first time home buyer – owner loan

May 17, 2009

Almost Free Grants for First Time Home Buyers

Maria Mbura asked:


Your dream of owning a home may soon come true if you are a first time home buyer.

You can take advantage of the many government grants for first time home buyers that are available to assist low income and first time home buyers get their first home.

These are specific government grants which are made to first time home buyers to provide them with part of the financial assistance needed for the initial down payments and acquisition costs of a new home.

Depending on the value of your property you could find that your down payment and closing costs can be paid up with this free money.

These funds are almost free with no interest or monthly payments to be made.They remain in the background as a second mortgage only to be repaid on the selling of the house. The government has also been known to forgive the loan in many cases after you reside in the house for 30 years.

Every state has a customized policy for granting such money. One needs to do an elaborate research work before applying for such grants.

Some of these grants assist specific groups for example the Federal Department of Veterans Affairs offers help for military personnel and veterans.

So if you’re a first-time home buyer or your income is low, look online for financing that is undertaken through your local or state board of housing.

Don’t miss this opportunity to own a house by taking advantage of the almost free government grants for first time home buyers.



Terri

May 15, 2009

First Time Home Buyer

gloconseo asked:


It’s not uncommon for a first time home buyer to say to me, “Gosh, just last week I called you about buying a home and now I’m in escrow! How did this happen so fast?”

The answer is it didn’t. First-time home buyers start the search long before most even realize it.

Here’s what you can expect from your home shopping experience.

Figuring Out the Benefits

You should buy a home. That’s what you’ve been hearing from friends and family, right? So, by now you have likely already weighed the benefits and decided that home ownership was the best decision for you. That’s a major hurdle now passed. You are focused and certain. Good.

Defining Search Parameters

Almost 80% of all home searches today begin on the Internet. With just a few clicks of the mouse, home buyers can search through hundreds of online listings, view virtual tours, and sort through dozens of photographs and aerial shots of neighborhoods and homes. You’ve probably defined your goals and have a pretty good idea of the type of home and neighborhood you want. By the time you reach your real estate agent’s office, you are halfway to home ownership.

How Long Should It Take to Find What You Want?

In seller’s markets, often I show only one home. After all, how many homes does one family need? A few buyers will look for years, but buyers who do that aren’t motivated. A motivated buyer will find a home within two weeks. Most of my buyers find a home within two days.

Good real estate agents will listen to your wants and needs and arrange to show only those homes that fit your particular parameters. Your agent should preview homes before showing them to you as well.

How Many Homes Will You See?

Studies show that the your memory dramatically improves after consumption of carbs and slows upon consuming sugar. So, layoff the soft drinks and have a hearty meal of carbs before venturing out to tour homes. The average number of homes that I show to a buyer in one day is seven. Any more than that, and the brain is on overload. Therefore, don’t expect to see 20 or 30 homes; although it’s physically possible to do so, you probably will not remember specific details about any of them.

The “Red Shoes” Experience

Women will relate to this. Say, you need a new pair of red shoes. You go to the mall. At the first shoe store, you find a fabulous pair of red shoes. You try them on. They fit perfectly. They are glamorous. Priced right, too. Do you buy them? Of course not! You go to every other store in the mall trying on red shoes until you are ready to drop from exhaustion. Then you return to the first store and buy those red shoes. Do not shop for a home this way. When you find the perfect home, buy it.

How to Rate Inventory

* Bring a digital camera and begin each series of photos with a close-up of the house number to identify where each group of home photos start and end.

* Take copious notes of unusual features, colors and design elements.

* Pay attention to the home’s surroundings. What is next door? Do 2-story homes tower over your single story?

* Do you like the location? Is it near a park or a power plant?

* Immediately after leaving, rate each home on a scale of 1 to 10, with 10 being the highest.

View Top Choices a Second Time

After touring homes for a few days, you will probably instinctively know which one or two homes you would like to buy. Ask to see them again. You will see them with different eyes and notice elements that were overlooked the first go-around.

At this point, your agent should call the listing agents to find out more about the sellers’ motivation and to double-check that an offer hasn’t come in, making sure these homes are still available to purchase.

Making the Selection

I’ll let you in on a little secret. I generally know which home a buyer is going to choose, and I suspect most other agents operate the same way. It’s an intuition. But I make it a practice not to steer buyers, and I insist that buyers choose the home without interference from me. It’s not my choice to make.

Real estate agents are required, however, to point out defects and should help buyers feel confident that the home selected meets the buyer’s search parameters.



Erica

May 1, 2009

First Time Home Buyers

Esperanza Creeger asked:


In 1994, we set our sights on a house located in a pleasant, quiet suburban enclave called Bixby Knolls in Long Beach, CA.  Although we could barely afford the home’s $230,000 purchase price – a fortune for us at the time – it was a small, neat, modest home situated in a good neighborhood with appreciation potential.  So, we dove into the home buying market.  It was a perfectly manageable house located in a perfectly acceptable neighborhood.

