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Forest Tardibuono

4 Ways To Buy A Home

Wednesday, June 16, 2010 - Article by: Forest Tardibuono - Sun Pacific Mortgage & Real Estate - Message

1. Newly Built Home- There are still newly built homes on the market. In the Sunday section of the newspaper, there are highlighted with a map. Sometimes there is special financing through the builder.

2. Resale Home- These are homes for resale by the owner. Sometimes the owner still lives in them and sometimes they are empty. Financing is available through FHA, Freddie Mac, and Fannie Mae. All 3 agencies require proof of income, proof of down payment, and will pull your credit. They are the normal 30 year fixed rate mortgages available right now.

3. Short Sale- These are homes for sale that require homeowner/seller approval and lender approval. The seller owes more than the property is worth. As an example, the mortgage owed is for $400,000.00 but the house is only worth $250,000.00 right now. The seller and their mortgage holder have to approve the contract for sale. The loan you get will be a typical and normal FHA, Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac 30 year fixed loan. But you might have to wait - even up to 6 months - for the mortgage holder to approve a lesser pay-off.

4. Foreclosure - For some reason a lot of people think buying a foreclosure requires a strange and different loan. It does not. BUT FHA, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac do require an appraisal. The appraisal cannot say the house is a dump and needs lots of lots of work. You will not get a normal and typical 30 year fixed rate loan on a dump. If the foreclosure you are looking at to buy is tired and dirty - which a lot of them are - you can get the typical loan. If the property is a dump and it is obvious, the appraiser will note this and the lender will not approve your loan. Other than that, buying a foreclosure is like buying a resale home - typical and normal.

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