Tag Archives: home buying

Important Rule for Homebuyers to Consider

Linda Lee, president of the Greater San Diego Association of Realtors, is the author of this guest post.

Shopping for a house can be exciting, but there is one factor above all others that deserves early consideration.

Be careful about where you set your sights. I have worked in real estate during all kinds of market conditions, and one of the biggest recurring mistakes I see is people who buy more home than they can afford.

Too many people end up suffering through the frustration and humiliation of losing their dream home because, in the end, they simply couldn’t afford it. For most buyers, the rule of thumb is to set your price range at around 1½ times your annual income.

With interest rates at historic lows, you may have a window of opportunity to obtain your dream home. Monthly payments are lower on any given loan than they have been in years, and most rates are fixed for 15 years or 30 years so you can predict your housing costs into the future.

Pre-approval for a mortgage, not prequalification, is an absolute must. Prequalification is simply a lender’s estimate of how much you could be eligible to borrow and does not mean you will get a loan. Pre-approval means providing your lender with a fully completed loan application and all supporting documents proving your income, assets, credit and liabilities before you start house hunting. With this done, you can be confident about the price range you are considering and more importantly ready to act when you find that perfect home.

Next, do anything you can to come up with a 20 percent down payment. This can greatly reduce the interest rate you will have to pay on your loan and eliminates the need for costly mortgage insurance on top of your monthly mortgage payment.

Stay in your price range and your prudent judgment may put you in a larger and more expensive home sooner than you think.

What is a Bridge Loan and Can You Buy a Home With One

bridge

Home price: $1.71 million.

 

Loan: $1.368 million.

 

Rate: 3.875 percent.

 

Loan type: 30-year fixed with no points or lender fees.

 

Backstory: Crosby’s clients had been searching for a home for over a year. The perfect home came on the market at a listing price of $1.325 million. Their Realtor, Karen Starr of the Grubb Co., advised that the home had multiple offers and would sell above the listing price. Crosby and Starr collaborated to help the clients prepare the strongest possible offer.

 

The buyers would eventually use funds from the sale of their current home, but not for the new transaction. Their down payment funds could only allow a 20 percent down payment at the likely price. If the home did not appraise, the buyers would need to make up the difference between the purchase price and the loan amount.

 

Crosby’s employer, RPM Mortgage, offers a bridge loan and Crosby obtained a commitment from RPM for $200,000.

 

This meant that they could write an offer with no appraisal contingency. The clients offered $1.71 million, which was accepted.

 

When a buyer obtains a loan for more than $1 million, two appraisals are routinely needed to provide validation of the value. The appraisals are independent, and the lower reported value is used for underwriting. All parties wondered whether the home would appraise for almost $400,000 over the list price. Luckily, they knew that they had bridge financing in case this happened. RPM uses fully licensed, experienced local appraisers.

 

The appraisals occurred within the 15-day contingency period and both reports validated the purchase price. The loan was underwritten and approved in 15 days.

Have questions about the appraisal process?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com

Read more: http://www.sfgate.com/realestate/article/Just-Approved-Bridge-loan-helps-buyers-secure-4507019.php#ixzz2T6BiGacx

Homebuying: Should You Take The Plunge?

sale

Spring is typically the busiest season for homebuying, and this year the housing market is already showing signs of coming back to life.

According to the National Association of Realtors, the median price for U.S. homes was $173,600 in January, the latest month of available data. That’s up 12.5 percent from the same period in 2012, and is the largest year-over-year increase since 2005.

Have questions about the market?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com

What’s more, even though home prices are beginning to rise, affordability continues to improve — especially for first-time buyers. The NAR’s first-time homebuyer affordability index reached a record high of 127.7 in 2012 (the higher the number, the better). In 2006, at the real-estate market’s peak, the index stood at 71.3.

Low mortgage rates and an improving economy are helping make homebuying more attractive today. Should you take the plunge? Consider the following.

Renting vs. owning

In many areas of the country, it is now cheaper to own a home than it is to rent. But much of that advantage still depends on the size of your down payment, the interest rate you’ll pay on a mortgage and the amount of time you plan to stay put.

Read more: http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/buy/sc-cons-0321-started-20130323,0,5340581.story

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