HAN, learn me about FHA Loans
Usually it requires you to be a first time home buyer, which I'm sure you are, and allows for a down payment as low as 3% of the total cost rather than a standard 20%.
The FHA doesn't actually give loans, they simply insure the loan (similar to PMI). Most larger mortgage companies (banks or otherwise) are qualified FHA lenders.
The FHA doesn't actually give loans, they simply insure the loan (similar to PMI). Most larger mortgage companies (banks or otherwise) are qualified FHA lenders.
Thread Starter
BOOM goes the dynamite!
Joined: Mar 2003
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From: in a van down by the rive
Usually it requires you to be a first time home buyer, which I'm sure you are, and allows for a down payment as low as 3% of the total cost rather than a standard 20%.
The FHA doesn't actually give loans, they simply insure the loan (similar to PMI). Most larger mortgage companies (banks or otherwise) are qualified FHA lenders.
The FHA doesn't actually give loans, they simply insure the loan (similar to PMI). Most larger mortgage companies (banks or otherwise) are qualified FHA lenders.
why would the seller pay the 3% down payment? That doesn't make any sense.
That 3% isn't closing costs though, it's a standard down payment. Sure, closing costs can be included in the loan resulting in no out of pocket costs, but just because they can doesn't mean they will. I guess it all depends on how badly somebody wants to sell... 3% of a 500k house (still cheap in CA) is 15k. I don't know many people who wouldn't think twice about giving that much money to they buyer just to buy their house from them.
Thread Starter
BOOM goes the dynamite!
Joined: Mar 2003
Posts: 27,571
Likes: 1
From: in a van down by the rive


