Every Question You Were
Afraid to Ask About Getting a Mortgage
50 real answers to the questions homebuyers are actually Googling β plain English, no fluff, no runaround.
Yes β but you need to show a lender that you have a reliable, documentable source of income. Traditional W-2 employment is the most common, but lenders also accept retirement income, Social Security, disability payments, investment income, rental income, and self-employment earnings. What lenders are really evaluating is your ability to repay, not whether you clock in somewhere.
If you recently left a job, are between positions, or are transitioning careers, options still exist β especially if you have strong assets or a co-borrower with income. Talk to a loan officer about your specific situation before assuming you won't qualify.
It depends on the loan type. Here's a quick breakdown of the most common options:
- Conventional loan: As low as 3% down (for first-time buyers); 5% is more common
- FHA loan: 3.5% down with a 580+ credit score; 10% down if your score is 500β579
- VA loan: 0% down for eligible veterans and active-duty military
- USDA loan: 0% down for eligible rural and suburban properties
- Jumbo loan: Typically 10β20% down, depending on the lender
Keep in mind that putting less than 20% down on a conventional loan will typically require you to pay Private Mortgage Insurance (PMI) until you reach 20% equity.
There is no single universal answer β it depends on the loan program. General minimums:
- Conventional loan: 620 minimum (680+ gets you the best rates)
- FHA loan: 580 for 3.5% down; 500 for 10% down
- VA loan: No official minimum, but most lenders want 580β620
- USDA loan: Typically 640+
- Jumbo loan: Usually 700β720+
Your credit score doesn't just determine approval β it directly affects your interest rate. A 760+ score typically qualifies for the best available rates. A 620 score will get you approved but may cost significantly more per month over the life of the loan.
Lenders evaluate every mortgage application through four core lenses known as the "4 C's":
- Capacity: Your ability to repay β primarily measured by your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio and income stability
- Credit: Your credit score and history β how reliably you've managed debt in the past
- Capital: Your assets β savings, retirement accounts, investments, and down payment funds
- Collateral: The property itself β its appraised value and condition, which secures the loan
A weakness in one area can sometimes be offset by strength in another. A borrower with lower credit but substantial assets, for example, may still qualify. This is why it always pays to talk with an experienced loan officer rather than self-disqualifying based on one factor.
Yes β there are legitimate loan options for borrowers with lower credit scores. FHA loans are the most accessible, accepting scores as low as 500 with a larger down payment. Some non-QM (non-qualified mortgage) lenders go even lower, though rates will be higher.
That said, "bad credit" is often fixable in a shorter time than people think. A loan officer can do a rapid rescore analysis and show you exactly which actions β paying down a balance, removing an error, settling a collection β would raise your score and by how much. Sometimes 60β90 days of targeted credit repair is the difference between a 580 and a 640 score.
Yes. Adding a co-borrower (also called a co-signer or non-occupant co-borrower depending on the program) can strengthen your application by combining incomes and credit profiles. This is commonly used when a first-time buyer has limited income or a thin credit file.
On FHA loans, non-occupant co-borrowers are explicitly allowed β a parent can co-sign without living in the home. Conventional loans also allow co-borrowers but may have different guidelines depending on the occupancy arrangement.
Important: the co-signer takes on full legal responsibility for the debt. The mortgage will appear on their credit report, and missed payments affect them equally. It's a significant commitment that both parties should understand before proceeding.
The 2-2-2 rule is an informal guideline that describes what lenders typically want to see when verifying income for a mortgage application:
- 2 years of W-2s or tax returns
- 2 years of employment history (with the same employer or in the same field)
- 2 months of bank statements showing your down payment and reserves
This rule sets expectations but is not a hard requirement for every loan type. Many lenders can work with less documentation under certain programs, particularly for self-employed borrowers or those using bank statement loans. Think of the 2-2-2 as the "easy path" β deviations from it are workable, just require more documentation.
