Homeowners With A Low Credit Score May Find An Alternative With An FHA Home Loan

The U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) has a sub group called the Federal Housing Administration (FHA). The FHA is a by-product of the National Housing Act passed in 1934.

The role of the FHA is to make sure that lenders don’t lose out if their mortgage loan recipients default on their mortgages. The FHA doesn’t “loan” money or build homes.

Mortgages backed by FHA are often called “FHA loans” even though it’s somewhat of a misnomer. A more appropriate name would be “FHA-insured” loans because that better describes the FHA’s function.

Because of the FHA guarantee to back loans, more lenders might grant loans that they would not consider without such backing. With this backing, lenders could feel more secure about granting the loan. Borrower rates may stay lower in such situations.

FHA loans are often used by borrowers with less-than-20-percent downpayments and, therefore, tend to require mortgage insurance payments. For FHA loans above 80%, mortgage insurance rates are 0.50% annually (paid monthly) with an up-front payment of 1.5% against the loan size and due at closing.

Homeowners with 15-year fixed FHA loans, however, are exempt from the annual insurance payments.For all homeowners, though, when the loan balance reaches 78 percent of the home’s value, the annual MI is no longer required.

Mortgage rates for FHA loans are typically higher than comparable conforming mortgages but because of new, risk-based pricing from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, homeowners with credit scores under 680 are finding FHA a viable alternative. And often with lower rates.

Source
FHA Loan
Wikipedia, April 1, 2008

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/FHA_loan

About the Author:

Leave a Reply