Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Grants and Loan�Programs
via Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Grants and Loan Programs.
via Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Grants and Loan Programs.
Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Grants and Loan�Programs
via Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Grants and Loan Programs.
via Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Grants and Loan Programs.
Down Payment Assistance Program – Housing & Community Development – LouisvilleKy.gov.
The Down Payment Assistance Program provides qualified homebuyers a loan to assist with purchasing a home which will be their primary residence.
Homebuyer households must have income no greater than 80% of median income, adjusted for family size.
All Homebuyers must complete HUD approved homeownership counseling before assistance can be committed. A Certificate of Completion from the counseling agency must be submitted with the application. Contact The Louisville Urban League at (502) 585-4622 or The Housing Partnership Inc.at (502) 585-5451 for counseling.
Metro Government has revised its Down Payment Assistance Program increasing the amount of assistance.
We are now offering Metro Wide assistance, and homebuyers may qualify for a forgivable mortgage which will be forgiven over a five (5) year period of 10% of the purchase price of the home to a maximum of $10,000.
We will continue to provide maximum assistance in our 2009 Target Area neighborhoods, and homebuyers may still qualify for a forgivable mortgage which will be forgiven over a ten (10) year period of 20% of the purchase price of the home to a maximum of $20,000.
Our Department has also allocated closing cost assistance in the amount of up to $2,000 for down payment assistance programs; however, homebuyers must pay all prepaid costs from their own funds.
Homebuyers are responsible for obtaining primary financing with a fixed rate mortgage from a reputable lender.
A Housing Quality Standards inspection will be conducted by a Louisville Metro inspector before closing. All deficiencies must be corrected and verified by re-inspection prior to closing
A HUD-1 closing statement must be received two working days (48 hours) prior to closing.
Applications will be accepted at any time. Assistance is granted on a first come, first serve basis. For more information about the Down Payment Assistance Program, please call 574-3107.
810 Barret Avenue, Louisville, Kentucky 40204
Office Hours: 8:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m.
Clients are seen by appointment – please call
Phone: (502) 574-3107
FHA Updates Credit Qualifying Guidelines.
FHA (Federal Housing Administration) mortgages are known for the easier and flexible credit qualifying guidelines that are offered to borrowers. It is for this reason that so many people choose FHA mortgages for their financing. Recently, FHA has updated the credit qualifying guidelines for disputed accounts and collections that becomes effective April 1st.
When the borrower has one or several disputed credit accounts and/or collections with a total balance that is equal to or above $1,000, the accounts must be resolved by payment arrangement or paid in full prior to or at closing. If not paid in full, these payments will be included in the debt to income ratios. If payment arrangements have been made, there must be at least three months of verified payments as per the agreement made with the creditor. Any disputed account or collections that are the result of credit card theft, identity theft or unauthorized use are excluded from the $1,000 calculation. There must be related and appropriate documentation, such as a police report, to substantiate this claim.
When the total amount due on outstanding credit and/or collection accounts is below $1,000 the borrower does not have to pay off the accounts in order to receive approval. It is not considered an acceptable resolution according to FHA to pay down balances on any of these accounts in order to bring the balance below $1,000. FHA requires that court ordered judgments be paid in full prior to FHA mortgage approval. In the case of a court ordered judgment in which the borrower has an agreement to make regular payments and can show the documentation that at least three months of payments have been made, a borrower can continue to pay off the judgment and the payments will be included in the debt to income ratios.
Acceptable documentation to support any resolutions to credit or collection accounts include a letter from the creditor which outlines the terms of the payment arrangements or verifies the payoff of debt, canceled checks or a credit report supplement that verifies the payoff or payment arrangements. It is likely that more borrowers will be cleaning up their credit prior to making an FHA mortgage application once these FHA updates for credit qualifying go into effect.
THE increased cost of F.H.A. mortgages has shifted the math a bit for would-be borrowers.
A home buyer with a down payment of less than 20 percent generally has to pay up in some other way to ensure that lenders are protected against default. (This requirement slipped during the housing boom; see “financial crisis.”)
The most popular low-down-payment loans have been those insured by the Federal Housing Administration. Borrowers can make down payments as low as 3.5 percent; they pay an upfront fee (often rolled into the loan) and a monthly premium. An alternative is private mortgage insurance, or P.M.I., available to those who put down at least 5 percent.
As the name implies, the insurance is provided by a private company rather than the government. Premiums can be paid up front, each month, or in a mix. The amount of the premium drops as the size of the down payment rises. Use of these loans has fallen off sharply in recent years as the P.M.I. companies tightened standards and F.H.A. gained popularity.
Effective on April 18, F.H.A.’s annual premium on a 30-year loan rose to 1.1 or 1.15 percent of the loan value, up from 0.85 or 0.9 percent. (The higher rates are for down payments below 5 percent.) On a $400,000 loan with the minimum down payment, that’s $83 more per month.
The monthly fee is in addition to the up-front premium, equal to 1 percent of the loan value. Which loan to go with may depend on the answer to a question: “how long is it going to take to recoup that 1 percent up front?” said Matt Hackett, an underwriting manager at Equity Now, a direct mortgage lender based in New York.
In the first quarter, 17.7 percent of new loans were F.H.A., according to Inside Mortgage Finance, an industry data provider, while P.M.I. had a 5.4 percent market share. Applications for F.H.A. loans jumped 20 percent in the month preceding the price increase, then tumbled when it went into effect, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association.
In addition to lower minimum down-payment requirements, F.H.A. has laxer rules for credit scores and debt-to-income ratios. Right now, it also has lower interest rates, said Thatcher Zuse, the president of Sound Mortgage, a lender and broker in Guilford, Conn. “Almost as a rule, as the rates stand right now, the less equity you’re putting down, the better the F.H.A. deal becomes.”
Mr. Zuse ran the numbers for two buyers able to put 5 percent down. For a buyer with a 780 credit score, the cost difference between F.H.A. and P.M.I. was negligible, but a buyer with a 650 score could save about $200 a month on a $400,000 F.H.A. loan.
There are circumstances peculiar to the New York area that could push a borrower to F.H.A., said Robert Donovan, a Bank of America senior vice president and regional sales executive. For one thing, the region has a high concentration of two- to four-unit homes, popular with buyers who want to live in one apartment while renting out another. Loans in such cases are treated much more liberally by F.H.A., he said.
The same goes for new-construction condominiums of any size: until more than half a project is sold, conventional loans may not be an option. F.H.A.-backed loans are available even if as little as 30 percent of the project is sold, Mr. Donovan said.
In the broadest terms, for someone with no special circumstances, great credit and a more-than-minimum down payment — say, 10 or 15 percent — P.M.I. may turn out to be the better deal. Someone with weaker credit or less cash may find F.H.A. works better.
To generalize, “if you qualify for P.M.I.,” Mr. Hackett said, “you should usually choose the P.M.I., because it is going to be less.”
Circumstances vary, though, so ask any lender to produce a written comparison, said Michael Moskowitz, the president of Equity Now, “just to keep the lender honest.”