                                                           

We did not have a clue at the time that home prices would slowly begin to climb and climb and climb thanks to an extended period of historically low interest rates. Low interest rates spurred consumer demand, which soon grew to overwhelming consumer demand for homes to call their own.  Consequently, home prices reached stratospheric levels in our neighborhood as well as in most major metropolitan markets (Texas, Oklahoma, the Dakotas and a few other affordable markets being the exception). 

Ten years later, in the middle of April 2004, a devastatingly tragic electrical fire took the lives of our beloved Italian Greyhounds, Ben and Rusty.  Although we rebuilt our home better than it was before, it was still a sad time for us; we ultimately sold our first, “first home”.  The offers made for our modest 1,600 square foot home were obscene – obscene amounts, that is.  It was undeniably the most profitable yet most heartbreaking investment of our lives.

In retrospect, recalling the loan application process and qualifying for the mortgage in order to buy our perfect little house, well, we recollect that process was NOT so perfect. 

In 1994, when we were struggling to qualify for the mortgage, we were not aware of available first time home buyer programs created for folks of low to moderate income.

Furthermore, our loan officer did not introduce us to these options, either because he was as clueless as we were about the existence of such programs or, the bank with whom he was employed at the time elected not to participate in specialty programs for first time home buyers. 

Neither we nor our loan officer had any idea the city of Long Beach, county of Los Angeles and yes, even the State of California all had available specialty loan programs designed specifically for folks like us: first time home buyers, short on cash for a 20%, 10% or even 5% down payment, not to mention funds to cover closing costs. 

We were wholly unfamiliar with mortgage credit certificate programs, below market interest rate programs, mortgage revenue bond programs, and we would have given our left arm for help with no-strings-attached gift money and forgivable grant money provided through city, county and state housing agencies. 

If we only knew . . . the home buying process would have been so much easier and much less stressful.   Driving our decision to buy a home we could barely afford was  exacerbated by our landlord’s demand we vacate the house, which was once rented by my husband and his former wife (the landlord’s daughter), within 30 days.  Great – no pressure there. . .

Fortunately, with the generous help of parents and with a loan borrowed from our 401K, we were finally able to produce a minimal down payment.   Our motivated home seller, an 80 year old retiree who wanted to move closer to her daughter in another town, helped us pay some of our closing costs through seller concessions. Then after all that, we SOMEHOW managed to scrape up sufficient funds to substantiate cash reserves to satisfy our lender and cover our personal moving expenses after escrow closed. 

Did we consider buying new furnishings and/or major appliances to update our 50 year old new house?  Fuggedaboutit!  And THEN we had to take into account recurring costs associated with debt servicing the new mortgage and maintaining our new home like water, electricity, property taxes, etc. 

If your borrowers are anything like we were back in the day, the sticker shock associated with a new home purchase and maintenance costs can discourage even the most motivated buyers.

Timely solutions to the above-described challenges may not be easily found or forthcoming at all.  Notwithstanding the charity of parents, other relatives and/or through the liquidation of assets in order to meet most lenders’ minimum mandatory requirements for down payment and cash reserves, a substantial number of  first time home buying hopefuls will consequently shelve their Dream of Homeownership.

This is the sad, sad shelf upon which dust will gather, accumulate and ultimately completely obscure the light-filled Dream of Home Ownership which once burned brightly in their mind’s eye – snuffed out, extinguished. 

What you must know is it doesn’t have to end this way.

Be the Hero.  With new information provided through the OFFICIAL LOAN OFFICER GUIDE,   solutions to the above-described challenges are placed at your fingertips.

In most real estate markets today, it remains virtually impossible for the average consumer of low to moderate income to qualify for a modestly sized mortgage without benefit of a substantial out-of-pocket investment.  Depending on a variety of qualifying factors, we’re talking a down payment investment equal to  10, 15, 20 or 25% of the home’s sales price plus closing costs (points, title, insurance, etc.). 

Be the Hero.  Be the “Go to Guy” for information about down payment assistance programs and products.

Programs like those that are the focus of the Official Loan Officer Guide will well serve your marginally qualified borrowers and help support the real estate industry overall by providing another way to shore up buyer qualifying and loan viability. 

Be the Hero.  Reserve first time home buyer program funds on behalf of your borrower before your competition does.  When I worked for a major national mortgage bank (a bank  heavily vested in first time home buyer loan programs),  I observed first hand fierce competition between loan officers and competing lenders for the right to secure programs funds on behalf of their constituencies – first time home buyers. 

I observed borrowers anxiously await word from their loan officer for assurances that they too would get their piece of the first time home buyer mortgage assistance pie.  Anything less could, and often did, jeopardize the borrower’s ability to qualify for a mortgage and close escrow on time (if ever).

A growing number of city, county and state housing finance agencies/authorities/corporations are creating new and/or fully funding existing programs to assist first time home buyers with cash money for down payment and closing costs.  Monetary assistance can be quite substantial, ranging in amounts from $5,000 to $100,000+ (amounts vary by city, county and state) or calculated as a percentage of the home’s sales price or a percentage of the first mortgage loan amount. 

Be the Hero.  Be the first in line to procure program information, educate your customer and secure funds for your stressed out client base – first time home buyers. 

