first time home buyer – owner loan

March 19, 2009

Good rate for first time home buyer?

tpattcredit asked:


I got a first time home buyer qualification with my bank at a rate of 7.5%. Our home will be between 110,000 and 120,000 and will be new. Is this a good rate for a first time buyer? It’s a 0 down loan also which is mainly what we need.

Claude

Do I qualify as first time home buyer?

tangting_01 asked:


I sold my old place on 5/17/06 and bought a new one this year on 5/23/09.
Do I qualify as first time home buyer since I didn’t own a house for 3 years?

Javier

March 17, 2009

It’s a Real Estate Boom for First Time Home Buyers

Roy Landers asked:


The subprime mortgage real estate fiasco has created a glut of residential real estate in the real estate market. Foreclosures are on the rise and it doesn’t look like the end is in sight for at least another year. Thousands of home owners are losing their homes because adjustable mortgage rates have adjusted upward and caused increases of monthly mortgage payments so high that the affected home owners just can’t make the payments. It is inevitable, under these circumstances that many homes go into foreclosure and banks have to take them back.

While it is unfortunate that many home owners are losing their homes, the opposite and upside effect is that the real estate market is now a boom for the first time home buyer.

Mortgage interest rates are still low and banks and real estate lending institutions have 30-40 year fixed loans for home buyers. With home values in many areas around the country, such as California, plummeting anywhere from 30-50 percent of what they were a year ago, the market is wide open for buyers who have never owed a home and would like to do so now.

Lending institutions and sellers are very motivated now and are readily lending their ears to home buyers saying “lets make a deal” and deal they will. Here are some of the innovative and sensible ways home buyers can now acquire a home of their own when they are armed with some real estate homebuyer education.

1. Use government grants and loans for down payment assistance.

The federal government in 2003 established the American Dream Down Payment Act. This federal law has allocated $200 Million a year since 2003 to assist with arranging down payments for first time home buyers. This is a good indication of just how serious the government is about helping Americans make the American dream of home ownership come true.

Fannie Mae, one of the many federally supported programs for home buyers has programs such as the MyCommunity Fixed Rate Mortgage. This unique program is ideally suited for the first time home buyer. It provides for low down payment, high loan to value with broad flexibility, including nontraditional credit considerations allowing for the buyer to qualify for the loan. It also has special financial options to serve public servant professions such as teachers, police officers, firefighters and health care workers, and people with disabilities.100% financing is available with 30-40 year fixed rates. Check out the details at http://www.efannie.com.

These funds, in addition to other government funding sources, are made available through federal, state and local government agencies that provide down payment assistance to their citizens on a case by case basis.

Every major city and county has one of these programs. One need only exercise a little initiative and these funds can be acquired. Contact your local housing authority, city managers office or county administration department to find out about them and how to apply.

2. Use non-profit agency down payment assistance

Another little known, but long existing opportunity for first time home buyers to acquire help with down payment assistance is the numerous numbers of non-profit agencies around the country that provide free down payment assistance to home buyers. The Community Reinvestment Act of 1977, enacted by Congress in 1977 and revised in 1995, requires banks located within identified communities to make loans and reinvest the depositors’ deposits within that community.

For decades now and continuing into the future banks have been making huge amounts of funds available to invest in targeted communities. However, the availability of the funds was not publicized in a significant way and many people did not and still do not know about these funds. Many non-profit agencies became aware that they could help in the community revitalization effort by creating a means whereby the banks could channel the funds through various home assistance programs that non-profits created. The non-profits that specialize in this type of program have grown over the years. Some are very large and are nation wide such as the Nehemiah Corporation – www.nehemiahcorp.org.

They get funding from the banks via the Community Reinvestment Act and other funding sources and then provide for down payment assistance and other housing assistance to persons desiring to own a home.

One of the high points of these programs is that the funding is often times not limited to first time home buyers and certainly is not limited to only low income home buyers. This creates yet another source of down payment assistance for the prospective home buyer. Given the numerous avenues of funding to assist in buying a home and the present market swing in favor of home buyers, buyers are now firmly in the driver’s seat.



Kim

March 15, 2009

Can we get first time home buyer tax credit?

Joey E asked:


Me and my wife are planning to purchasing a home (we are first time home buyers) from my brother-in-law’s brother. Part of the purchase will be made using some money my dad has set aside for me. The money that will be used is not an inheritance because my dad is still living.
It is my brother in law’s brother. Not my wife’s brother.

Justin

March 13, 2009

Will A New President Help The First Time Home Buyer?

Jennifer Stromsteen asked:


According to a survey conducted by Harris Interactive, commissioned by Move, Inc. and released today, about 44 percent of all home buyers feel that the housing market will improve with a new President taking office. At the same time the majority of home buyers are nervous about the housing market and report barriers between them and becoming a home owner. These barriers are the cost of down payments, annual incomes and a lack of confidence in today’s economy to name just a few mentioned. Despite all, there is an underlying demand for homes which is healthy.

