Air Date 02-16-13: Benefits of Home Ownership!
We Continue with our Home Ownership Matters Series! Dr. Kim Manturuk is the Senior Research Associate in Financial Services at the Center for Community Capital, a research institute at the […]
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For home buyers today, there are two mortgage programs which offer 100% financing. The first is the VA loan from the Department of Veterans Affairs. It’s available to most active military personnel and veterans nationwide.
The other program is the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Rural Development Single Family Housing Loan Guarantee Program.
Sometimes called a “Rural Housing Loan” or a “Section 502” loan, today’s USDA financing isn’t just for farms. Because of the way the USDA defines “rural”, there are plenty of exurban and suburban neighborhoods nationwide in which USDA loans can be used.
Home buyers who buy a home in a qualified USDA area, and who meet USDA income eligibility requirements, can take advantage of the USDA’s low interest rate, no downpayment mortgage program.
USDA mortgages are structured just like conventional ones via Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac. Where they differ, though, is with respect to downpayment requirements and mortgage insurance.
Unlike conventional loans, USDA mortgages have no down payment requirement, which allows a home buyer to finance a home for 100 percent of its purchase price. The U.S. Department of Agriculture will assess a two percent mortgage insurance fee to all loans, and the cost may to be added to the loan size at the time of closing, as can the costs of eligible home repairs and improvements. The monthly mi factor is significantly less than the FHA loan.
This loan can also be used with THDA.
Similar to FHA home loans, rural housing loans aren’t made by the USDA. Rather, the USDA insures mortgage lenders making USDA Section 502 loans against loss. The program is meant to spur homeownership in rural and underdeveloped areas.
In order to qualify for a USDA home loan, home buyers must meet two requirements.
First, the buyer must buy a home in a USDA-eligible area. In general, USDA property eligibility is governed by census tract density. However, the term “rural” leaves room for interpretation, opening Section 502 mortgages to buyers in unexpected parts of the country.
A buyer’s second USDA eligibility requirement is that household income may not exceed 115% of the area’s median income. A mortgage lender can tell you whether your income meets program requirements, if you’re unsure how to check.
Click here to confirm your USDA eligibility
There are other USDA qualifying criteria, too, including :
For today’s home buyers, mortgage rates remain low and USDA home loan guidelines remain loose. The program is designed for leniency so long as the buyers meets the USDA’s property and income eligibility requirements.
Note, however, that the USDA changes its “rural areas” fairly regularly and an expanding town is apt to lose its rural loan eligibility with the next census tract update, planned for late-March 2013. Homes which are USDA-eligible today may not be USDA-eligible in April.
Get help with your rural home loan and determine your personal eligibility.
Source The Mortgage Report
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The Housing Hour February 16, 2013
We Continue with our Home Ownership Matters Series! Dr. Kim Manturuk is the Senior Research Associate in Financial Services at the Center for Community Capital, a research institute at the […]