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Articles Tagged With: FHA Mortgage

FHA Mortgage Loan

What Can I Buy With An FHA Loan?

What is possible with an FHA home loan? If you don’t know all your options, you might be surprised to learn you can use an FHA mortgage to buy a house with as many as four living units, manufactured home or modular home, and even a condominium unit. There are some things you cannot use an FHA mortgage to buy, we’ll examine some housing types below: Suburban Houses, Duplexes, And Townhomes FHA loans can be used to buy a one-to-four unit property in a typical neighborhood that is primarily residential and a house where you plan to live as your home address. A duplex or townhome is eligible for an FHA mortgage if the property meets minimum standards, the same as a single-bedroom home or a condo. Repo Homes And | more...

 
FHA Loan

Are You Preparing For An FHA Mortgage?

Getting your credit ready for a home loan application is one of the most important steps in the mortgage planning process. Do you know how to get your credit prepared before the lender pulls your reports and reviews your FICO scores? The first key to doing this right is time. Give yourself at least a year to save and plan for your mortgage. This also gives you enough time to work on your credit and lower the amount of monthly debt you carry. Lowering the balances on your credit cards not only improves your debt ratio, it also potentially enhances your credit card utilization ratio, too. A year of on-time, every time payments for all financial obligations is strongly recommended. This is the most basic credit repair advice you’ll find | more...

 
FHA Home Loan

FHA Manufactured Home Loans: Questions And Answers

FHA home loan options include loans for manufactured housing, modular homes, and what some still refer to as “mobile homes”.  FHA home loan rules for manufactured housing include age and foundation requirements as well as minimum sizes. If you aren’t sure how to proceed when trying to apply for a manufactured home loan, here are some common questions asked about these types of FHA mortgages. Are FHA Manufactured Home Loans The Same As FHA 203(b) Mortgages? Not exactly. The FHA loan program allows the purchase of a modular home or a manufactured home that is not on a permanent foundation at the time of creation. The manufactured home must be placed on a permanent foundation as a condition of loan approval and the timing of this must be agreeable to | more...

 
Home Loan

Planning An FHA Mortgage

When you decide to buy a home, you don’t just walk out and make an offer on a home. There is a planning and saving stage, a house hunting stage, and an application stage of the home buying process.  That’s a bit of an oversimplification of how it works, but even as such it shows that there’s a lot to buying a home–the more planning you can do, the better off you will be. One important issue related to the planning stage of the home loan process involves your budget. Figuring out how much home loan you can afford isn’t just about how your finances look today.  You will need to look to the future in terms of your job, your income, any raises or promotions that might affect how | more...

 
FHA Loans

The FHA Borrower’s “Secret Weapon” For Closing Costs

Do you know about one of the secrets of managing your closing costs for an FHA home loan? We’re talking specifically about seller contributions to your closing costs for your FHA purchase loan–what the seller is permitted to contribute under the rules for your FHA mortgage. Buying a home requires more cash than some borrowers expect–at first. There are appraisals and home inspections to pay for, sometimes a pest inspection may be needed, and you may also have to pay or anticipate paying some taxes, compliance inspection fees, and more. Negotiating with the seller to pay a portion of your closing costs is (believe it or not) fairly common in the mortgage industry.  Individual sellers and individual house hunters alike may need some time to get used to this idea | more...

 
FHA home loans

FHA Mortgage Insurance: What You Need To Know

When you apply for an FHA mortgage, you are required to have mortgage insurance. This comes in the form of an FHA Up-Front Mortgage Insurance Premium which is paid at closing time in cash or financed into the FHA loan amount. You can do one or the other, but you can’t partially finance this premium. That’s the “up front” part. FHA loans require an annual premium paid in monthly installments. This is called a Mortgage Insurance Premium and is not the same as conventional Private Mortgage Insurance.  That is required by conventional lenders for certain mortgages without a 20% down payment or better. Private mortgage insurance is known by the acronym PMI, and some borrowers (even some lenders) use MIP and PMI interchangeably even though they aren’t the same thing. | more...

 
FHA mortgage

Getting Your Credit Ready For A Mortgage

FHA mortgages generally have more forgiving credit score requirements than some of their conventional counterparts.  If you are thinking of applying for a mortgage you definitely want to start reviewing your credit far in advance of the application–that’s advice we give out here on a regular basis and is fairly “Home Loans 101” type information.  Newcomers quickly learn that starting work on their credit as early as possible is the best move they can make in the planning stages of the loan. But what isn’t so entry-level advice? What some credit reporting agencies advise on managing your credit with or without a home loan to plan for. The implications of this advice are basically that credit is not a “set and forget” type of issue; for best results, you’ll want | more...

 
FHA Home Loan

Do You Need To Fix Your Credit Before You Buy A Home?

There are plenty of third parties who promise to fix your credit for you, for a price. But did you know you can do your own type of credit repair without having to pay or coordinate with anyone else?  You should definitely try working on your own credit before you try to pay someone else to do it for you. But how is it done? The first thing to remember is that you need TIME. Don’t assume you can fix your credit scores and loan repayment history while you’re working with your loan officer to get your FHA mortgage application approved.  You will need to start working on your credit far earlier than that, as it takes time for credit reports to notice the work you’re putting in (on-time payments, | more...

 
FHA Loans

FHA Home Loans And Your Downpayment

There are good reasons to put more money down on a low-down-payment mortgage like an FHA home loan. There are also important reasons why someone might not be able to pay as much upfront on the home loan as they would like. What are the advantages and disadvantages of a larger downpayment? The biggest disadvantage for some is the basic financial outlay of cash. Financial circumstances don’t permit all buyers to pay a lot out of pocket for their home loans. In such cases, downpayment assistance programs offered by state or local agencies can help those who qualify. For those who can afford to pay more upfront? The most obvious, Home Loans 101-type advice is that a bigger downpayment lowers your interest costs over the lifetime of the loan because | more...

 
FHA Home Loans

Buying A Condo Unit With An FHA Loan

The FHA Single-Family Home Loan program offers condominium loans in addition to its other single-family home loan options. This surprises a small number of house hunters who wrongly assume that FHA home loans are need-based loans or that condo units don’t qualify for an FHA mortgage. They do. But there are some important things to know about the FHA Condominium Loan option–the first is that since 2019, there have been different rules about how condo loans are processed. Once upon a time you could not get an FHA condo loan if the condominium project was not on or added to the list of FHA-approved projects. Now, you may be allowed to buy a condo unit in a project that is NOT on the FHA’s list provided that the condo unit | more...