Get Your Mortgage Phil: Trade-Up Home Buying: Nine Points About Financing Every Real Estate Agent And Buyer Must Know

Trade-Up Home Buying: Nine Points About Financing Every Real Estate Agent And Buyer Must Know

Trade-up home buying has a different set of issues to conquer than the first-time home buying process. The first-time home buying process is about education. The first-time home buyer is figuratively diving into the water for the first time. Whether they make a beautiful swan dive or belly flop depends a lot on how well they were educated before they entered escrow by their real estate agent and mortgage originator.

belly flop

The trade-up home buying process has an element of education, but it is more about coordination. How does the trade-up buyer coordinate the sale of their existing home with the purchase of their new home? Here are nine points that the trade-up buyer and their real estate agent  need to know about in terms of financing to successfully coordinate the disposition of their current home along with the purchase of the new home:

 

  1. Loan approval does not necessarily mean that you should release loan contingency. A loan approval always has conditions. If you are selling your current home, one condition lenders usually have is a copy of the closing statement from the sale of the current home. What happens if your buyer backs out? How comfortable are you with the ability of your buyer to buy your house? You need to find out all of the conditions from your lender so that you know exactly what has to happen in order to get your loan. Do not release loan contingency until you are aware of the conditions and are confident that you can satisfy these conditions.

  2. Your mortgage originator needs your tax returns, even if the loan approval does not require it. Here is why: some of us try to minimize the amount of income tax we pay. Some of us use form 2106, which allows us to report unreimbursed business expenses on schedule A of our tax return. Lenders deduct this amount from your income for qualifying. Sometimes the lenders will not ask for tax returns, but they almost always ask for form 4506-T. Form 4506-T is a summary of the tax return you have filed with the IRS. If you have unreimbursed business expenses claimed, the lender most likely will re-underwrite the file and may even deny the file because your income is not as much as originally presented! Give your tax returns to your mortgage originator to prevent this problem upfront!

  3. If you plan on renting your current home, you may not be allowed to use the rental income to qualify. I recently wrote a post about this subject - Before You Advise Your Client Rent Their Current Home And Buy Another, You Need To Know This!.

  4. If you plan to sell stocks, bonds, and/or mutual funds for the down payment, you are best served selling prior to having your file underwritten. Here is why: If you do not provide proof of liquidation, many lenders will value the worth of your holdings at 70% of the verified amount. Without proof of liquidation, the lender my determine that you are short on cash to close escrow, even if in reality you are not. Prove it now to save headaches later!

  5. Are you trading-up because of a job transfer? Here is what you need: an employment offer letter, clear of any conditions (drug test is an example), and an affidavit signed by you stating that you will provide a paystub within 30 days of closing.

  6. Try your best to nail down your loan amount and your interest rate up front! Here is why: If you increase your loan amount and/or change your interest rate after your lender has sent their initial disclosures, they may require re-disclosure and a new seven day waiting period before they can close escrow! Set it and forget it!

  7. Take care of your credit score before you write an offer. Most lenders use the middle score of three credit repositories. In addition, the qualifying score most use is the middle score from the borrower with the lowest score among all the borrowers involved in the purchase. Credit scores can be changed if there are errors on the report. Work with your mortgage originator to make these changes now rather than while you are in escrow. 

  8. If you want an impound account, set it up after the close of escrow. Here is why: cash to close is one of the issues that often causes a headache at closing. Impound accounts require more cash to close. Why complicate an already stressful situation? Close escrow, call your lender, and then set up the escrow account when there's not as many hoops to jump through!

  9. Don't count on 100% of your retirement funds as cash reserves. Most lenders are now only counting 60% of the value of retirement funds as cash reserves. For example, if you have $20,000 in retirement funds, the lender will only value these funds as $12,000.  
Knowing these points will help the trade-up home buyer and real estate agent coordinate a multi-faceted transaction.
coordination

I originally had the idea of giving ten points - anybody have a tenth for the trade-up buyer?


 

 

 Do you need help structuring a loan, or getting a rate quote? Call me at (650) 222-0386, or e-mail me                                                                                                           

 


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Comments

Great points to ponder, there is never a time if you are the buyer you should never remove the contingency

Posted by Andrew Monaghan CRS, GRI, EPro Associate Broker (Keller Williams Professional Partners) 7 months ago

Very informative, thank you for sharing.  You're right, all agents and buyers should know these points!

Posted by Tina Jan (Coldwell Banker Kivett-Teeters) 7 months ago

Paul, these are excellent points. What a great post!

#10. (actually part of #8) Be aware that lenders add 1/8 to 1/4 point if you do not create an impound account.

At least that has been my experience, but I am not a lender. For FHA buyers, an impound account is mandatory.

#11. Find out if there is a one-time float-down in the loan.

#12. If important, find out if there is an ability to re-amortize the loan if the buyer receives a large lump sum (such as in the sale of a former home).

 

Posted by Frank & Sharon Alters, CDPE-Short Sales Jacksonville-Orange Park-Fleming Island (Watson Realty - Clay County, Duval County, St. Johns County ) 6 months ago

This is why I defintely recommend a great mortgage person, plus an accountant so that the buyers realize the impacts to their overall financial picture.  Thanks for great information and dicussion points for buyers, 

Posted by Don Sabinske, Sabinske & Associates Inc. 6 months ago

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