FHA Mortgages Help Home Buyer’s With Past Credit Problems

Posted by Carl Pruitt on April 11th, 2008 filed in FHA Mortgage Tips

by Carl Pruitt

If you are thinking about buying a home, but you have had credit problems, recent changes in the FHA loan guidelines may solve your problem. FHA loans have been around a long time, but the guidelines have changed so much in the several years that your real estate agent and the home seller you are trying to work with probably won’t recognize the program.

The initials ”FHA” stand for Federal Housing Administration. The FHA is a part of the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). When you see HUD homes for sale, they are foreclosed homes that were financed with mortgages guaranteed by FHA.

The program was established in 1934 as part of the National Housing Act with the mission to expand credit and home ownership opportunities for borrowers who may have had credit problems, have a limited credit history, or whose bills take up a higher percentage of their total income than typically allowed on conventional loans.

The FHA program accomplishes this goal by providing insurance which will pay off the loan if the borrower defaults. Because of the guarantee of FHA mortgage insurance, the lender can take more risk approving mortgages for borrowers who don’t fit into conventional loan programs.

FHA insured mortgage guidelines were designed to accommodate the situations faced by first time home buyers, but any borrower without an outstanding FHA loan guarantee is eligible to use FHA to purchase or refinance. The standard FHA program is not for purchasing non-owner occupied investment property.

Many real estate agents and sellers are hesitant to recommend that anyone use an FHA loan because they have heard horror stories about the red tape involved. In the past, the FHA guidelines were much stricter on the property and caused the seller to have to pay higher fees than a conventional loan. Using an FHA insured loan often caused the closing to have to be delayed while arguing over seemingly silly red tape issues. However, this red tape has been almost completely unraveled over the last couple of years.

If you have an agent or seller who is reluctant to accept an offer involving FHA financing, here are some of the benefits you can give them:

1. Low down payment requirements. The required down payment is typically 3% or less of the sales price. This down payment can come entirely from gift funds from a family member or a non-profit foundation.

2. The seller can pay up to 6% of the total sales price for closing costs and prepaid expenses. This allows a buyer to negotiate an agreement which results in having to bring absolutely no cash to the closing!

3. FHA requires no financial reserves at the time of loan approval. A borrower with no savings, and no money in checking will still meet the requirements.

4. FHA has reformed the appraisal guidelines to get rid of the need for minor repairs that must be completed prior to closing. HUD now allows as-is appraisals. Expensive termite, well and septic inspections are no longer automatically required before closing. Such requirements were the type problems that often delayed closings and angered home sellers in the past.

5. No FHA required minimum credit score. HUD’s automated underwriting system named FHA Total Scorecard relieves borrowers of the need to write detailed credit explanations, pay off old collection accounts, or meet an arbitrary debt to income ratio.

6. If the automated underwriting system does not approve your loan, the underwriter is given discretion to use common sense in the decision to approve the loan manually. The underwriter often is not given such discretion on conventional loans.

8. No prepayment penalties. Many loans for borrowers with credit problems have significant penalties for paying the loan off within the first 3-5 years. These penalties prevent refinancing for a lower rate or for debt consolidation. FHA loans have no prepayment penalties. As a matter of fact, FHA loans allow for a program called streamlined refinancing. As long as you make your mortgage payments on time, you can refinance if rates go down without having to produce all of your qualifying documentation again.

FHA loans provide extensive benefits for both buyers and home sellers. There would be many fewer potential buyers in the market without the program. FHA allows borrowers with past credit difficulties to get the same mortgage rates as perfect credit borrowers with no money out of pocket to buy the home.

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