Archive for the ‘Real Estate Tips’ Category

Rent or Buy? How Do You Decide?

Tuesday, March 25th, 2008

Wheatworks Software announces the release of a new Free Rent or Buy Calculator for people considering the question of renting or buying real estate.

Deciding whether it’s better to rent a home or buy a home is a complicated decision. One fallacy that many succumb to is that home ownership is the cornerstone of the “American Dream”. It’s not.

The American Dream is related to life, liberty and the pursuit of happiness. A lot of happy people rent. They’re happy to let a landlord care for the property instead of enduring the stress of falling real estate prices and home maintenance.

Other important considerations include the local real estate market, how long you intend to live in the location, whether it’s a “buyer’s market” or a “seller’s market”, whether you have grown children or haven’t yet had children, and whether your concept of “home” requires ownership.

There are many things to consider when deciding whether to rent or buy a home. Some of these include whether or not you believe real estate is over-priced, the real estate market conditions where you wish to live, how long you’ll live in the home, and other considerations.

The most important consideration is probably financial. Wheatworks’ new Free Rent or Buy Calculator helps people look at the decision from a financial perspective.

Free Rent of Buy Calculator Screenshot

Learn more about the Free Rent of Buy Calculator.

Download the Free Rent of Buy Calculator.

Where You Live Matters

Tuesday, July 10th, 2007

I talked with a friend tonight. He recently moved to Florida to work as CEO of a non-profit organization. We talked about tying flies (Fly Tyer Magazine) and swapped fish stories. He fishes much more often than I do and so had more and better fish stories to tell.

Because he lives near water, he fishes more frequently. It’s much more convenient for him. Where you live matters.

Then we talked about housing.

We’re in similar houses in terms of age, size, and features. But that’s where the similarities end.

His monthly property taxes are 4 times my annual property taxes.

In fact, his monthly property taxes are twice my total monthly PITI!

Where you live matters!

Saving for a Down Payment Will Become Necessary Again

Monday, July 9th, 2007

The last few years have been an odd time for home buyers. Adjustable Rate Mortgages with little or nothing down have been the order of the day. However, ARMs have also hurt a lot of home buyers who can’t keep up with the rising payments as the mortgages adjust.

One thing most experts expect is the return of the down payment. So many risky loans have been made during the recent housing market boom, that lenders have been taking significant hits. As ARMs readjusted and home buyers couldn’t afford to make the larger monthly payments, lenders have been left holding the bag more often than they wish.

And because many mortgage loans made in the recent past required no down payment, lenders are being left holding the entire bag. And in many of these cases, because of the recent decline in appraised values, the bags the lenders have been left holding are larger than the value of the property.

Down payments offer lenders a form of protection when a loan goes into foreclosure. The lender at least has the down payment. Also, history seems to indicate that the more of their own cash a home buyer has in a home, the less likely they are to walk away from it.

The financial hurdle for young home buyers in the future won’t occur on the back side due to rising monthly payments they can’t afford to make. Rather, it will occur on the front side: the hurdle will be saving enough money for the down payment required to purchase a home.

Real Estate Calculator Suite, from Wheatworks Software, has two Down Payment Savings Calculators, that help you discover how long it will take to save a desired amount and how much you must save each month to save a certain amount by a particular deadline.

Learn more about Real Estate Calculator Suite and its Down Payment Savings Calculators at Real Estate Calculator Suite.

Sub-Prime Woes Will Be Replaced By Solid Lending Practices

Monday, April 2nd, 2007

We’ve all heard of the problems with sub-prime lending and the economic concerns these problems have generated across the country. A couple dozen sub-prime lenders have hit the skids and are going/have gone bankrupt. Some reporters and prognosticators are calling this initial sub-prime lending problem the “tip of the iceberg”.

These sub-prime lending issues will have an impact on mortgage lending. Fortunately, one change that will occur is that lenders will begin paying closer attention to borrowers’ ability to make their mortgage payments without going under. Foreclosures hurt all the parties involved.

