FHA is still the number one purchase and refinance for
Colorado mortgage loans
and the guidelines have changed under the Obama Administration
to help homeowners to obtain Colorado mortgage
for purchasing their home with still, a small down
payment. There have been a few changes that have taken place, more money
is now required from the borrower on purchases and a raise in credit
score requirements has been implemented. Traditionally, the down payment
money was at 3%, but that has been increased up to 3.5% and that has to
be the borrowers/co-borrowers own money, the rest can be a gift to cover closing
costs . The maximum loan to value for FHA Colorado mortgages has been reduced from 97% to
96.5%, not a major reduction, but still a reduction. However, what
offsets the reduction is the increase in loan amounts per city/per county.
Loan limits have been raised to the conforming limits and above. This
gives greater coverage for more home purchases that were out of reach
previously, due to low loan amounts that were set for each area.
Unless your putting down 20% or more for your down payment on a
purchase, this type of mortgage is far less expensive than a
conventional mortgage for a purchase and even a refinance if above an
80% loan to value. Conventional mortgages still offer the lowest rate
between the two. Mortgage insurance (PMI) is expensive and mandatory on
every Colorado conventional mortgage loan above 80% loan to
value.
This is why the 80/20 mortgage was so
popular years ago when 100% financing was still available, because it
allowed you to get around paying mortgage insurance. Today second
mortgages and HELOC'S (Home equity lines of credit) are getting
scarcer and carrying much higher credit score requirements., so the
first and second mortgage option together is getting tougher to get
through underwriting. Remember, when shopping online for an
Colorado Mortgage quote,
never put your social
security number on an online form, only give it to a company that you
feel comfortable with.