A denial can feel discouraging, but it's important to understand the specific reason β because most are fixable. The most common reasons for denial include:
- Credit score below program minimums
- Debt-to-income ratio too high
- Insufficient down payment or reserves
- Income that can't be fully documented
- Employment gaps or recent job changes
- Property issues (condition, value, or zoning)
- Outstanding judgments, liens, or collections
By law, lenders must send you an Adverse Action Notice explaining the reason for denial. Use that notice as your roadmap. In many cases, addressing the identified issue and reapplying within 6β12 months results in approval.
There's no income floor for a mortgage β what matters is how your income compares to your total monthly debt obligations. Lenders use your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio, which is your total monthly debt payments divided by your gross monthly income.
Most conventional loans allow a DTI up to 45β50%. FHA loans can go up to 57% in some cases. So if you earn $6,000/month gross and have $800/month in existing debt payments, a lender will factor in whether a new mortgage payment fits within the allowable DTI range for your loan type.
Most lenders want to see a 2-year employment history, but that doesn't mean 2 years at the same job. What matters is consistency in employment β especially within the same field or industry. If you've been in the same career and recently got a promotion or a new job with higher pay, that's generally viewed favorably.
For hourly and salaried W-2 employees, even being a few months into a new job can work, as long as you have an offer letter or pay stubs showing consistent income. Part-time, seasonal, or contract income typically needs 2 years of history to be counted.
In most cases, yes β especially if the job change is in the same field, comes with equal or greater pay, and you didn't switch from W-2 to self-employment. Lenders care about income stability and likelihood of continuation, not necessarily tenure at one specific employer.
Where it gets complicated: switching from salaried to commission-based pay, moving to a completely different industry, starting a new business, or taking a pay cut. These situations don't automatically disqualify you, but they require more documentation and may need more seasoning (time on the job) before closing.
Lenders verify employment at two points: when you apply, and again right before closing. Common verification methods include:
- Verbal VOE (Verification of Employment): The lender calls your employer directly to confirm your position and dates of employment
- Written VOE: A signed form from your employer
- The Work Number (Equifax): An automated database used by many large employers
- Pay stubs + W-2s: Typically the last 30 days of pay stubs and 2 years of W-2s
- Tax transcripts: IRS Form 4506-C authorizes the lender to pull your tax records directly
Self-employed borrowers typically need 2 years of personal and business tax returns, a year-to-date profit and loss statement, and sometimes 12β24 months of bank statements.
Absolutely β and it's more common than ever. The process is just different. Self-employed borrowers (anyone who owns 25%+ of a business) typically need 2 years of self-employment history before a lender can count that income. Lenders use your net taxable income from your tax returns, not what you actually deposited in the bank.
This is where many self-employed buyers run into a snag: if you write off a lot of expenses to reduce your tax bill (which is smart tax strategy), your qualifying income on paper may be lower than your actual cash flow. Bank statement loans were created specifically for this β they use 12β24 months of bank deposits to calculate income instead of tax returns.
Lenders can use a wide variety of income types, as long as they are stable, documentable, and expected to continue for at least 3 years. Qualifying income types include:
- W-2 wages and salary (base pay, overtime, bonuses with 2-year history)
- Self-employment income (net from tax returns or bank statements)
- Social Security and disability income
- Pension and retirement income
- Investment income (dividends, interest)
- Rental income (with documentation β typically 75% of gross rent)
- Alimony or child support (with court order and payment history)
- Part-time income (with 2-year history)
- VA benefits
Yes β rental income from investment properties you own can be used to offset your debt obligations and boost qualifying income. However, the rules depend on whether the property shows up on your tax returns and how long you've been receiving the income.
For existing rental properties: lenders typically use the income shown on Schedule E of your tax returns. If the property operated at a loss (after depreciation and expenses), that loss may actually count against you.
For the property you're purchasing: if it's a multi-unit (2β4 unit) and you plan to live in one unit, lenders will often count a percentage of projected rental income from the other units toward your qualification. This can be a powerful strategy for first-time buyers.