Somewhere along the way, significantly sized groups of lenders and borrowers lost touch with basic financial realities. Home buyers cannot borrow more than they can repay and expect good to come of it. Nor can lenders provide more than a borrower can repay and expect a good result.

During the last few years many lenders have set aside the time-tested qualifying ratios to meet the appetites of home buyers whose eyes were bigger than their stomachs. No doc loans, adjustable rate mortgages and negatively amortizing loans were passed out by brokers and lenders who immediately passed these hot potato loans on to those holding mortgage backed securities.

This freedom to loan money without consequence for defaults is one of the reasons so many bad loans were made in the last few years.

I am much more likely to pay attention to whether you can repay me if you are actually borrowing my money than I would be if I’m merely the middleman collecting a “finder’s fee” or yield spread premium (YSP) for getting you to sign some papers.

Perhaps you remember when the standard housing ratio was 28 and the debt ratio was 36. And you may remember when buying a home required a home buyer to make a significant down payment. Many will remember when credit reports were pulled and reviewed with a fine-toothed comb by lenders.

Meeting the qualifying ratios, making a healthy down payment and having a good credit report will soon be back in financial fashion for home buyers. And this will be a very good thing.

During recent years, several people have asked why Real Estate Calculator Suite does not have an ARM calculator. It hasn’t needed it. During these strange times when many have used ARMs and NegARMs to buy houses, interest rates for fixed rate mortgages have been at historic lows!

Since 1997, using Real Estate Calculator Suite has been a good way calculate financial scenarios for home buyers using safe, fixed rate mortgages. The software’s default settings have always included the long-standard use of housing and debt ratios, qualifying based on income, and the expectation of a down payment.

Buying a home has always been serious business because it has financial consequences lasting long into your future. It’s good to know that standard financial values and risk-averse lending practices are coming into their own again.

10 Things ‘They’ Won’t Tell You

Wednesday, February 14th, 2007

Here are a couple interesting links about the ten things different real estate and lending professionals won’t tell you in your interactions with them. These are eye-opening, informative articles.

Here are 10 things your Realtor® won’t tell you

10 Things Your Morgage Lender Won’t Tell You

And from Yahoo!® Finance:

10 Things Your Real Estate Broker Won’t Tell You

Are these lists of unspoken realities fair to all the professionals involved in your real estate transactions? No. There are fully-honest professionals in every field.

But like the cliches about the used car industry, there’s enough funny business in the real estate and mortgage industry that lists like these are written and published in national media outlets.

The takeaway lesson: Look out for yourself. While they may be very friendly, the other folks (lender, agents, seller, etc.) in your real estate transaction have their own agenda. They’re looking out for themselves.

Important Consumer Handbook on Adjustable-Rate Mortgages

Sunday, February 4th, 2007

During the last few years interest rates have been low. Yet at the same time, a large number of home buyers have used adjustable rate mortgages to buy homes. Instead of locking in a fixed rate mortgage (FRM) for 5.5% to 6% for 30 years and knowing exactly what one’s payment will be for the entire term of the mortgage loan, home buyers have jumped on the teaser rates of as little as 1% offered on adjustable-rate mortgages (ARMs).

Unfortunately for those who jumped on the ARM bandwagon, interest rates are already low and are generally expected to adjust upward in the future. You see the ads for ARMs on TV like, “borrow $500,000 for only $1,600 per month!” The fine print scrolls so quickly and is so fine you don’t have a chance to read that in a year or two that $1,600 per month can jump to as much as $3,000 per month or more as the adjustable interest rate adjusts.

Before you sign for an adjustable-rate mortgage you MUST know the details. And one of the best places to get a healthy introduction to adjustable rate mortgages is the Federal Reserve Board’s website. The FRB’s “Consumer Handbook on Adjustable-Rate Mortgages” starts by explaining, “your monthly payments could change”, “your payments may not go down much, or at all”, “you could end up owning more money than you borrowed”, and “if you want to pay off your ARM early to avoid higher payments, you might have to pay a penalty.”