Please note, programs addressed in the OFFICIAL LOAN OFFICER GUIDE are primarily used exclusively in conjunction with purchase money first mortgage loans with 30 year fixed loan terms.   Alt-A, sub-prime and non-traditional hybrid loan first mortgage loans types are strictly prohibited.

Bottom line?  There is hope, and it begins with this quick read, bare-bones approach to assisting the neophyte loan officer and veteran loan officer to better understand how such first time home buyer programs work in tandem with step-by-step processes and procedures and ways to pinpoint available programs in your borrower’s selected subject property city, town and/or surrounds.   Some first time home buyers may elect to buy (or not to buy) in a particular city or county based on the availability (or lack thereof) of first time home buyer programs. 

The OFFICIAL LOAN OFFICER GUIDE provides a fast track to inside knowledge regarding useful specialty programs created specifically to assist first time home buyers of low to moderate income on a NATIONWIDE scale.

There is a dearth of information available to educate loan officers on a nationwide scale about the many beneficial programs that are the focus of this guide.  As I complete the writing of my first book on this topic, it is my hope, desire and intention that the OFFICIAL LOAN OFFICER GUIDE: Below Market Interest Rate Programs – Down Payment Assistance Programs, First Edition, will serve to educate and empower you to help cash strapped first time home buyers produce tangible results in the form of new, affordable housing that falls within the budgetary means of all eligible citizens nationwide.

To you guys and gals in the mortgage finance trenches, you are amazing!  This book was written for you.  May you make many a first time home buyer and real estate agent happy, satisified clients by your effective utilization of the information contained within this book.

  

Best of luck to you all and happy down payment assistance hunting!

Esperanza J. Creeger

Author

www.FTHBGuru.com



Calvin

April 22, 2009

Government programs that help first time home buyers

Devin Dozier asked:


If you are looking to buy a home and it is the first home that you will be buying, then you can start looking for government programs that help first time home buyers. There are a lot of people out there that are looking to buy a house. There is just something special about owning a home- and saying that you own a home.

If you own a home you will know what that means. Now, if you are a first time home buyer you will know what that means very soon. Also, if you are scared that you will not be able to buy a home, do not be, everyone is going through a rough time right now. The government knows this, and they want all of us to own our homes.

This is why they have set up government programs that help first time home buyers get and own their own homes.

There is only one way you can own a home, and that is if you paid for it. The first thing you will think of, if you are looking to own your own home, is to go to the bank so that they can help you. This is something that everyone will do. The bank is the first place anyone will think of.

However, if you feel that you will not be able to cover the repayment on a home the way the bank is charging you, then you do have other options. The next thing you want to do is look at government programs that help first time home buyers.

Make sure that you know everything you have to know before you go in head first though. Then, go in and talk to the people you need to talk to, they will be happy to help you and give you any more information that you need.



Fred

March 29, 2009

Getting a First Time Home Buyer Mortgage

Kozsun Huseyin asked:


Buying a first property can be one of the best choices you make or it soon can become a choice you wish you never made. However, with the right information, you can go on to get the dream home you always wanted.

Buying a first property is not an easy choice to make. There is so much involved in getting your first property. For one, getting your first time home buyer mortgage is a enormous commitment to make. However, when done properly, you can have your dream property for life.

It is not as if wanting to buy your property is the hard part. In fact the hard part comes with getting a first time home buyer mortgage. It is a enormous commitment to make, and you will need to research to find the best mortgage rate for your needs. There may be a few differences in obtaining a new property mortgage loan rather than simply obtaining a loan for an existing property you own, and this is primarily in the inspection process.

The largest aspect with getting a first time home buyer mortgage is determined by your credit worthiness. You see, from the mortgage loan lender point of view, it is a large sum of money they will be entrusting to you. And because of this, the process to get your first time home buyer mortgage is going to be one that will require your time. The amount of money usually involved in property mortgages makes many mortgage loan lender nervous especially if the loan is to purchase an existing property.

Getting the best mortgage rate will largely depend of your credit worthiness. If you have a good credit history, then the process of getting your first time home buyer mortgage will be much easier, and you also will have access to many more mortgage products with the best mortgage rates.

There are many factors which determine how a lender chooses who to accept when giving a first time home buyer mortgage, and no two mortgage loan lender will reach the same result. They all use different scoring systems to decide who to give a first time home buyer mortgage to. It all boils down to how much risk the mortgage lender is willing to take. However, rest assured as there are many mortgage loan lender out their, and by researching mortgage mortgage loan lender, you will find a mortgage that is right for you.

Another point which comes to your rescue is that mortgage loan lender are normally more ok with a new property mortgage loan because they can guarantee the quality of the property. And this is due to when buying your new property, there are many checks done which protects not just you, but also the mortgage lender. This is in the best interest of both of you, as it means you won’t be buying a property which has potential problems. After all, you would not want to buy your new property, only to find that there are structural problems with the building! That is why there are many parts involved in getting from seeing a property you want to buy, and finally getting the keys to move in.

One thing to keep in mind, when you are getting your first property is that getting a mortgage takes time. Research to find the best loan for your needs. A mortgage is something that will be with you for anywhere up to or over 25 years.



Allen
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