Your monthly mortgage payment is typically made up of four components, often called PITI:
- Principal: The portion that reduces your loan balance
- Interest: The cost of borrowing, based on your rate and remaining balance
- Taxes: Your estimated property tax divided by 12, collected monthly into escrow
- Insurance: Your homeowner's insurance premium, also collected monthly into escrow
If your down payment is less than 20% on a conventional loan, you'll also pay PMI (Private Mortgage Insurance) until you reach 20% equity. On FHA loans, mortgage insurance is called MIP and works differently.
Closing costs typically range from 2% to 5% of the loan amount. On a $350,000 loan, that's $7,000 to $17,500. These costs come from several different sources:
- Lender fees: Origination, underwriting, processing
- Third-party fees: Appraisal, title search, title insurance, attorney (in some states)
- Prepaid items: First year homeowner's insurance, property tax escrow, prepaid interest
- Government fees: Recording fees, transfer taxes (vary by location)
The good news: some costs are negotiable or shoppable. Your Loan Estimate will break them down clearly. Seller concessions (the seller paying some of your closing costs) are also common in buyer-friendly markets.
Mortgage points (also called discount points) are prepaid interest you pay at closing to permanently reduce your interest rate. One point equals 1% of the loan amount. Paying one point on a $300,000 loan costs $3,000 upfront and typically reduces your rate by 0.25%.
Whether buying points makes sense depends on your break-even timeline. If paying $3,000 upfront saves you $60/month, your break-even is 50 months (about 4 years). If you plan to stay in the home beyond that, points make financial sense. If you might sell or refinance before then, skip them.
PMI stands for Private Mortgage Insurance. It's required on conventional loans when your down payment is less than 20%. PMI protects the lender β not you β in the event you default. Despite that, the cost falls on you.
PMI typically costs 0.5%β1.5% of the loan amount per year, depending on your credit score, loan-to-value ratio, and lender. On a $300,000 loan, that's roughly $125β$375/month added to your payment.
The upside: PMI is not permanent. Once you reach 20% equity (through payments or appreciation), you can request removal on conventional loans. It automatically cancels by law at 22% equity based on the original amortization schedule.
Your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio is one of the most important numbers in your mortgage application. Here's how it works:
Front-End DTI (Housing Ratio): Your proposed monthly housing payment (PITI) Γ· gross monthly income. Most lenders want this at or below 28β31%.
Back-End DTI (Total DTI): All monthly debt payments (housing + car loans + student loans + credit cards + other installments) Γ· gross monthly income. Most conventional loans cap this at 45β50%. FHA can go higher.
Minimum credit card payments are used for the calculation β not the actual amount you pay. Even a $0 balance card with a credit limit shows $0 DTI impact. What kills DTI is carrying balances with minimum payments, car loans, and student loans.
There are several ways to secure a lower rate on your mortgage:
- Improve your credit score β higher scores unlock better pricing tiers
- Increase your down payment β less risk for the lender often means a better rate
- Buy discount points β pay upfront to permanently reduce the rate
- Choose a shorter loan term β 15-year rates are typically lower than 30-year rates
- Shop multiple lenders β rates vary meaningfully between lenders for the same borrower
- Lock at the right time β rates fluctuate daily; locking when rates dip can save money
This is a two-part question: what can you qualify for, and what can you comfortably live on? These are not always the same number β and the lender only answers the first part.
A practical framework: keep your total housing payment (PITI + PMI) at or below 28β30% of your gross monthly income. If you earn $8,000/month, a payment of $2,240β$2,400 is generally considered manageable. Stretch beyond 35β40% and you may feel "house poor."
Also factor in: maintenance (budget 1β2% of home value per year), utilities, HOA fees if applicable, and the cash reserves you want to keep after closing. The lender approves the loan β you have to live with the payment.
Fixed-rate mortgages (FRM): Your interest rate stays the same for the entire loan term β whether 15 or 30 years. Your principal and interest payment never changes. Predictability is the biggest advantage. Most homebuyers choose this option.
Adjustable-rate mortgages (ARM): Your rate is fixed for an initial period (typically 5, 7, or 10 years), then adjusts annually based on a market index. A 7/1 ARM, for example, is fixed for 7 years then adjusts every year. ARMs usually start with a lower rate than a comparable fixed-rate loan.