You can read the “Consumer Handbook on Adjustable Rate Mortgages” online or download a PDF version which you can print and read as you wish away from your computer.

If you or someone you know is considering an ARM, point them to the Consumer Handbook on Adjustable Rate Mortgages.

Home Inspection Form

Wednesday, December 27th, 2006

While many live in homes they feel are perfect for their families or their lifestyles, no one lives in a perfect home. Every home needs routine maintenance.

A few nights ago a clunking sound gave me the “opportunity” to move our clothes dryer away from the wall in the utility room. Before I pushed it back into place, I noticed a small gap around the dryer exhaust pipe where it entered the wall.

I ran to my local builder’s supply store and bought two cans of an expanding foam to fill the gap. (One can was enough.) It was an easy fix and worked so well I toured the rest of the house looking for gaps. I found another in an exterior closet where a hot water heater pipe enters an interior wall.

Filling the two gaps wasn’t much work and I felt like I had actually done something to improve my home a bit. As I thought about it afterwards, I realized I should have taken care of these little gaps earlier. But I had never noticed them. Why? I hadn’t done an organized inspection of my home.

The irony is that I have access to an excellent little Home Inspection Form available in Real Estate Calculator Suite. You can use it, too!

Download the trial version of Real Estate Calculator Suite. Click on the “Home Inspection Form” button on the menu page, print the Home Inspection Form, and start looking around your home.

Ending one year and beginning another is an excellent time to give your home a good inspection. There are so many different items to inspect that a Home Inspection Form can be a useful tool to remind you of the details. Also, by keeping the completed form in a file, you can compare this year’s home inspection to one you do later.

The Home Inspection Form in Real Estate Calculator Suite is only designed to help you conduct a quick review of your home. While you’ll not be performing a professional home inspection, you’ll probably notice things that usually escape your notice because you’re accustomed to them as they are.

Caution: Don’t do anything during your home inspection that requires the skill or abilities of a professional.

Tip: Before buying a home, it’s a great idea to have it inspected by a professional home inspector whom you hire.

Chances are good that (even in a well cared for home) you’ll find a few minor details that require attention. And remember, prevention is always better than a cure.

Check out the Home Inspection Form in Real Estate Calculator Suite … it’s a free download.

Preparing for a Mortgage Loan Servicing Transfer

Wednesday, November 29th, 2006

Washington Mutual has sold its mortgage servicing business to WellsFargo. The accounts of 1.3 million mortgage servicing customers will be soon transferred from WAMU to WellsFargo.

Whether it’s a letter from WAMU or another mortgage servicing company, chances are pretty good that your mortgage will be sold a time or two during the 20 or 30 years you make payments. When you get the letter (AKA “Notice of Servicing Transfer“), what should you do.

First, hang onto it and file it in the folder where you keep your other mortgage-related documents.

Second, document that status of your mortgage. If you’re one whose mortgage servicing is being transferred from WAMU to WellsFargo, login to your WAMU account and print the information you see in your web browser: Account Summary, Loan Details, Escrow Summary, Transaction History, Amortization Schedule and other pages that contain information about your current loan status.

Third, using the online Document Request feature or by calling your current mortgage servicer, request paper copies of the information you have printed. Ask for copies of all your loan documents including the HUD-1, the Escrow Statement, a Payoff Quote, and other documents the servicer has available. It’s better to have these and not need them, than need them and not have them.

Fourth, if your mortgage loan payment is being automatically drafted from a checking or other account, pay close attention to your account statements to ensure the payments occur as they should after the transfer. If you use a third-party service to make your loan payments (an online bill paying service for example), remember to provide the service with the new mortgage servicer’s payment information (account number, address, etc.).

Fifth, while you may have no say in whether your mortgage loan is transferred to another servicer, you do have some very clear consumer rights and protections related to your loan servicing. These are detailed in section 6 of the Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (AKA RESPA) which is Federal law. The US Department of Housing and Urban Development has an excellent web site with information about your RESPA-guaranteed rights.

