Bad Credit and 50 Year Mortgages

Basics

There are mortgage lenders that offer 50 year mortgages to borrowers with bad credit, and they will look at your mortgage application and analyze the following:

borrower income and assets equity in the property Borrower Income and Assets

Lenders require a borrower to declare their income and assets on the mortgage application.

Lenders allow a borrower to do this in two basic ways:

stated loanfull documentationA stated loan is one where a borrower states but does not prove their income and asset level. The bank does not require proof of either.

A full documentation loan is one where the lender receives many different documents from the potential borrower, including:

pay stubstax returnsbank statementsinvestment accountsThe more documentation you show on your application the better your interest rate is likely to be.

If you can document your income and assets you will be able to make a stronger case for a 50 year loan with bad credit. It’s not required though.

Loan terms can be for many years, including:

15 years30 years40 years45 years50 yearsSome lenders also offer loan terms with other lengths.

So far the longest available mortgage loan term is for 50 years.

Equity In Your Property

This is the amount of equity that will remain in your property after the loan is done.

The more equity you have in the property the more likely you are to be approved.

If your new loan is only 70% of the value of your property you are more likely to be approved than if your new loan is 95% of the value of the property.

Make sure you know your current appraisal value. Keep up with current valuation trends in your area to make sure you have a good idea of your appraisal value, although you will only get a definitive opinion from an appraisal report.

By: Ben Afzal

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Mortgage Loan Disclosures

Applying for a mortgage usually means you will get a blizzard of paperwork to sign.

Many of these papers are “disclosures”. These are often mandated.

Important disclosures include:

credit score information disclosure

good faith estimate

equal credit opportunity act disclosure

The credit score information disclosure lets you know what your credit scores are. These are typically ratings given to you by the three different credit bureaus. This can be the basis for understanding your credit and starting the process of working on your credit if there are issues.

Good Faith Estimate

A good faith estimate is an estimate of a range of closing costs involved in getting the loan, including:

lender

broker

escrow company

title company

hazard insurance company

appraiser

government fees

taxes

other fees

It is important to remember that these costs are just estimates. They can change. It is an “estimate” of mortgage costs, not a guarantee.

The equal credit disclosure is an anti-discrimination disclosure.

There are numerous other disclosures, but the ones of interest to most potential borrowers are the good faith estimate and the credit disclosures. These are the ones with the potential to have a direct impact on people’s financial results.

Other disclosures include authorization to check credit, verify employment status, assets, income documentation, and other pertinent information.

By: Ben Afzal

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