ARMs can make sense if you plan to sell or refinance before the adjustment period begins, or if you believe rates will fall in the future. The risk is that if rates rise, your payment goes up. In an uncertain rate environment, most buyers prefer the certainty of a fixed rate.
An ARM (Adjustable-Rate Mortgage) offers a lower initial interest rate in exchange for some future uncertainty. After the fixed period ends, the rate adjusts based on an index (like SOFR) plus a margin set by the lender.
ARMs typically have rate caps that limit how much the rate can increase: per adjustment, annually, and over the life of the loan. A 2/1/5 cap structure means: rate can't rise more than 2% at first adjustment, 1% per year after that, and 5% total over the life of the loan.
ARMs make sense for: buyers who plan to sell within 5β7 years, buyers who expect income to grow significantly, or buyers in high-cost markets trying to qualify for a larger loan with a lower initial payment.
The best loan depends on your unique combination of credit, income, down payment, the property type, and your long-term plans. Here's a simplified framework:
- Great credit, 20%+ down, stable income: Conventional loan β lowest overall cost, no PMI
- Lower credit or limited down payment: FHA loan β more flexible guidelines, government-backed
- Veteran or active military: VA loan β zero down, no PMI, competitive rates
- Rural or suburban property, moderate income: USDA loan β zero down, low rates
- Loan over conforming limits: Jumbo loan β higher amount, stricter requirements
- Self-employed or non-traditional income: Bank statement or Non-QM loan
A good mortgage broker can present multiple options and show you side-by-side comparisons so you can make an informed decision based on real numbers.
Both are popular options, but they serve different borrower profiles:
- Credit: FHA allows scores as low as 580 (or 500 with 10% down); conventional typically requires 620+
- Down payment: Both can go as low as 3β3.5%; conventional has more flexibility
- Mortgage insurance: FHA MIP is usually required for the life of the loan (with less than 10% down); conventional PMI can be removed at 20% equity
- Loan limits: FHA has county-specific limits; conventional limits are higher
- Property condition: FHA has stricter appraisal/condition requirements; conventional is more flexible
FHA often costs more over time due to lifetime MIP, but it's the right tool for buyers with lower credit or limited savings. Once you build equity, refinancing from FHA to conventional is a common strategy.
VA Loans are available to eligible veterans, active-duty service members, and surviving spouses. Benefits include: zero down payment required, no PMI, competitive interest rates, and flexible credit guidelines. The VA funding fee (a one-time charge) replaces mortgage insurance and can be financed into the loan.
USDA Loans are for buyers purchasing in eligible rural and suburban areas (more areas qualify than most people think). Benefits include: zero down payment, low interest rates, and reduced mortgage insurance compared to FHA. Income limits apply β generally up to 115% of the area median income.
If you qualify for either of these programs, they are almost always the most cost-effective option available. Too many eligible buyers overlook them.
A jumbo loan is any mortgage that exceeds the conforming loan limit set by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (currently $806,500 in most areas for 2025, higher in high-cost markets). Because these loans can't be sold to the agencies, lenders hold more risk β which means stricter qualification standards.
Typical jumbo requirements include:
- Credit score of 700β720 or higher
- Down payment of 10β20%
- DTI ratio below 43β45%
- Substantial cash reserves (often 12+ months of payments)
- Full income documentation
Rates on jumbo loans are sometimes comparable to or even slightly lower than conforming rates, depending on market conditions.
Yes β refinancing is simply replacing your existing mortgage with a new one, ideally at better terms. Common reasons people refinance include: lowering their interest rate, reducing their monthly payment, switching from an ARM to a fixed rate, removing PMI or FHA MIP, or tapping home equity (cash-out refinance).
There's no mandatory waiting period to refinance a conventional loan, though most lenders want to see 6β12 months of payment history. FHA and VA loans have specific streamline refinance programs with reduced documentation requirements.
The key question is always: does the long-term savings justify the closing costs? Use the break-even calculation β divide your closing costs by your monthly savings to find out how many months it takes to recoup the cost of refinancing.
