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Articles Tagged With: FHA Mortgage Loan

FHA Loan

FHA Mortgage Insurance Options

There are plenty of things you might need to know about the FHA mortgage insurance premium, but if you are a first-time home buyer there are some aspects about this you should know about as early as possible so you can make the most informed choices possible about your home loan, what to finance, and how much to save. Learn Your Options Getting ready for a home loan means learning which items you have the option of including in the loan amount and how much you will pay over the lifetime of the loan on interest rates on the amount of your loan AND the add-ons you choose to include. And that’s where understanding FHA mortgage insurance becomes very important. One thing some people initially get confused over? Mistaking PMI | more...

 
Buying a House

FHA Loan Interest Rates And FICO Scores

Buying a home means paying attention to your financials–credit scores, debt repayment habits, and credit utilization rates. Paying attention to them as early as possible is an important choice when you are planning your home loan. Don’t put off working on your credit–time is not on your side if you are planning to apply for a home loan in the next 12 months if you haven’t looked at your credit scores, reports, etc. If you want to buy a home with an FHA mortgage, you generally have more forgiving credit qualification guidelines from the FHA, and that’s a great reason to use an FHA mortgage. FICO score issues can be a major worry for some borrowers, but by working on your own credit far ahead of your home loan you | more...

 
FHA Loan Options

Pro Tips For FHA Home Loans

There is still time to take advantage of the higher mortgage loan limits for FHA home loans in 2021, and if you don’t know what it takes to be approved for an FHA single family loan this year, there are some pro tips you can use to get much closer to home loan approval. Pro Tip: Are you worried about your FICO scores? Remember that FHA standards include a requirement of a 580 FICO score or better for the lowest down payment. But the FHA standards are not the only minimum credit score requirements at work–the lender’s own standards also play a part. That is why you should start getting your credit ready early–at least a year ahead of your application for a single-family home loan. That’s not something many | more...

 
FHA loans

Do You Need An FHA Loan Calculator?

The short answer is, “YES”, you DO need an FHA loan calculator. But which one to use? There are multiple types of home loan calculators–they all have important functions. But many seeking FHA loans won’t need to use all of them or even most of them. You might just need a little extra information for planning and saving purposes. The FHA Loan Calculator The FHA home loan calculator uses the numbers you provide about your income, hazard insurance, mortgage insurance, property taxes, the term of your loan, and other information to help you arrive at an estimate of the monthly payments you could be making (principal and interest rate combined) and the maximum loan amount you might qualify for on a 15-year or 30-year loan (estimates only and not a | more...

 
FHA home loan

Start Getting Ready For Your FHA Home Loan

FHA home loan resources abound–you should know about using online mortgage calculators, pre-qualification for a home loan, and the availability of free credit reports to help you in the research and planning stages of your new home loan or refinance loan. Let’s start with those free credit reports–the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau (CFPB), reminds home loan applicants that they are entitled to “a free credit report every 12 months from each of the three major consumer reporting companies (Equifax, Experian and TransUnion)” according to the CFPB official site. Getting your credit report from all three agencies is an excellent way to begin your planning stage of the loan. Get your credit reports a year in advance of your loan application and remember to keep monitoring your credit afterward. This gives | more...

 

What Are The Benefits Of An FHA Loan?

FHA home loans are for any financially qualified borrower. You don’t have to be a first-time homebuyer, and you don’t have to worry about income caps or household income limits when applying for an FHA mortgage. And there are plenty of other FHA loan benefits, too. Consumer Protections With AN FHA Loan One important benefit and protection for the FHA borrower is an FHA requirement for a home to be approved for an FHA mortgage, it must have a remaining economic life for the full duration of the loan term. That is important–what good is owning a home you cannot sell? The home’s condition at closing time must be such that it is suitable to re-sell at any point during the mortgage. If the home’s basic condition would not support | more...

 
FHA Home Loan

FHA Mortgage Or USDA Home Loan: Which Is Best For You?

What makes FHA mortgages different than USDA home loans for the same kind of property? Both FHA and USDA mortgages are offered for single-family homes and you can apply for a 30-year fixed rate mortgage under both programs with lower interest rates and more flexible credit requirements than some conventional loans. What makes FHA and USDA mortgages so different?  One important factor is who qualifies for each kind of loan. USDA mortgages are intended specifically for low to moderate income borrowers who are looking for affordable housing. USDA mortgages feature price limits and household income limits that will affect the borrower’s overall loan eligibility. FHA mortgages do not feature such restrictions and are for any financially qualified borrower regardless of the upper limit of their household income. USDA loans feature | more...

 
Is your credit ready for an FHA loan?

Mortgage Advice: Are You A First-Time Homebuyer?

Are you a first-time homebuyer? There are some issues you should know about when you start your journey toward owning a home. It is a very good idea to make a checklist before you start and add to it along the way. Start your process as organized as you possibly can-there are some important things to do before you ever fill out home loan paperwork and there are a lot of little details. Organizing, checklists, and goal-setting are all important skills you’ll develop or continue to develop during this process. Real Estate Agents: To Use Or Not To Use? A real estate agent can be a big help for a first-time home buyer but you do NOT have to use one if you don’t want to. This is a choice | more...

 
Is your credit ready for an FHA loan?

Choosing The Right Home Loan

Are you considering the purchase of a home? Among the options, you need to consider? The right kind of home loan for the right type of borrower. There are many loan programs out there with a variety of government-backed mortgages to choose from including USDA, FHA, and VA. There are also Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac loans. When exploring those home loan options, some borrowers want the lowest upfront costs possible, which makes sense when a borrower has other goals for that money, and making a down payment would hurt those plans. Some borrowers may need that money at another point, and seek out down payment assistance in the form of grants, loans, etc. One type of home loan that features a low down payment of 3% and allows down | more...

 
FHA loans

The FHA Home Loan Myth

There is a prevailing myth about FHA home loans that persists to this very day–the idea that FHA mortgages are ONLY for first-time home buyers and/or the economically disadvantaged. FHA home loans are thought to be exclusively for these borrowers, but that is definitely NOT TRUE. FHA home loans are for any financially qualified borrower with FICO scores over 500 (the FHA minimum, not your lender’s minimum standard). Some confuse the FHA loan program with the USDA Single-Family home loan program, which DOES have income limits and is aimed at borrowers who are in financial need. USDA mortgages have a no money down option for qualifying borrowers but the homes purchased with these mortgages must be in USDA-approved areas and feature household income caps. FHA mortgages, on the other hand, | more...