This same survey reports that about 80 percent of all renters plan at some point to become home owners, nearly half of them plan on doing so within the next five years. Space, life changes such as family and increasing rent charges are a few of the reasons given for wanting to become home owners. What these findings show is that despite the subprime crisis and difficulties in economy and new mortgage rules the underlying demand for housing remains strong. People still long to have a home of their own; however, their thoughts and priorities regarding the home and neighborhood are changing with today’s changing world.

Most potential home buyers are willing to make sacrifices in their lives to save money and earn extra income to obtain down payments. Certain neighborhood features and home amenities are willingly overlooked to be able to buy a home in the current market. A number of these choices reflect changing values as well as a growing concern of the environment, community features and the rising cost of fuel. The finings in the survey demonstrate that despite difficulties faced buy first time home buyers they are willing to do what it takes to become home owners. It shows strength and a determination. This is great news to the real estate industry that pays attention to consumer perceptions and behaviors. This survey can be used for feedback that will enable them to identify ways to enhance the search experience to meet the needs of today’s consumers who will be the first time home buyers of tomorrow.

First time home buyers see better things on the horizon coming with the new President coming into office in January 2009. Today’s falling economy makes it difficult in saving for a down payment and is putting off new home owners until things are able to pick up. A promise of a new President nearly always brings promises and hopes for a change in what is currently happening in the jobs situation and in the economy as a whole. With an economy that is already facing challenges this hope is heightened and the changes are anticipated with baited breath.



Micheal

Credit Card Advice for First Time Home Buyers

Greg Roy asked:


In our modern world credit cards have become virtually a necessity. Consumers cannot book an airline flight without a credit card. Nor can they rent a vehicle without one. And while it is possible to make purchases online without a credit card, it is time-consuming and a hassle.

While the vast majority of the population has at least one credit card, it certainly is not the vast majority that use credit cards to their advantage. Like prescription medication, credit cards can be very beneficial. But also like prescription drugs, credit cards can bring great harm to the user when abused.

There are many predatory sharks swimming in the credit card oceans. It is critical for first time home buyers to apply sound, savvy financial management skills in their use of credit card accounts. Your very ability to qualify for a mortgage on your first home will depend upon it.

Here are some simple-to-understand but difficult-to-follow guidelines for the best use of credit cards. The word best in this instance means most financially prudent, or the most beneficial to your overall financial health in the short, medium and long term.

1. Don’t use credit cards to finance the purchase of consumer toys. While some credit cards provide an interest rate that is reasonable, most don’t. Interest can be very, very costly. The bottom line is that if you don’t have the money to purchase that latest electronic device that you want, you shouldn’t charge it on your credit card. Doing so can be very habit forming, and will burden you with excessive debt. The process of qualifying for a home mortgage involves meeting certain debt to income ratios. The less credit card debt that you have, the more easily you will be able to meet those ratios.

2. Pay off your entire credit card balance every month. This is so important and so beneficial, yet so few people do it. The ones that do are the ones that have mastered financial self-discipline and reap a lifetime of rewards. Have you ever seen car dealerships advertise zero-interest loans on certain vehicles. While the offers are valid, most people don’t have a credit score high enough to qualify for the teaser rates. And that’s what they are: teaser rates. You may not qualify for the zero-interest deal, but even if you don’t, the dealer got you into the showroom to find out. And that is the biggest hurdle in selling you a new car. However, if you do pay off your credit card balances every month, you will likely develop that very high credit score. Not only will you qualify for the best rates on your car financing, you’ll also qualify for the best rates on your home financing. It’s win/win in all cases.

3. Get your credit card portfolio established, then leave it be. There are very good reasons for this. Your credit score will be negatively impacted by constantly changing credit card accounts. Long-term stability is rewarded by the credit risk formulas. Who would you rather lend to, a person who has had the same credit card account for the past 10 years and has always made payments on time, or a person who opens and closes a different credit card account every month? Which person do you think is more likely to pay you back?

Additionally, the credit risk formulas penalize people for too many credit checks in their file. A person who is applying for a lot of credit is seen as desperate for credit. That is not helpful. When banks loan money, it is like loaning an umbrella on a sunny day. When it clouds up and begins to look like rain, banks will ask for their umbrella back. That’s just the way it is. Banks are most eager to make safe loans, and those loans would go to people who are flush with cash and don’t need a loan. The people who could be considered “dirt-poor” and penniless are the ones least likely to be able to obtain a loan. To develop a high credit score, you don’t want to be projecting the image you are desperate for credit. And you’ll need a high credit score to help you qualify for that mortgage on your first home.

The bottom line: use credit cards wisely. If you want to qualify for a mortgage to buy your first home, don’t use credit cards to buy things that you cannot afford to buy. Learn to make credit cards a tool for furthering you towards your financial goals. Fail to do that and you’ll likely end up a tool for the credit card companies to make outrageous profits for their upcoming quarterly report.



Javier
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