Home Loans with Bad Credit

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You have just seen the house of your dreams but you have had credit problems.  The ability to find home loans with bad credit can be difficult but not impossible.

Previous to 1990 if you did not qualify for a FHA or VA home mortgage it was very difficult to get a mortgage.  This since has changed and there are companies providing home loans with bad credit on a daily basis.  These loans were introduced to help high risk borrowers to secure a mortgage and become homeowners.

When you are looking for home loans with bad credit you will probably want to look into what is called a subprime loan.  This is a loan to persons with a damaged credit history and would be considered a high risk borrower.  Because of the higher risk, subprime loans normally require a larger down payment and a higher interest rate.  The higher the risk the lender feels you are, based on credit scores and other factors the higher the rate to borrow will be.  If the risk seems lower you could receive a lower rate and lower down payment even if you are still considered a high risk borrower.

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Home equity loan

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In simple terminology, a home equity loan is a loan taken against your house. A home equity loan is also called a mortgage or a second mortgage. Another synonym for home equity loan is equity release schemes.

While taking a home equity loan you are actually borrowing the worth of your house. If the house is completely owned by you, then the term used for home equity loan is “mortgage“, otherwise if your house is not fully paid off but has equity, it is called a “second mortgage“. From now on we will use one term for both to facilitate better understanding. We will call them Home Equity Loans.

A home equity loan is an extra loan that you take against your home in addition to your mortgage; hence this is called a second mortgage. This enables a home owner to encash equity without refinancing the first mortgage. Most people are under the impression that the only way to raise cash is by selling their homes. However reality differs and factually one can take a second mortgage to free up the first mortgage also.

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Student loan debt consolidation

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There’s no way around it. If you took out student loans to pay for college, you have to pay them back. That can be hard to do, whether you’re still in school, trying to start your life outside it, or even 10 years down the line. You borrowed the money, you used it, and you have to pay it back.

What happens when that means you have to choose between paying all your bills or just those? What happens when those outstanding debts get in the way of putting money together for a house, or a car, or a family? It just doesn’t make sense to walk through life incurring the debts of living while you’re still dragging around the ones from school.

Fortunately, there’s a solution. You still have to pay back what you borrowed, but with a student loan debt consolidation make monthly payments to just one lender.

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Unsecured debt consolidation loans

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Bankruptcy is an ugly word, but a very real possibility to many people struggling to pay a laundry list of bills that never seem to end. At times, that pile of bills seems impossible to deal with, a mountain you’ll never get out from under without taking drastic measures. But bankruptcy isn’t the only alternative to a life chained to the never-ending cycle of bills, late fees and more bills.

Think about consolidating your debt in a single loan, a form of refinancing that helps you put your finances back in your control and your life back in order. But refinancing is for people who own a home, right? What if you don’t have a home, or you don’t want to risk losing it by putting it up for collateral? That’s where an unsecured debt consolidation loan comes into play.

Unsecured debt consolidation loans do not require collateral. You can pay off all your other creditors and keep your house – or lack thereof – out of it. Lenders are able to stay in business by covering their risk with higher interest rates than they offer on secured loans.

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100% Mortgage Loans

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100% Mortgage Loans – The need to put 5, 10, or even 20% down on a home no longer exists. Many mortgage professionals have the ability to offer their customers 100% financing in a variety of ways.Buying a home has become much easier because mortgages with no down payment required have become much more available in the mortgage market.

Lenders have increased the loan amounts they are willing to lend with no down payment. Some lenders have reduced the credit score required. In addition, some lenders are offering interest-only payments to make qualifying easier.

We offer loans with no down payment required up to $1,400,000 with a credit score as low as 620. We also offer loans with no down payment required up to $700,000 with a credit score as low as 580. Full documentation and stated income loans are available.

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2/28 Adjustable Rate Mortgage

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2/28 Adjustable Rate Mortgage – A 2/28 arm is a mortgage that has a fixed rate for the first two years, and then the interest rate adjusts for the next 28 years. This completes the full 30 year term of the loan.2/28 ARMS will have a cieling rate that is often times upwards of 13%. This means that your rate could potentially go as high as the cieling rate over time if you do not refinance out of the mortgage.

Verify the pre-payment penalty term when closing.

The 2/28 is used quite often as a “band-aid”, or 2 step type of loan. What is meant by this is, many people who are put on a 2/28, are put on the loan as a temporary thing with the intention of refinancing in the next 2 years. These types of loans are used quite often by sub-prime lenders to get borrowers into a home at a lower rate and payment upfront for the first 2 years, and then once a borrower has had a chance to establish more credit or repair their credit they can look into qualifying for a mortgage with a great fixed rate.

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Consolidating Debt – Refinance or 2nd Mortgage?

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Consolidating DebtRefinance or 2nd Mortgage? – Homeowners who need to consolidate their high interest unsecured debts often wonder what is the best way of doing it. Is it best to refinance your first mortgage or take out a second mortgage or Home Equity Line of Credit?

Recent increases in the Prime Rate have made the Home Equity Lines of Credit much less attractive than they were a few years ago. Don’t use a home equity loan as a way to manage your outstanding debt. Instead, use it as a way to eliminate your debt entirely. Find a good mortgage broker that will show you how to use your monthly savings to pay off all of your debt, including your mortgage, in a much shorter period of time. In today’s rising rate environment, Home Equity Loans, Lines of Credit and other short term interest rate-linked forms of financing are increasingly risky liabilities to have on your creditand your home. Consider consolidating all of your revolving and secondary debts into a single loan.

Taking advantage of refinance programs which allow you to consolidate your debts and modify the rate and term of your first mortgage, such as adding a minimum payment option, can allow you to really boost your cashflow or focus your finances. We have had customers who were paying 2500 a month in mortgage + credit card & car payments drop down to making one minimum payment of 1100 dollars a month after debt consolidation refinancing. In the same situation, a second mortgage would have only reduced their total monthly spending to 2150 a month.

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