FHA Allows Greater Refinancing for Underwater Homeowners

Posted in FHA Refinance on .

New adjustments to Federal Housing Administration (FHA) programs will allow hard-working homeowners to have access to more refinancing options. If you are a homeowner who owes a sum that’s greater in value than your home, you may qualify for mortgage refinancing.

The goal of these changes is to give homeowners a greater opportunity to restructure and refinance their qualifying mortgage loans. This can be done if the borrower is up-to-date on the mortgage and the lender enacts a 10% reduction of the amount owed on the original loan.

Also, the new FHA loan must have a lower balance than the home’s current value, and the borrower’s total mortgage debt after refinancing must be less than 115% of current home value. (This debt would include all mortgages in the homeowner’s name, whether one or multiple.)

Homeowners with troubled mortgages can now lessen the burden on their shoulders. They can resume paying their mortgage at a monthly rate that they can afford, leaving behind debt and regaining equity. And with more honest working families avoiding foreclosure and staying in their homes, the future for housing markets should continue to look bright.

The FHA Refinance Option in Greater Detail

1. FHA Refinance Option for Underwater Loans — Encouraging Responsible Restructuring and Refinancing

This option may be selected voluntarily by lenders to allow more cooperation with borrowers who have “underwater” mortgages. Since the FHA refinance is a voluntary option, it will not necessarily apply to all borrowers who fit the criteria below.

Loans can be refinanced to a value that is lower than that of the home with the standard FHA refinance loan.

Lenders must write down the principal of the first mortgage by at least 10%, but the actual reductions will likely be much greater.

Homeowners will now make monthly payments at today’s low interest rates, not at the high rates in effect when they first took out their loans. Their monthly payment on the refinanced mortgage should not exceed 31% of their income.

Who is eligible?

Homeowners who are current on their mortgage payments, who live in their home as their primary residence, and who have full proof of income and can pass a credit check (i.e. have a minimum credit score of 500).

This short refinancing will be reflected on the borrower’s credit score, as is standard for any act of loan forgiveness.

Homeowners whose loans are not insured by the FHA at the present are still eligible for refinancing.

2. Incentives for Principal Write-downs on Second Liens

Homeowners can have a second mortgage on the home, but in order to qualify for refinancing, all mortgage debt will need to be rewritten to no more than 115% of the home’s current value.

3. Transparency on the Impact of Refinancing

Each quarter, the FHA is obligated to disclose data on the quantity of loans, the average percentage written down, and quantity of principal reduced.

4. TARP-funded Support for Expanding the Impact of Refinance

Up to $14 billion in TARP funding will go towards incentives for writing down second liens, encouraging servicer participation and helping to cover possible losses on the loans.

 

This program has become FHA Home Affordable Modification Program (FHA-HAMP).

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