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How To Get A Mortgage After Short Sale (or Foreclosure)

The guidelines for new mortgages are changing. Everything we take for granted about home loans (and being a home owner) is being debated now in Washington D.C.

Its clear that required mortgage down payments will increase along with other key elements that many of us have taken for granted. For example, there is growing support to eliminate the mortgage interest tax deduction. There are also political rumblings behind getting rid of the ‘As American As Apple Pie’ 30 year mortgage and replacing it with a 15 or 20 year term.

(REALTORS(R) remember, support the NAR. They are the only voice we have in D.C.)

Already a new approved guideline, the new QRM (Qualified Residential Mortgage) rules will be in full effect April 2012. (Its widely believed that the QRM rules will force minium down payments to increase to 20%). As Fannie and Freddie are ‘scaled down’ and their continued roles in the mortgage markets are in flux expect lots of heated debate about mortgage requirements. Stay tuned and be vigilant.

The question remains, given today’s guidelines what are the absolute bare-minimums to obtain a mortgage?

….and perhaps more interesting…how to obtain a mortgage immediately after a Short Sale..read on…

By far the easiest mortgage to obtain is a FHA loan:

1) 3.5 percent down payment, based on the purchase price of the home (e.g., $7,000 on a $200,000 home), or a gift of that same amount;

2) 3 percent to 6 percent of the purchase price, on top of the down payment, for closing costs, or a credit from the seller of the same amount; and

3) 640 FICO credit score — the middle score of those generated by the three credit bureaus (some banks will lend to borrowers with middle scores lower than 640, but will require more than the minimum down payment).

Lenders will want you to document income, asset and job history documentation, current paycheck stubs, two months’ bank statements and two years of W-2 forms or tax returns, and:

  • a minimum of two years have passed since the discharge of a bankruptcy;
  • a minimum of three years have passed since a foreclosure;
  • anywhere from zero to three years have passed since a short sale, depending on the circumstances surrounding the short sale.

Home Page
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Ten Short Sale Questions
How To Lower Your Property Tax Bill
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Loan Officer Compensation Changes: What It Means for Consumers
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Making an Offer
Mortgage Refinance Tip
Money saving refinance tips
HUD Properties, FHA, and Title Seasoning
Refinance before listing your property
Loan Fraud
Loan Terms
What Credit Repair Companies can and cannot do
Credit after Foreclosure, bankruptcy and Short Sale
How to lower your property taxes
Refinancing
What must be disclosed in a real estate transaction
How To Get A Mortgage After Short Sale (or Foreclosure)
The Fed flexes its ARM muscles
Do Banks walk away from properties?
Wall Street Reforms
H.R. 6133
Should we let the housing market crash?
Refinancing is not always prudent
3 Things To Ask Your Lender When Locking a Loan
Foreclosuregate
Higher FICO needed
Banks sue for mortgage deficiency
FICO Practices Could be Hurting People that Should be Buying Homes
Some dread the demise of Fannie and Freddie
Mortgage Debt Relief Act
It’s official: high LTV ratio increases foreclosure risk
Supreme Court hands homeowners sting defeat
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