Having your documents ready upfront speeds everything up. Standard documentation includes:
- Income: Last 30 days of pay stubs, 2 years of W-2s, 2 years of federal tax returns
- Assets: Last 2 months of bank/investment/retirement account statements (all pages)
- Identity: Government-issued photo ID, Social Security number
- Property: Signed purchase contract (when available)
- Additional (if applicable): Divorce decree, child support/alimony documentation, bankruptcy discharge papers, rental agreements for investment properties
Self-employed borrowers also need: 2 years of personal and business tax returns, year-to-date P&L statement, and a business license or CPA letter confirming self-employment status.
These terms are often used interchangeably, but they are meaningfully different:
Pre-Qualification: A quick, informal assessment based on self-reported information. No credit check, no documentation review. It gives a rough estimate of what you might qualify for. It holds little weight with sellers.
Pre-Approval: A formal review of your credit, income, assets, and employment. You submit actual documents, and the lender issues a conditional commitment to lend. This is what serious buyers need before making offers in competitive markets.
Fully Underwritten Pre-Approval: The gold standard. Your complete file has been reviewed by an underwriter before you even find a property. This gives sellers maximum confidence and can significantly strengthen your offer.
From application to closing, the typical mortgage process takes 30 to 45 days, though 21β28 day closings are achievable when buyers come prepared and the transaction is straightforward.
Here's a general timeline:
- Days 1β3: Application, disclosures, document collection
- Days 3β7: Processing β file compiled and submitted to underwriting
- Days 7β14: Underwriting review β conditional approval issued
- Days 14β21: Appraisal completed, conditions cleared
- Days 21β30: Final approval (clear to close), closing disclosure issued
- Day 30β45: Closing and funding
Delays most commonly occur due to missing documents, appraisal issues, title problems, or last-minute credit changes. Being responsive to your loan team's requests is the single biggest way to stay on schedule.
An appraisal is an independent professional opinion of the property's market value, ordered by the lender and typically paid for by the buyer. The appraiser visits the property, measures it, documents its condition, and compares it to recently sold comparable homes ("comps") in the area.
The lender uses the appraised value to confirm the property is worth at least as much as you're paying. If the appraisal comes in low β say, the home is under contract for $350,000 but appraised at $330,000 β the lender will only lend based on $330,000. You would need to either renegotiate the price, pay the difference in cash, or request a reconsideration of value (ROV).
You're entitled by law to receive a copy of your appraisal at least 3 business days before closing.
Great questions separate informed buyers from those who just sign where they're told. Ask your lender:
- What loan programs do I qualify for, and why do you recommend this one?
- What is the APR, and how does it differ from the interest rate?
- What are your lender fees specifically? (Origination, processing, underwriting)
- Are there prepayment penalties?
- How long will you lock my rate, and what does it cost to extend the lock?
- What could cause my closing costs to change between the Loan Estimate and the Closing Disclosure?
- What is your average time from application to closing?
- Will my loan be sold after closing? Who will service it?
Missing a payment doesn't immediately result in foreclosure, but consequences escalate the longer it goes unaddressed:
- 1β15 days late: Grace period β no penalty in most loans
- 16β30 days late: Late fee assessed (typically 3β5% of the payment)
- 30+ days late: Reported to credit bureaus β significant credit score damage
- 90+ days late: Lender may begin pre-foreclosure process (Notice of Default)
- 120+ days late: Foreclosure proceedings may formally begin
If you're facing financial hardship, contact your loan servicer immediately. There are loss mitigation options including forbearance, loan modification, and repayment plans. The sooner you communicate, the more options you have.
Preparation before you apply is the single most powerful thing you can do to improve your terms and reduce stress. A smart pre-application checklist:
- Check your credit reports at annualcreditreport.com β dispute any errors 60β90 days before applying
- Avoid opening new credit accounts β new inquiries temporarily lower your score
- Pay down revolving balances β keeping utilization below 30% (ideally 10%) boosts your score
- Document your down payment β large deposits need to be sourced, so keep a clear paper trail
- Avoid major purchases β don't finance a car or appliances before closing
- Gather your documents early β 2 years W-2s, 30 days pay stubs, 2 months bank statements
- Talk to a loan officer before a real estate agent β know your budget before you fall in love with a house
A direct lender (bank, credit union, retail mortgage company) originates and funds loans using their own money. You're limited to only the products that specific institution offers.
