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Knowledge base on
interest only home mortgage loan rates
What Happens To My Mortgage When I Sell My Home You've decided to make the plunge and sell you home. More than a few people have innocently asked me, "What happens to my mortgage when I sell my home?"
What Happens to My Mortgage When I sell My Home
If you own a home, you undoubtedly are carrying a mortgage on it. A mortgage is simply a loan from a bank or financial institution for percentage of the value of the home, which you pay to the person you purchased the home from when you bought it. Depend on the type of mortgage you have, the amount due on the loan should have decreased during the time you lived in the home and made monthly payments.
When you go to sell your home, the simple question is what happens to the then due balance on the mortgage? The simple answer is the financial institution is going to be paid out of the proceeds of the sale before you see anything. As a result, it is critical that you calculate in the loan repayment amount when determining if it makes sense to sell a home. If you have a home worth $300,000 and owe $280,000 on the mortgage, you are going to realize little or no profit after the costs associated with the sale and probably shouldn't sell it.
If you have plenty of equity built up in the home, your mortgage can still end up costing you more than you originally expected. Many modern mortgages have restrictive penalties built into them. These penalties are designed to encourage you to hold onto the home for a set period of time, usually a couple of years, so the bank can recover a certain amount of interest up front. Put another way, the bank is trying to lock in a certain amount of profit on the loan.
When it comes to these restrictive penalties, lending institutions get pretty creative. Many will include a penalty if you sell or refinance the property within the first two years of the loan period. The penalties can be anything from the equivalent of three months of payments to a preset amount or even a percentage of the loan. State law often influences these issues, so you need to read your mortgage loan documents closely.
Regardless, you mortgage is going to be paid off as part of the sales process. The exact amount will depend upon the nature of your loan.
About the author:
Raynor James is with the FSBO site - http://www.fsboamerica.org - FSBO homes for sale by owner. Visit our "sell my home" page - http://www.fsboamerica.org/seller.cfm - to sell your house yourself with a free 1 month listing.
More Useful Resource and Updates on interest only home mortgage loan rates
- What an interest rate cut means to you (CNN Money)
The Federal Reserve is expected to cut interest rates today. That would be the ninth consecutive rate cut this year. Here's what this means to your wallet.
- Good credit? Home loans no longer a sure thing (USA Today)
The new, dynamic landscape of mortgage lending today is a world in which even those with good credit are having trouble getting mortgages or the loan terms they want. Buyers and properties are being forced to go through extra scrutiny.
- Exeter Commercial Is Announcing The Formation Of Our Mortgage Modification and FHA Lending Groups (PRWeb via Yahoo! News)
The Mortgage Modification Group will work with borrowers of both residential and commercial mortgage loans who have fallen behind, or who are about to fall behind on their payments due to an unforeseen hardship. This can include an ARM rate adjustment, illness, loss of job, failure of a business etc. The FHA Group will work with borrowers that are seeking to purchase a home and who may not ...
- Fannie, Freddie Mortgage-Bond Spreads Hit Widest in Two Months (Bloomberg)
Oct. 27 (Bloomberg) -- Yields on Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac and Ginnie Mae mortgage bonds rose to the highest in two months relative to government notes, boosting home-loan rates.
- Mortgage rates up, loan-to-value falls (Zawya)
29 October 2008 Mortgage rates in the UAE are likely to rise further due to the liquidity strain, while the loan-to-value (LTVs) ratio is expected to further decline, a report said.
- Wood County veterans have new tool to refinance home mortgage (Wisconsin Rapids Daily Tribune)
The Department of Veterans Affairs is offering veterans caught up in the current mortgage crisis a helping hand.
- Mortgage applications jump 17% on lower rates (CNN Money)
Borrowers streamed back into the mortgage market last week as loan applications jumped nearly 17%, according to a regular survey from the Mortgage Bankers Association.
- Fitch: Loan Modifications Will Cushion Rate Shock on $347B of U.S. Subprime ARMs (Business Wire via Yahoo! Finance)
NEW YORK----The dramatic increase of London Interbank Offering Rates from mid-September to mid-October has reignited concerns regarding payment shock for borrowers of U.S. hybrid adjustable-rate mortgage collateral and particularly subprime RMBS, according to Fitch Ratings.
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