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FHA Mortgage – Check the New FHA Rules

March 8th, 2009

The Federal Housing Administration used to be known as a place for low-income borrowers with tarnished credit histories. But now, it has become a destination for borrowers whose credentials are respectable, but not stellar.

 

Is It Better to Buy or Rent? To qualify for the best FHA mortgage rates on a new or refinanced mortgage, you need to have a top-notch credit score and a substantial down payment or home equity. But if you have less than perfect credit and less than 20% in home equity, an important threshold, you’ll have to pay a lot more. And that’s why many of those borrowers are avoiding conventional loans turning to the FHA.

 

FHA requires down payments of only 3.5% and has less stringent credit requirements than conventional mortgages backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the two government-controlled mortgage finance companies. FHA mortgage loans also have become one of the least expensive alternatives for new mortgages and refinancing, given the increase in fees tacked onto traditional loans.

 

“Just about anyone that is putting down less than 20% needs to consider FHA home financing,” said Joe Rogers, executive vice president of Wells Fargo Home Mortgage. “That doesn’t mean they need to take it, but they should consider it.”

 

The FHA, which was created during the Great Depression, does not make loans, but insures mortgages that meet its guidelines. Because the FHA. is the only viable option for a lot of people, its loans now account for a much larger percentage of all mortgages. In 2005 and 2006, at the height of the housing boom, only 1.8 % of all mortgages were FHA-backed, according to Inside Mortgage Finance. Last year, that number ballooned to 17.1 %. The FHA now insures 4.8 million single-family mortgages worth about $550 billion. Historically, FHA home loans carried a certain stigma. They were viewed as hard-to-obtain loans for low-income consumers with checkered credit histories and small down payments. They also tended to be more expensive.

 

But in the current market, the opposite is often true. Qualifying for a regular mortgage has become more expensive, sometimes prohibitively so, given the many fees that are now layered onto conventional loans backed by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac.  The FHA loan fees are generally levied on borrowers deemed to be more risky. The charges depend on your credit score and the amount of money you’re borrowing relative to the value of your home. But they tend to hit people with credit scores under 700 and less than 20% in home equity. Carrying a home equity loan may result in extra fees, as will taking cash out of your home when you refinance.

 

The additional charges aren’t the only hurdle consumers may face. Borrowers with less than 20% in home equity must also purchase private mortgage insurance. The insurance has become much more difficult to qualify for and more expensive, especially in areas where home values have declined the most.

 

FHA borrowers will not avoid mortgage insurance, but they will escape the extra fees, lenders and mortgage brokers said. And that’s why, for many families, the FHA program has become the most economical option.  If you’re having trouble securing a new mortgage or refinancing an existing mortgage, here is what you need to know about the FHA loan program:

 

Generally speaking, your payments, including taxes and insurance, should not exceed 31% of gross income. When you include car payments, student loans and other obligations, your total debt shouldn’t exceed more than 43% of gross income. But these thresholds are only guidelines. So if you have a larger than required down payment, or a good amount of money in the bank, you may be able to bend these rules. The FHA does not impose any income limits or credit score minimums, but people with credit scores below 500 must have at least 10% of equity in their home to be eligible. (The average FHA borrower has a score of 640.)

 

But to keep default rates down, many FHA-approved lenders have recently started to impose their own credit score minimums — above and beyond the F.H.A’s. guidelines — and are requiring more stringent income documentation. Clearly, they’re trying to protect themselves: if a particular lender’s default rates exceed neighboring lenders, they can be audited and even removed from the program.“In the last month and a half, there has been a dramatic increase in the minimum credit score required,” said Michael Moskowitz, president of Equity Now, a New York mortgage lender that makes FHA loans. “Some went to 580 and others went to 620.”

 

Whether an FHA loan will cost less depends on your personal situation. Currently, however, borrowers with credit scores less than 700 with less than 20 % in home equity often come out ahead with FHA loans. At the very least, lenders and brokers say it pays to compare the costs of an FHA-insured loan versus a conventional mortgage if you fit into this category.  In most cases, the total costs of FHA loans including the interest rate and mortgage insurance become less than a traditional mortgage’s costs as your credit.

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