A mortgage broker is an independent professional with relationships with dozens β sometimes hundreds β of wholesale lenders. They shop your loan to find the best rate and program for your situation. Brokers don't fund the loan themselves; they match you with the right lender.
Brokers often have access to wholesale pricing not available to consumers directly, which can mean better rates. They also provide more flexibility for complex borrower profiles.
The best tool is the Loan Estimate (LE) β a standardized 3-page form every lender must provide. Because the format is identical, side-by-side comparison is straightforward. Focus on:
- Section A β Origination Charges: The lender's actual fees β fully controllable by the lender
- Interest rate and APR: APR accounts for fees and gives a truer cost comparison
- Cash to Close: The total you bring to closing
- 5-Year Cost Comparison: Page 3 of the LE shows projected costs over five years
Don't compare rate alone. A lender quoting a lower rate while charging $4,000 more in fees may not be a better deal. APR and total cash-to-close tell the full story.
Your maximum loan amount is driven by income, debts, and credit. To increase your borrowing power:
- Reduce existing debt β paying off a car loan or credit card directly lowers DTI
- Add a co-borrower β combining incomes increases the qualifying amount significantly
- Document all income sources β make sure every eligible income stream is counted
- Improve your credit score β a higher score may unlock programs with more favorable DTI limits
- Choose the right loan type β FHA allows higher DTI ratios than conventional in some cases
- Increase your down payment β a larger down payment reduces the loan amount you need
There is no legal limit, but there are practical credit score implications. Credit scoring models (FICO and VantageScore) treat multiple mortgage inquiries within a 14β45 day window as a single inquiry β this is called "rate shopping protection." So comparing 3β5 lenders in the same month won't hurt your score any more than applying once.
If you're denied, waiting 6β12 months to address the underlying issue before reapplying gives you the best chance. Applying repeatedly without fixing the root cause won't produce a different result.
Loan-to-Value (LTV) is your loan amount divided by the appraised value (or purchase price, whichever is lower), expressed as a percentage.
Example: $270,000 loan on a $300,000 home = 90% LTV (10% down).
LTV affects: whether PMI is required, your interest rate tier, which programs you qualify for, and how much equity you hold. Lower LTV = less lender risk = better terms for you. Most lenders offer the best pricing at 80% LTV or below.
Interest Rate: The base cost of borrowing. This determines your principal + interest payment.
APR (Annual Percentage Rate): The interest rate plus certain fees (origination, points, broker fees) expressed as a single annualized rate. APR gives a more complete picture of total loan cost.
Example: A loan at 6.875% with $5,000 in fees might carry a 7.1% APR. A loan at 7.0% with no fees has a 7.0% APR. The second loan has a higher rate but lower total cost. APR is the better comparison tool β assuming you keep the loan to full term.
If this is your first home purchase, the process can feel overwhelming. Here's a simplified checklist to keep you on track:
- β Check your credit score and review all three credit reports for errors
- β Calculate how much you can afford (28% housing rule is a solid starting point)
- β Save for your down payment AND closing costs AND reserves β don't go to zero
- β Research first-time buyer assistance programs in your state or city
- β Get pre-approved before shopping for homes
- β Hire a buyer's real estate agent (typically paid by the seller)
- β Make an offer, negotiate, go under contract
- β Complete your mortgage application and respond to document requests promptly
- β Order a home inspection β highly recommended even if not required by your lender
- β Review your Loan Estimate carefully and sign your Intent to Proceed
- β Avoid any major financial changes until after closing
- β Review your Closing Disclosure 3 days before closing
- β Do a final walk-through of the property, then close!
