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Articles Tagged With: FHA 203b Mortgage

FHA Home Loan

How To Prepare For A Home Loan In 2021

How do you prepare for a home loan in the new year? There are a number of steps you can take to get ready. The first step for some is to contact the FHA and HUD at their toll-free number 1-800 CALL FHA to request a free referral to a HUD-approved, local housing counselor. This can help you to better understand the credit requirements of the home loan process, learn what areas to focus on to get your credit ready, etc. The first step for others isn’t to call for a referral, but rather to contact the three major credit reporting agencies to request copies of the borrower’s credit report. You’ll want to get very familiar with the contents of your credit report as early as possible. Look for a | more...

 
FHA mortgages

Important Questions To Ask About Your Home Loan

If you are considering a home loan, the Federal Trade Commission has some advice for you. The FTC, a government agency charged with providing consumer protection, advice, and free credit reports (among many other things), advises house hunters that there are some important questions you should be asking when it’s time to commit to a mortgage loan. Some issues the FTC warns about are not problems for those who apply for FHA home loans to buy or refinance a home. For example, the FTC advises borrowers to ask about any applicable penalties for early payoff of the mortgage loan. And don’t forget, the early payoff of your mortgage doesn’t just happen when you pay off the note before the loan term ends. It can also happen when you refinance your | more...

 
Is your credit ready for an FHA loan?

FHA And HUD Explain Higher FHA Loan Limits In 2021

On December 2, 2020, the FHA and HUD issued a press release announcing higher FHA mortgage loan limits for 2021. Those applying for FHA mortgages with FHA case numbers assigned on or after 1 January 2021 will have higher loan guaranty limits to work with than in 2020. The same thing happened last year, but higher loan limits in the new year are NOT guaranteed to happen year-to-year. But this year, it DID happen and the FHA has explained the hows and whys. Why did limits go higher for the new year? FHA is required by a federal law known as the National Housing Act, (which itself was amended by the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008) to “…set Single Family forward loan limits at 115 percent of area | more...

 
FHA One-Time Close Construction Mortgage Basics

Get An FHA Mortgage In 2021 To Build Your Dream Home

Are you considering your home loan options for 2021? There are a variety of choices but those who do not want to buy somebody else’s house and want to build their own can turn to an FHA One-Time Close mortgage to build from the ground up. Even first-time homebuyers can qualify to do this. If you’re planning on a mortgage in 2021, there are higher FHA home loan limits available, and those who explore their options to build on their own land and choose not to have a range of other FHA home loan options you should seriously consider that can provide alternatives you might not be aware of.  What are those options? House hunters can apply for an FHA mortgage to purchase a fixer-upper (using an FHA rehabilitation mortgage) | more...

 
FHA home loan advice

Higher FHA Loan Limits In 2021

The FHA and HUD have announced higher FHA forward loan limits for 2021. Most borrowers will experience a higher FHA loan limit depending on their location and other variables. Federal law requires FHA to establish forward mortgage / purchase loan floor and ceiling loan limits each year. These limits are based on the loan limit set by the Federal Housing Finance Agency for conventional mortgages owned or guaranteed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. The national conforming loan limit for 2021 is $548,250. While these limits DO NOT apply until 1 January 2021, you can locate the entire list of FHA loan limits. That list includes areas at the FHA ceiling, areas between the floor and the ceiling at the FHA official site. The National Housing Act and its amendments | more...

 
FHA Home Loan

Steps To Buying A House

Do you know the ten steps to buying a house? Each one can be considered its own phase of your home loan journey and if you want to buy a house with an FHA mortgage, these are the steps you should anticipate: Check your credit score Calculate how much FHA mortgage you can afford Choose a real estate agent (where applicable) Get pre-approved with a participating FHA lender Start house hunting Make an offer on the house you want Schedule a home inspection Secure your financing Purchase a homeowners insurance policy Close your loan and move into your new home Note that the first steps are squarely in the planning stages of your mortgage; you should know the contents of your credit report and your FICO scores long before you | more...

 
FHA Home Loan Questions

Common Questions About FHA Mobile Home Loans

FHA home loan options include FHA mortgages for mobile homes. You can buy a mobile home, manufactured home, or modular home using an FHA mortgage and there are many common questions about this type of FHA mortgage option. What Does the FHA Define As A Manufactured Home? The FHA official site describes a mobile home (also known as a manufactured home) as a property built “to the Manufactured Home Construction and Safety Standards (HUD Code) and displays a red certification label on the exterior of each transportable section”. The FHA official site also states that manufactured homes are built “in the controlled environment of a manufacturing plant” and are transported in one or more sections on a permanent chassis. FHA loan rules state that any mobile home must be affixed | more...

 
FHA Rehab Loans

FHA Fixer-Upper Loans For Smaller Home Improvement Projects

There is a type of FHA home loan that lets you get a mortgage to simultaneously buy and repair or modify a home. These fixer-upper mortgages are known as FHA 203(k) Rehabilitation Mortgages and this is an option you can also get as an FHA refinance loan. It’s a great alternative to the standard FHA home loan. Any borrower needing to repair, upgrade, or renovate an existing home can apply for this mortgage–you can refinance an FHA or non FHA loan with the FHA 203(k). But some borrowers don’t have ambitious, large-scale work to be done and a “full” 203(k) rehab loan might not be the right loan if you don’t have a huge project to deal with. And fortunately there is a smaller version of the FHA 203(k) Rehabilitation | more...

 
FHA Home Loan

FHA Home Loan Up-Front Costs

The amount of planning and saving time you give yourself ahead of your home loan application is very important. Without enough lead time to save for your up front costs and prepare your credit you may fill out an application without being truly ready. And part of being ready is understanding what costs you may be responsible for up front. Do you know what to anticipate needing to have saved for your new loan? There are two important areas to begin with–your down payment, and the FHA Up-Front Mortgage Insurance Premium which is part of your closing costs. Both the down payment and the UFMIP calculations require at least a rough estimate of what the asking price of the home and/or the amount of the mortgage might be; you can | more...

 
FHA Loan Options

FHA Loan Options

Why choose an FHA mortgage? Why not apply for a USDA home loan or a VA mortgage? Aren’t these also government-backed loan programs? Yes, but FHA mortgages are open to any financially qualified applicant, while USDA loans are need-based mortgages for those who meet certain income requirements, and VA loans are not offered to the general public but are offered as a benefit for military service. There is nothing wrong with USDA mortgages or VA home loans. But they aren’t available for just any borrower, where FHA mortgages are offered to the general public. And what about applying for conventional mortgages? These non-government backed home loans have higher FICO score requirements in many cases, as well as higher down payment requirements in cases where the borrower’s credit scores aren’t as | more...