Finally, if you have problems or experience any difficulties resulting from the transfer of your mortgage loan from one servicer to another, always communicate with your loan servicer in writing.

Avoid Shoddy Home Construction

Saturday, November 11th, 2006

In the rush to build fueled by the recent housing bubble, home builders churned out an incredible number of new homes. And the building still continues. If you scan the anecdotal reports blogged on the ‘net, you’ll read some tales of rushed housing projects, shoddy work and poor quality materials.

If you’re looking for a new home, pay attention to the quality of the construction. In my small part of the world, it’s obvious that homes built individually in the late 80’s are more solid than many built en masse in the last few years. In other words, don’t be afraid to consider buying a solid, older home. New isn’t necessarily better.

If you have a home built to your specs, make sure it’s built well. The best way to stay on top of the construction and ensure the builder or laborers aren’t cutting corners is to visit the home site as frequently as you can. Take your carpenter friend along a few times, too, to get his or her opinion. Don’t be afraid to be clear with the builder if you see things that are substandard. And don’t wait. Like writing software, the sooner a problem is corrected, the easier it is to fix.

ConsumerReports has an online article titled, ‘Housewrecked‘, that is a good place to begin learning about the problems that ‘plague many newer homes.’ The article includes a list of 9 warning signs to looks for when you’re looking at a home to buy. It’s good stuff.

Remember, it’s a ‘buyer beware’-world!

CustomCalcs Makes Home Buyers Think of You

Thursday, September 7th, 2006

Make home buyers think of you with a personally branded real estate software designed to promote you.

Putting your name, graphics and brand on a custom calculator turns a popular real estate and financial software product into a great promotional tool for you. Home Buyer’s Calculator Suite is a Windows®-based collection of financial calculators designed to assist home buyers with the financial considerations related to purchasing a new home.

Market yourself in an impressive and memorable way by giving away your fully branded mortgage calculator. It’s a remarkably useful tool for home buyers and it gives you an excellent way to promote yourself. Home buyers think when they use a real estate calculator … and when the calculator has your brand, they can’t help but think about you.

How do you promote yourself with a custom calculator? By giving them away. These personalized calculators are designed to be given away for promotional purposes. They are offered as downloads from real estate and mortgage web sites, banks give them away on CD-ROMs at teller windows, real estate agents offer them on diskettes at open houses, and financial authors have included their branded software with books.

Screen shots of custom branded financial software are available at http://www.customcalcs.com/gallery.htm. They show how CustomCalcs’ clients use their uniquely branded software to attract home buyers, build goodwill and promote their businesses. This software is an excellent promotional tool which gives you an advantage in promoting your real estate or origination business.

This custom branded real estate software clearly displays your picture, logo, graphics and contact information. The software includes links to your web site, internet services and email addresses. You can gain an edge in real estate and loan origination by promoting yourself while providing your clients a great way to play with their own numbers.

Because this custom branded software is designed to promote you, the distribution license provides broad distribution rights. The software distribution license provides for royalty free distribution to promote your business.

Learn more at www.CustomCalcs.com

About CustomCalcs.com

CustomCalcs(tm) is the promotional software division of Wheatworks Software, LLC. Since 1997, Wheatworks Software, LLC has created innovative financial calculators for consumers, professionals and companies in the real estate and financial services industries.

CONTACT INFORMATION:
Rick Wheat
Managing Partner
Wheatworks Software, LLC
www.CustomCalcs.com
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50 Year Mortgages Are Here!?!

Monday, April 17th, 2006

Reliant Home Warranty Corporation announced today that it will be the first to market a 50-year amortization for subprime borrowers in North America. They also announced a 5 year blended mortgage (3 years interest only and 2 year P&I) for a 53 year loan!