Your credit score directly impacts your interest rate β and it can often be meaningfully improved in 60β120 days with targeted action:
- Pay down credit card balances β fastest lever; get utilization below 30%, ideally below 10%
- Pay all bills on time β payment history is 35% of your FICO score
- Dispute errors on your credit report β incorrect collections or wrong balances can be removed
- Don't close old accounts β length of credit history matters; older open accounts help
- Don't open new accounts β new inquiries temporarily lower your score
- Request a goodwill deletion β for one late payment on an otherwise perfect record, some creditors will remove it
Some of the most expensive homebuying mistakes are completely avoidable:
- Financing a car or major purchase before closing β new debt changes your DTI and can kill approval
- Moving large sums of money between accounts without documentation β unexplained deposits trigger underwriting flags
- Changing or quitting your job mid-process β employment is verified again right before closing
- Not shopping multiple lenders β even a 0.25% rate difference adds up to tens of thousands over 30 years
- Skipping the home inspection β appraisals don't catch everything; inspections protect your investment
- Draining all savings for the down payment β lenders want cash reserves after closing
- Borrowing the maximum you qualify for β qualifying for more doesn't mean you should borrow more
- Being slow on document requests β delayed responses can cost you a rate lock and delay closing
Buyers commonly confuse these two entirely different evaluations:
Home Inspection: A detailed assessment of the physical condition of the home β roof, foundation, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, and more. Ordered and paid for by the buyer. Not required by the lender, but strongly recommended. Its purpose is to identify problems and give you leverage to negotiate repairs or credits β or to walk away.
Appraisal: An independent estimate of market value based on comparable sales. Required by the lender. Its purpose is to confirm the collateral supports the loan amount being requested.
An appraiser may note obvious defects that affect value, but they are not conducting a thorough inspection. Never rely on an appraisal as a substitute for a proper home inspection.
An escrow account (also called an impound account) is a separate account managed by your loan servicer that collects and holds funds for property taxes and homeowner's insurance on your behalf.
Each month, a portion of your mortgage payment flows into this account. When your tax bill or insurance premium comes due, your servicer pays it automatically from the escrow funds. This protects you and the lender by ensuring those critical bills are never missed.
Your servicer performs an annual escrow analysis to ensure the account stays funded. If there's a shortage, your monthly payment adjusts upward. If there's a surplus above the allowable cushion, they'll send you a refund check.
Some loan types require escrow; others make it optional for borrowers with sufficient equity.
Mortgages for investment properties come with stricter requirements than primary residence loans:
- Down payment: Typically 15β25% depending on property type and program
- Credit score: Usually 680β700+ required
- Interest rate: Typically 0.50%β0.75% higher than equivalent primary residence rates
- Reserves: Lenders often require 6+ months of payments held in liquid reserves
- Rental income: Projected rental income may help you qualify, subject to restrictions
VA and USDA loans cannot be used for investment properties. FHA requires you to occupy one unit of a multi-family purchase. Conventional is the most common path for investment property financing.
Mortgage calculators are useful for ballpark planning but have real limitations. Here's a balanced view:
Where they're helpful:
- Estimating principal + interest at a given rate and loan amount
- Comparing a 15-year vs. 30-year loan total cost
- Running amortization schedules and extra payment scenarios
- Break-even analysis on discount points or refinancing
Where they fall short:
- Most don't include taxes, insurance, HOA, or PMI β your real payment is higher
- You enter the rate yourself β your actual rate depends on your credit and current market
- They can't account for lender fees or closing cost variations
Down payment assistance (DPA) is one of the most underutilized resources available to homebuyers. Thousands of programs exist at the federal, state, county, and city level β and many eligible buyers have no idea they exist.
DPA comes in several forms:
- Grants: Free money that never needs to be repaid
- Forgivable loans: Forgiven after you remain in the home a set number of years
- Deferred-payment loans: No payments required until you sell, refinance, or pay off the loan
- Matched savings programs: Your saved dollars are matched up to a cap
Eligibility is often based on income limits (typically 80β120% of area median income), first-time buyer status (often defined as no homeownership in the past 3 years), and purchasing within a specific area or zip code.
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NEXA Lending, LLC
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