Wednesday, September 30, 2009

MORTGAGE IS DENIED? HERE'S WHAT TO DO

Talk about raining on your parade!  You find your home, make an offer & then learn that your loan application as been turned down.  What to do now?

You may be able to turn a "NO" into a "YES" by taking the right steps:

Low appraisal-Try negotiating with the Seller or consider making a larger down payment should you have the money.

Not enough up front Cash-Lender determines that you don't have enough money to cover the downpayment + closing costs.  Ask the Seller to assume some of the closing costs or consider a non-repayable gift of funds from a relative.  Your lender will instruct you how to document this gift.

Insufficient Income-Due to governments "Making Homes Affordable" program, lenders are using a 31/38 rule when calculating allowable loan limits. Monthly PITI (principal, interest, taxes & insurance) should not be more than 31% of your gross monthly income. Your total debt (car loans, credit cards etc.) plus the PITI should not exceed 38% of your gross monthly income.  If your credit record is good & you've been carrying an equivalent housing payment, try to convince the lender to ease this guideline. If you or your spouse are expecting a salary increase, tell the lender who can then verify the forthcoming income increase.

Unsatisfactory credit (FICO) score--Lenders are looking for defaults, bankruptcies as well as late or missed monthly payments.  The lender needs to know the full picture if these issues are due to an illness, job layoff, marital problems or other short-term situations.  If you've regained financial stability for at least a year, the lender may reconsider.  If you have an up-and-down credit history, the only solution is to reestablish prompt payment practices.  There are also a few good lenders that will assist you in "cleaning up" your credit report and therefore increasing your FICO score.  Please contact me and I can refer you to these lenders which do not charge for this service...they just want to handle your loan when it comes time to buy.

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