In today’s financial environment that offers so many odd, exotic mortgage options, I like to compare them to the good ol’ standard, a 30-year fixed rate mortgage. (Regardless of what you hear on tv or read in the newspaper, it’s hard to beat a 30-year FRM.)

Here’s how a 30 FRM compares to a 50 for the purchase of a $250,000 home.

Let’s start at HSH Associate’s web site to get today’s national average mortgage rate. It’s at 6.61% for a 30 year FRM. The monthly payment (principal and interest) required to amortize a $250,000 purchase at 6.61% for 30 years is $1,598.30. (The quick way to compute this is to use Loan Spread Calculator Pro!)

The monthly payment on same loan for 50 years is $1,430.04. Subtract this from the $1,598.30 and it looks like you’ll save $168.26 each month by getting a 50 year loan instead of a 30 year loan!

Multiply that $168.26 by 30 years of payments and it looks better. It sure looks like you’ll “save” $60,573.60 by getting the 50 year mortgage. The problem is that while you’ll save more than $60,000 in monthly payments, you’ll still have 20 year left on the 50 year loan!

And remember those 20 years require monthly payment sof $1,430.04. In other words, you will still owe $343,209.60 on your $250,000 house! In fact, during the 50 years of your loan, you’ll pay a total of more than $858,025 for your house.

The 50 year loan will cost you $282,637 than the 30 year and take 20 more years to purchase.

Doesn’t really make sense, does it? Use Real Estate Calculator Suite to check the numbers for yourself.

Buying a Home or Flipping a House?

Saturday, August 27th, 2005

Those who buy a home as a place to live, a place to raise a family or where they can settle comfortably for a period of time, aren’t usually concerned about the normal, expected fluctuations in home values.

And while it doesn’t make the news as much as the current talk about real estate bubbles and exotic mortgages, I think it’s still true that the American dream includes buying a home. Notice I didn’t write, “buying a house”. In my opinion, there’s a difference.

It feels good when your home appreciates in value. And when real estate prices slide, if your home depreciates in value, it may not feel good, but it doesn’t cause too much stress. You know the primary value of your home is that it is a home.

However, the real estate market has another side that can be stressful and financially dangerous. It’s called “flipping”. And in some places it seems like everyone is doing it and, in those areas, the real estate market is a little crazy.

Large numbers of houses are being bought and sold as investments — not as homes. If you’ve been to the book store, watched the news or read a newspaper, you’ve probably heard the phrase “house flipping”. It’s the act of buying a house and then selling it for more than it cost the buyer. House flipping is not about home ownership. It’s about turning a quick buck and in many markets involves a good bit of speculation.

If a house flipper doesn’t time it right, he or she can face significant financial loss. Someone is always the last to buy a house before the market slides. It’s important for house flippers to remember the old phrase, “what goes up must come down,” because it happens to house prices.

Imagine this scenario: Flipper “A” buys a house (an “investment property”) for $200,000 and sells it to flipper “B” for $220,000. “A” makes a nice profit. It’s probably not as much as he thinks (more about this in a future post), but a profit nonetheless.

Next, imagine that flipper “B” then sells to flipper “C” for $245,000. “B” makes a profit.

What goes up must come down. Let’s assume the market turns downward after flipper “C” buys and prices begin declining. Flipper “C” can’t find a buyer for the $260,000 he expected. Time passes and “C” drops the price to $250,000. “C” is beginning to fret because after closing costs and transaction fees, there’s not much profit between $250,000 and $245,000.

Let’s imagine in this contrived scenario that prices continue sliding until they return to “normal”. If that happens, Flipper “C” is stuck with a heavy loss because his investment property is now valued at $205,000 or $40,000 less than he paid. It happens.

Two Lessons: 1) Be careful flipping in a market that is already over-valued. And 2) if you’re a home buyer in a market that seems too pricey, the path of patience is probably worth considering.

