Tara O'Brien's Minneapolis Real Estate Update: 5 Tips for Deciphering Your Home Loan’s Good-faith Estimate

Tara O'Brien's Minneapolis Real Estate Update: 5 Tips for Deciphering Your Home Loan’s Good-faith Estimate

Minneapolis Condos and Minneapolis Real Estate | Tara O'Brien
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Thursday, August 05, 2010

5 Tips for Deciphering Your Home Loan’s Good-faith Estimate

Knowing how to read your good-faith estimate can help you save money on your home loan.


When you’re shopping for a mortgage loan, it’s sometimes hard to understand the jargon lenders use in the good-faith estimate explaining the costs and fees you’ll pay when taking out a mortgage.When you apply for a mortgage, the lender has three days to give you a good-faith estimate of the fees and interest rate you’ll pay, as well as other loan terms. Here are five tips for using the new three-page form to your advantage.
When you apply for a mortgage, the lender has three days to give you a good-faith estimate of the fees and interest rate you’ll pay, as well as other loan terms. Here are five tips for using the new three-page form to your advantage.

1. Know which fees can increase and by how much

In the past, lenders provided an estimate of the costs involved in getting your home loan, and if those costs rose by the time you closed on your home, tough luck. The good-faith estimate shows some fees the lender can’t change, like the loan origination fee that you pay to get a certain interest rate (commonly called points) and transfer costs.The form also lists the charges that can increase by up to 10%, like some title company fees and local government recording fees. The lender must cover any increase over that amount.Finally, the good-faith estimate lists the fees that can change without any limit, such as daily interest charges.

2. Look for answers to basic loan questions

In the summary section, lenders explain your loan’s terms in simple language. Can your interest rate rise? If so, a lender must spell out how much the rate can jump and what your new payment would be if it does. Can the amount you owe the lender increase, even if you make your payments on time? If it can, a lender must show you the potential increase.

3. Evaluate the “tradeoffs” on a loan

In the new “tradeoff table,” you can ask lenders to provide details on the tradeoffs you can make in choosing among home loans. If you’d like the same loan with lower settlement charges, how will the interest rate change? If you’d like a lower interest rate, how much will your settlement charges increase?

4. Compare apples to apples with the shopping chart

Included on the good-faith estimate is space for you to list all the terms and fees for four different loans, so you can make side-by-side comparisons.


5. Know what’s missing from the good-faith estimate


The new form lacks some key information, such as how much you’ll reimburse the sellers for property taxes they’ve already paid on the home. It also doesn’t tell you the amount of money you’ll have to bring to the closing table. Some lenders have created supplemental forms providing that information. If yours hasn’t, ask for it.


G.M. Filisko is an attorney and award-winning writer who has encountered many settlement statements that bore no resemblance to the lender’s good-faith estimate. A frequent contributor to many national publications including Bankrate.com, REALTOR® Magazine, and the American Bar Association Journal, she specializes in real estate, business, personal finance, and legal topics.Read more: http://buyandsell.houselogic.com/articles/5-tips-deciphering-your-home-loans-good-faith-estimate/#ixzz0vmVyl0GR

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# posted by Tara O'Brien @ 7:33 PM


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Minneapolis Condos and Minneapolis Real Estate | Tara O'Brien
About Tara O'Brien's Minneapolis Condos, MN Real Estate Website: The www.taraobrien.com web site provides Greater Minneapolis communities of Downtown Central, Calhoun-Isles, Camden Community, Longfellow, Near North, Nokomis, Northeast, Phillips, Powderhorn, Southwest and University Community, Minnesota real estate information and resources to guide homeowners, homebuyers and real estate investors through the process of selling and buying a house, condo or other realty property in the Minneapolis Condos area. Tara O'Brien (Sometimes spelled as Tara, Tera, OBrien, O'Brian, or Obrian) has services to help you get the best value for your Minneapolis Condos home and this website offers home buyers and home sellers a superior comparative market analysis (CMA), a way to view real estate and MLS IDX listings including virtual tours, prepare your home for sale, and more. Investors looking for real estate investment properties to invest in need look no farther. Anyone selling a home, buying a home or seeking housing can learn more about our realty services, and will appreciate working with a  Minneapolis Condos REALTOR who knows  the area so well. Through trusted partners, we also provide real estate and financial services to consumers looking for houses for sale or selling their home in Minneapolis Condos, MN, such as mortgages, credit history, new homes, foreclosures and other services. If you've already tried to go the for sale by owner (FSBO) route and find you are needing a partner who you can trust in the sale of your most precious asset, Tara O'Brien can take care of your special needs. It really doesn't matter if you spell it REALTOR, Realator or Realter, realty, realety or reality, real estate or realestate, Tara speaks  your language.
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