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DIRECT HUD / FHA
LENDER
FHA's mortgage insurance
programs help low- and moderate-income families become homeowners by lowering
some of the costs of their mortgage loans. FHA mortgage insurance also
encourages mortgage companies to make loans to otherwise creditworthy borrowers
and projects that might not be able to meet conventional underwriting requirements,
by protecting the mortgage company against loan default on mortgages for
properties that meet certain minimum requirements--including manufactured
homes, single-family and multifamily properties, and some health-related
facilities.
Section 203(b) is the centerpiece
of FHA's single-family insurance programs. It is the successor of the program
that helped save homeowners from default in the 1930s, that helped open
the suburbs for returning veterans in the 1940s and 1950s, and that helped
shape the modern mortgage finance system. Today, FHA One- to Four-Family
Mortgage Insurance is still an important tool through which the Federal
Government expands homeownership opportunities for first-time homebuyers
and other borrowers who would not otherwise qualify for conventional loans
on affordable terms, as well as for those who live in underserved areas
where mortgages may be harder to get. In FY 1997, FHA insured more than
790,000 homes, valued at almost $60 billion, under this program. FHA currently
insures a total of about 7 million loans valued at nearly $400 billion.
These obligations are protected by FHA's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund,
which is sustained entirely by borrower premiums.
Section 203(b) has several
important features:
Downpayment requirements
can be low. In contrast to conventional mortgage products, which frequently
require downpayments of 10 percent or more of the purchase price of the
home, single-family mortgages insured by FHA under Section 203(b) make
it possible to reduce downpayments to as little as 3 percent. This is because
FHA insurance allows borrowers to finance approximately 97 percent of the
value of their home purchase through their mortgage, in some cases.
Many closing costs can be
financed. With most conventional loans, the borrower must pay, at the time
of purchase, closing costs (the many fees and charges associated with buying
a home) equivalent to 2-3 percent of the price of the home. This program
allows the borrower to finance many of these charges, thus reducing the
up-front cost of buying a home. FHA mortgage insurance is not free: borrowers
pay an up-front insurance premium (which may be financed) at the time of
purchase, as well as monthly premiums that are not financed, but instead
are added to the regular mortgage payment.
Some fees are limited. FHA
rules impose limits on some of the fees that mortgage companies may charge
in making a loan. For example, the loan origination fee charged by the
mortgage company for the administrative cost of processing the loan may
not exceed one percent of the amount of the mortgage.
HUD sets limits on the amount
that may be insured. To make sure that its programs serve low- and moderate-income
people, FHA sets limits on the dollar value of the mortgage loan.
FHA Loan Limits
FHA has maximum loan amounts,
which vary from one county to another. It is critical that the borrower's
loan amount, including financed closing costs, not exceed the maximum set
by FHA for the county in which the subject property is located. There are
no income limits on FHA loans.
FHA Maximum Loan Amounts
by State and County.
Streamline Refinancing
for FHA Mortgages
FHA has permitted streamline
refinances on insured mortgages since the early 1980's. The streamline
refers only to the amount of documentation and underwriting that needs
to be performed by the mortgage company, and does not mean that there are
no costs involved in the transaction.
The basic requirements
of a streamline refinance are:
The
mortgage to be refinanced must already be FHA insured.
The
mortgage to be refinanced should be current (not delinquent).
The
refinance is to result in a lowering of the borrower's monthly principal
and
interest payments.
No
cash may be taken out on mortgages refinanced using the
streamline
refinance process.
I offer streamline refinances
in several ways. We offer "no cost" refinances (actually, no out-of-pocket
expenses to the borrower) by charging a higher rate of interest on the
new loan than if the borrower financed or paid the closing costs in cash.
From this premium, the company pays any closing costs that are incurred
on the transaction.
We also offer streamline
refinances and include the closing costs into the new mortgage amount.
This can only be done if there is sufficient equity in the property, as
determined by an appraisal. Streamline refinances can also be done without
appraisals, but the new loan amount cannot exceed what is currently owed,
i.e., closing costs may not be added to the new mortgage with those costs
either paid in cash or through the premium rate as described above. Investment
properties (properties in which the borrower does not reside in as his
or her principal residence) may only be refinanced without an appraisal
and, thus, closing costs may not be included in the new mortgage amount.
Also offering HUD's special
homebuying programs:
Officer
Next Door
Teacher
Next Door
Homeownership
for public housing residents
Have a Question about
a condo?
Click
here to see if the condo project is on the FHA Approved List.
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ANY Realtor to submit a bid on a HUD owned home?
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listing of HUD owned homes? Select your state!
Find your home, and I will
arrange the financing!
Contact Susan McCann Today!
Cell: 410 - 490 - 2282
Fax: 410 - 573 - 0343
Email:
smccann21638@yahoo.com
Apply
Online For Your FHA Loan

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