Buying a New Home is Not Always a Good Idea

Monday, August 8th, 2005

People get excited about buying a new house for a lot of different reasons. For those buying their first home, the reason for excitement is obvious. For others who buy for “investment purposes” the thought of future returns can generate excitement about future prospects. Some buy a new home because their family has grown in size and they need additional space. Others buy a new home after a windfall and enjoy the excitement of a more expensive residence.

However, while buying a new home is exciting, there are also good reasons some people should NOT buy a new home. You hear it said that buying a new home is a person’s most significant financial decision. It certainly can be. A new home is usually acquired with a mortgage loan which must be repaid over an extended period of time (whether it’s convenient or not). Also, a new home will have some significant closing costs which include everything from a downpayment to prepaid homeowners insurance.

So how does one know if buying a new home might be a bad idea? It’s not always obvious (especially if emotions are high), but here are three reasons buying a new home might be a bad idea.

1. Buying a new home might be a bad idea if you can only do it with exotic financing your parents haven’t heard of before. If you can only purchase your home by squeeking into it with an interest only mortgage, it’s probably not a good idea. Your monthly payment will increase — perhaps by devastating amounts.

There are other odd-ball financing options that you not use without a clear-minded consideration of your future. Interest rates are low on conventional, fixed-rate mortgages (FRM) which allow you to know what your monthly payment will be decades into the future. Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs) are unpredictable except for one thing: they will increase your monthly payment in the future.

2. Buying a new home may not be a good idea if you know you will be moving soon. You’ll lose all those closing costs that you pay to buy a new home.

3. Many believe buying a new home today in some “hot” real estate markets is a bad idea. In markets where the real estate prices have risen irrationally in recent years and months, many experts expect a “correction”, or a return to more reasonable home prices. If this happens, those who have bought a new home at a frothy price will regret it when home prices return to normal levels. In fact, after a correction in home prices, some recent home buyers will owe more for their new home than they could recoup by selling it. Finance guys call this “getting upside down” and it’s not a good thing.

Remember, it’s easy to get excited about buying a new home, but emotions are transient. Buying a new home is an important decision which should be based upon clear-headed thinking about your current and future financial situation — and not raw emotion. Look out for yourself!

“Creative Financing” May Hurt in the Future

Thursday, June 16th, 2005

At the same time mortgage interest rates for conventional loans are at historic lows, more than half of all mortgage loans are interest-only (IO) and/or adjustable rate mortgages (ARM). On the face of it, that doesn’t make a lot of sense.

Here’s what may be going on and if it is, it doesn’t bode well for the future.

An interest-only loan is one that allows a borrower to pay only the interest portion of the amortized loan for a period of time. However, IO loans are “interest only” for only an initial period of time. After that, the full monthly payment is due.

Interest-only loans encourage people to buy more house than they can afford with the hope that their income will increase before the fully payment of principal and interest is due. Others use IO loans to purchase a home with the intention of selling it before the full payment is due.

If one’s income increases to cover the full payment or one sells the home before the full payment is due, there’s probably little cause for concern. However, Interest-Only and adjustable rate mortgages still seem like risky gambles … especially when conventional rates are so low.

Another problem waiting in the future for those with interest-only mortgages is that many have an adjustable interest rate when the full payment begins. If interest rates rise during the next 3-5 years (as many believe will happen), those with IO loans will face a double-whammy: Full payments of principal and interest AND a rising interest rate. That will hurt!

While a conventional 30 year mortgage may not be as fun to brag about around the watercooler and doesn’t sound nearly as exciting as being able say, “I’m using some creative financing,” there’s a lot of wisdom in not buying more home than one can afford now AND in the future.

Takeaway Point: Don’t let an aggressive lender sweet talk you into creatively financing your home.

40 Year Mortgage?

Monday, June 6th, 2005

FannieMae announced it is extending the maximum loan term from 30 to 40 years effective June 1, 2005. The 40 year term will be available on Fixed-Rate Mortgages and on Hybrid Adjustable-Rate Mortgages. Learn more information about FannieMae 40-Year Mortgage Solutions.

