What not to do before Buying a Home

What NOT to do before buying a home
Published by James Troia on Friday February 18, 2011 10:44 AM
For buyers who have the intention of purchasing within the next six months, it’s important to get the finances in order and set a reasonable plan to make your purchase achievable. However, there are also a few things one should not do when preparing to enter the buying process. To ensure a smooth process, you’ll want to avoid the following:

Stay away from making any other large purchase of any kind — especially a new car. Even if you have accumulated the savings to cover it responsibly, control the desire to spend. “A large purchase, a car or otherwise, can affect your mortgage terms when the time comes to seek financing,” says Matthew Rand, Managing Partner of Better Homes and Gardens Rand Realty. After applications are submitted and the numbers are crunched, your extra loan payment will affect the terms you wind up receiving when all is said and done. “The less complicated your finances appear to the loan officer, the better off you will be.”

Avoid any unnecessary moving around of money as well. When a lender reviews your finances for approval, one of the major concerns will be the source of your down payment, closing costs, etc. You’ll also need to provide statements for the last two or three months on any assets. “If you have moved money around recently, there may be large deposits and withdrawals on your accounts, which will make it difficult for the lender to properly document,” says Rand. “Try to leave your money where it is until after you speak with a loan officer; this includes not changing banks either.”

If you can prevent it, don’t voluntarily change jobs while trying to purchase or close on a house. Again, the source of your income is extremely important to a lender. If there is any question about where your money will be coming from, it could put your deal in jeopardy and increase your level of risk to the lender. Although sometimes a change in jobs is unforeseen and unpreventable, try to close your deal before making a professional move. “You need the lender to be confident in your ability to pay back the loan. Showing a long history of steady income is crucial to your success as a buyer,” says Rand.

By appropriately planning and making smart financial decisions throughout the buying process, you will experience less hurdles and a much more efficient transaction.

Reposted from The Rand Blog

Pre-qualify or Pre-approval

What is the difference between pre-qualifying and pre-approval?

Given the current state of mortgage lending, knowing where you stand credit wise is even more important now than ever.

A pre-qualification is normally issued by a loan officer, who, after interviewing you, determines the dollar value of a loan you can be approved for. No credit checks are done, no employment history taken, nothing is submitted to an underwriter. However, loan officers do not make the final approval, so a pre-qualification is not a commitment to lend. After the loan officer determines that you pre-qualify, he/she then issues you a pre-qualification letter. In times past, before houses were selling very quickly (between 1997-2005) we used pre-qualification letters. However during the peak seller’s market pre-approvals (explained in the next paragraph) became the standard in the Greater Hudson Valley Region.

It is important to note that in truth anyone can be “pre-qualified”. Your realtor can do it for you, they simply have to know the lending guidelines. [Read more...]