argyle.
This column does not necessarily reflect the opinion of HousingWire’s editorial department and its owners.
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