Forward Mortgage  ·  NMLS #1109257  ·  Licensed in Michigan
Questions? (248) 956-0445
Certified Divorce Lending Professional · CDLP®

Your housing decisions deserve expert guidance.

Divorce changes everything about how you qualify for a mortgage. Before your settlement is signed, you need to know what's actually possible — not what you're hoping is possible.

In the industry since
2004
20+ years in mortgage, with a growing focus on divorce lending strategy
Credential
CDLP®
Certified Divorce Lending Professional — specialized training at the intersection of family law and mortgage financing
Confidential consultations
No pressure, no obligation
You'll leave with clarity — whether or not we work together
Serving Michigan homeowners
CDLP - Certified Divorce Lending Professional seal
Issued by the Divorce Lending Association
In Michigan
One of only a handful
of CDLP®-certified mortgage professionals in the state of Michigan
The credential

What is a Certified Divorce Lending Professional?

A Certified Divorce Lending Professional (CDLP®) is a mortgage professional who has completed specialized training in divorce mortgage planning through the Divorce Lending Association — the only organization dedicated exclusively to this discipline.

The CDLP® credential is more than a course. It represents deep training at the intersection of four distinct areas that all come into play during divorce:

Family law
+
Financial & tax planning
+
Real property
+
Mortgage financing

A standard loan officer handles mortgage applications. A CDLP® understands how the terms of a divorce settlement affect mortgage qualification — and works with the legal team to help structure agreements that actually hold up when it comes time to secure financing.

Standard loan officer
  • Processes mortgage applications
  • Evaluates income and credit
  • Finds the right loan product
  • Closes the loan
CDLP®
  • Everything a loan officer does, plus…
  • Reviews settlement language for mortgage impact
  • Advises on support income structuring
  • Coordinates with attorneys and mediators
  • Identifies issues before they become problems
  • Maintains ongoing CE in family law & tax changes
Brian Mutter, CDLP
Brian Mutter
CDLP® · Forward Mortgage
Why work with a CDLP

An operations background changes how I work with clients.

I've been in the mortgage industry since 2004, and most of that time was spent on the inside — as a processor, administrator, and operating partner. I didn't start on the sales floor. I started in the engine room.

That shapes everything about how I approach client work. My instinct is to educate first, explain the process clearly, and make sure you actually understand what's happening and why. Not to rush you toward a decision.

Divorce mortgage planning is a different level of complexity than a standard mortgage transaction. It sits at the intersection of family law, financial planning, and lending guidelines — and the decisions made during settlement can have consequences that show up months later in underwriting. I find this work genuinely rewarding, because bringing real clarity to someone navigating an incredibly stressful time matters.

A regular loan officer can take your application. A CDLP helps you understand your options before your options get locked in.

Operations-first approach · Information, education, communication
Why timing matters

The best time to reach out is early.
Very early.

Divorce is more than a legal process — it reshapes the financial foundation of two lives, including some of the most consequential decisions either spouse will make about housing. When divorce is involved, some important mortgage rules and guidelines change entirely. A CDLP can bring clarity before those decisions are locked in.

In many cases, we can work directly with the legal team to suggest settlement structure or language that may better support future mortgage financing — something most attorneys simply aren't trained to anticipate.

Then
3s
Mortgage rate environment many couples locked in during marriage
Now
6s
Today's rate environment — same home, dramatically different payment
One income instead of two
Qualifying for a mortgage after divorce is a fundamentally different exercise. The buying power that existed as a couple often looks very different when only one income is on the application.
Affordability shifts dramatically
Moving from a rate in the 3s to a market in the 6s changes what is realistic — for both retaining the home and purchasing a new one. Setting accurate expectations early prevents painful surprises later.
The agreement language matters
How support payments, asset division, and property transfer are worded in the settlement can directly affect how much a client qualifies for — or whether they qualify at all. We help get the language right before it's final.
The window of opportunity
Before filing
Ideal. Maximum options, maximum flexibility to shape the settlement.
During proceedings
Still very valuable. Settlement language can still be influenced.
Near finalization
Helpful — but options begin to narrow. Act quickly.
After settlement
We can still help — but some opportunities are no longer available.
Common situations

You may not realize how much your situation has changed.

Each of these circumstances carries mortgage implications most people — and many attorneys — aren't aware of until it's too late to adjust.

01
Retaining the marital home
Qualifying solo is a fundamentally different exercise than qualifying as a couple. And if your current rate is in the 3s, refinancing into today's market changes your monthly payment — and your reality — significantly.
Talk through your situation →
02
Buying a new home after divorce
Most people are now qualifying on one income instead of two, entering a rate environment far higher than the one they left. What felt affordable as a couple can look very different alone.
Talk through your situation →
03
Using support income to qualify
Alimony and child support can count as qualifying income — but only if structured and documented correctly in your agreement. How it's worded can make or break your ability to get a mortgage.
Talk through your situation →
04
Settlement terms that may not work
Agreements that look sound on paper often fail in underwriting. If both names remain on the loan, you're still legally liable — regardless of what the settlement says. A CDLP reviews terms before they're locked in.
Talk through your situation →
05
Joint debt and your credit profile
Joint debt doesn't disappear at divorce. Credit cards, car loans, and the mortgage itself may still appear on your report even after your settlement assigns responsibility elsewhere.
Talk through your situation →
06
Non-traditional or changing income
Divorce often coincides with career transitions — returning to work, going part-time, or becoming self-employed. These situations require careful handling to meet lender guidelines, and early planning makes all the difference.
Talk through your situation →
Schedule a consultation

Let's talk about your situation.

These questions help me prepare so we can make the most of our time together. There are no wrong answers, and everything you share is completely confidential.

About you
About the divorce
About the marital home
About income and support
About your credit and finances
Anything else?

Your information is confidential and will only be used to prepare for your consultation.

Thank you — we'll be in touch shortly.

Brian will review your answers and be in touch within one business day to schedule your consultation. You'll come away from that conversation with real clarity about your options — whatever you decide to do next.

Need to reach us sooner? Call or text (248) 956-0445 or email [email protected]