6 Ways to Slash Mortgage
Costs
By
Michael Larson • Bankrate.com
Ready to plunk down your hard-earned cash for
a slice of the American pie? Make sure your financing is low fat. Buying
a home is likely the most expensive, long-ranging financial commitment most of
us ever make. The more homework you do before heading out with a real estate
agent or before making an offer on a home, the more likely you are to stretch
your mortgage budget. Here are six ways to get the most bang
for your money beginning before you step out the door to shop.
Get pre-approved
Get pre-approved for your mortgage loan, rather than just pre-qualified.
With pre-approval, the lender pulls a credit report, verifies a borrower's
income and takes other preliminary underwriting steps to come up with a maximum
allowable loan amount, which usually doesn't change. The lender also commits, in
writing, to making that loan if a purchase occurs within a set amount of time.
In a pre-qualification, the customer provides the information, but the lender
doesn't check it and there's no assurance that the loan will be approved.
Pre-approval requires the home-shopper to fill out a loan
application and provide supporting pay stubs, bank statements, employment
information and W-2 forms. Lenders charge for the service -- generally from $20
to $50 -- but it's worth it. Pre-approval puts you in the strongest possible
bargaining position with sellers and their real estate agents. Those who are in
a hurry to move a property often will accept a lower bid from a pre-approved
buyer because they can be certain the deal will go through.
Check out ARMs
Short on cash? Consider an adjustable-rate mortgage. ARMs
feature lower monthly payments at first, something that might help marginal
buyers get into a home.
"When you see interest rates going up, a lot of the
adjustable-rate mortgages actually become more affordable at that stage in the
game," says Peter Goldberg, senior vice president of Ohio Savings Bank in
Cleveland. "Ultimately people look for that lower payment and ARMs can really
provide a lot of that."
Based on Bankrate.com's weekly national survey of lenders,
the interest rates offered for ARMs tend to be about 1.5 to 2 percent lower than
the average 30-year-fixed rate. Someone borrowing $150,000 on a one-year ARM at
5.47 percent would have monthly payments in the first year of $849. The
same-sized loan with a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage at 7.01 percent would cost
$999 a month.
If the one-year ARM's annual adjustment is too volatile
for your tastes, some relatively new adjustables offer initial fixed periods
that endure longer. Consider a longer-term ARM, such as a 5/1 or 7/1 that
features an initial fixed period of five years or seven years. You'll pay a
little more in interest than for their one-year counterparts, but less than for
a 30-year fixed-rate loan.
Float a balloon
Balloon loans are another option available to get a lower payment in the
first few years. These mortgages charge less interest upfront for a set time
frame, but require the borrower to either refinance at the end of that period,
pay off the loan or convert it to a fixed payment schedule.
On a seven-year balloon loan, a borrower might make
payments of principal and interest for that period of time. Assuming rates
didn't shoot up more than 5 percent in the meantime, they might then be able to
pay just $250 to roll the loan into a fixed schedule for the last 23 years.
Buy down the rate
If you've got the cash now and want to lower your payments, you can "buy
down" your mortgage rate.
It's a simple concept, really: In exchange for more money
upfront, lenders are willing to lower the interest rate they charge, cutting the
borrower's payments.
Buydowns can be temporary or they can last the life of the
loan. The purchaser can negotiate the deal directly with a lender, but sometimes
a home seller arranges the buydown as an incentive to attract buyers.
Look for builder incentives
Those looking to buy a new home instead of a previously owned one may find
that the builder will provide the incentives. Alan Cohen, a branch manager with
Irwin Mortgage Corp. in Indianapolis, notes that companies in his market will
sometimes offer a few thousand dollars to consumers to put toward their
mortgages. Someone can use that money to buy down the loan rate for a couple of
years.
"If you have a rate of 7.5 percent (on a 30-year fixed
loan), you might find a buydown set up where the builder will actually allocate
the points, say three points," Cohen says. A buyer could apply two points to the
first year's payments and one to the second, resulting in a 5.5 percent interest
rate the first year, 6.5 percent the second year and 7.5 percent all following
years. "The lender will hold the funds like a tax and insurance account, and
every month they will draw down the difference out of those funds like an
escrow," he says.
That would help people who don't have much money now but
expect to earn more later. Others who want to have a low rate for good can put
the builder's money toward that end. Using the same loan parameters, for
instance, somebody could buy the rate down about three-eighths to one-half of a
percentage point for the entire 30 years, according to Cohen.
Trim closing costs
Of course, the mortgage rate isn't the only thing that determines how much
financing will set you back. Closing costs add a significant chunk of change to
the final bill, so borrowers should try to minimize them, too.
How? For starters, consumers shouldn't overshoot their
budgets, according to Don Martin, a mortgage broker who owns Mayflower Capital
in Los Altos, Calif. Because the cheapest lenders often have the most
conservative underwriting standards, borrowers can end up paying less in
origination fees by showing some restraint.
As an example, say a couple with $52,500 available for a
down payment wants to buy a $150,000 home. They might be able to qualify for a
loan with just $400 in origination fees because the broker's cheapest lender
cuts deals for people who get mortgages for only 65 percent of their home values
or less.
But if the same pair fell in love with a $240,000 home and
refused to let it go, they would be getting a mortgage at about 78 percent
loan-to-value. That's still conservative, yet maybe not enough so for the
cheapest lender. The broker ends up having to find another company willing to
provide the money, and that company might charge $650 in fees.
"So many people desperately need to pay top dollar for a
house and that's where they get into trouble," Martin says. "The cheapest
lenders won't work with them. The lower the rate that the lender has, usually
those folks are real strict."
The same rule applies to other qualifying factors, such as
debt-to-income ratio. A borrower who would only have to spend 28 percent of
gross monthly income to get a mortgage should be able to obtain one more cheaply
than a customer who would have to spend 35 percent or 40 percent.
Consumers have less control over the fees for other
closing events because lenders and brokers negotiate them with various
third-party providers. Somebody can't call up the lender's title insurance
company, for example, and demand that it charge mortgage providers less for its
services. But shoppers can take the Good Faith Estimate document, or GFE, that
they receive during the loan application process and compare it with those from
a couple of other companies. If a credit report costs $100 at one shop and $20
at another, but the second lender's deal is better overall, point out the
discrepancy and ask the preferred company to lower its charge.