So how does a 40 year mortgage compare to a 30 year? The savings in monthly payments isn’t enough to be exciting and the difference in the total paid is large enough to make one think twice.

Let’s start with the typical 30 year, fixed rate mortgage scenario.

If you borrow $250,000 for 30 years at 5.75%, your monthly payment of principal and interest will be $1,458.93. Over the 30 years of your mortgage loan, you will repay the $250,000 principal and $275,215.57 in interest payments for a total of $525,215.57.

Now, consider the 40 year fixed rate mortgage.

Borrow the same $250,000 for 40 years at 6% and your monthly payment of principal and interest will be $1,375.53. You will save $83.40 per month for 30 years for a total saving during the first 30 years of your 40 year mortgage of $30,024. It sounds good, but remember, this is a 40 year mortgage. You still have 10 years remaining.

Over the 40 years of your mortgage you will repay the $250,000 principal and will pay a total of $410,256.37 in interest payments for a total of (catch your breath) $660,256.37!

In other words, at the beginning of the 31st year, you will still owe $165,063.60.

So what’s so appealing about a 40 year mortgage? Lower monthly payments. In the same way that a 30 year mortgage makes it easier for home buyers to purchase a home than a 20 year mortgage, a 40 year mortgage makes a new home more affordable than a 30 year.

Those last ten years, though … Ouch!

(Where did all these numbers come from? Real Estate Calculator Suite, of course.

Questions for First-time Homebuyers

Sunday, May 22nd, 2005

While the 16 calculators in Real Estate Calculator Suite answer many of the financial questions that arise when purchasing or selling a home or property, most of homebuyers have much broader questions. HUD, The U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, provides an excellent web site which provides more information than most people even knew was available about buying real estate.

In particular, “Common Questions from First-Time Homebuyers” answers 16 very common questions about buying a home at: http://www.hud.gov/buying/comq.cfm

And if you need more answers, don’t miss HUD’s “100 Questions and Answers About Buying a New Home.” It’s at: http://www.hud.gov/offices/hsg/sfh/buying/buyhm.cfm

This is excellent material straight from the agency that regulates mortgage lending and ensures that borrowers are protected.

Housing Ratio and Debt Ratio

Saturday, November 27th, 2004

Housing Ratio and Debt Ratio are not as complicated as they sound. They are simply percentages of your monthly income.

The Housing Ratio (typically 28) is the percentage of your income a lender will allow you to use for housing expenses. If your gross monthly income is $5,000 and the Housing Ratio is 28, then the lender will allow you 28% of the $5,000 for housing expenses when you qualify for a mortgage loan. 28% of $5,000 is $1,400.

The Debt Ratio (typically 36) is the percentage of your income a lender will allow for long term debt. Your housing expenses are long term debt, but all of your other loans and credit accounts that won’t be paid off within 10 months are considered long term debt, too. Using the gross monthly income of $5,000 mentioned above and a Debt Ratio of 36, your maximum monthly debt allowance is $1,800.

To continue this Debt Ratio example, if you have minimum monthly payments due of $900 for a couple of cars and a credit cards, you’ll have to subtract them from the $1,800 leaving only $900 for your monthly housing payment. Subtract about 10% from this for insurance and taxes and you qualify for a loan with a monthly payment (principal and interest) of $810.00.

If you want to explore your particular financial situation in terms of your Housing Ratio and Debt Ratio, the Mortgage Qualification calculator in Real Estate Calculator Suite, a Windows(r)-based collection of real estate calculators.

Visit Inman News for Real Estate News

Thursday, November 18th, 2004

Among the millions of web sites on the ‘net, some really stand out as sources of quality information. One that sparkles with real estate news is Inman News at: www.inman.com

Started in 1993 by Bradley Inman, Inman News has become the leading source of real estate news for consumers and professionals. If you have any interest in the world of real estate, www.inman.com is the site you want to explore.

And among real estate blogs, the Inman Blog is excellent, fresh and comprehensive. You’ll find it at: www.inman.com/blogger/bradinman.aspx


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