On June 11th, HUD released Mortgagee Letter 2008-16 which changes the mortgage insurance premium costs for borrowers. It addresses a few other things too, such as refinances, but today I’m going to cover purchase transactions for you.
The new policies go into effect on Monday July 14th. If your buyer has a property under contract and their lender orders the FHA Case Number prior to the 14th, they will be locked in at the old terms (unless they change properties… case numbers go with the house).
Currently, buyers pay 1.5% of the loan amount in what’s called the Up Front Mortgage Insurance Premium (UFMIP) which can be paid in cash or rolled into the loan, as well as what’s called Monthly MIP that is calculated by taking the loan amount times .5% (1/2 of a percent) which gives you the annual rate. Just divide by 12 to get the monthly premium payment. (Ex: $200,000 x .5% = $1,000 annually divided by 12 = $83.33/month)
Under the new guidelines, the borrower will pay different premium rates based on 2 risk factors:
Credit Score:
-No Score / Non-traditional
-300-499 (minimum 10% down)
-500-559
-560-599
-600-639
-640-679
-680-850
Down Payment / LTV (Loan to Value):
Less than 90% LTV (10% or more down)
-UFMIP Ranges from 1.25%-1.75%
-Monthly MIP is .5%
90.01-95% LTV (5-9.99%)
-UFMIP Ranges from 1.25-2.0%
-Monthly MIP is .5%
95.01+ LTV (Less than 5% down, remember, most buyers use 3%)
-UFMIP Ranges from 1.25-2.25% (the highest, 2.25%, can be reduced to 2.0 with housing counseling)
-Monthly MIP is .55%
As you can see, for the majority of your borrowers, both the UFMIP and the monthly will go higher. Another major change is that borrowers with less than a 500 credit score will now only qualify for FHA financing if they put down at least 10%.
But don’t freak out about these increases… on a $200,000 loan, the raise from .5% to .55% will only change your client’s payment by $8.33 per month.
These changes will help to bring FHA into the current market and ensure that the program will be around for many years to come… something we all will appreciate going forward as FHA loans continue to be the loan of choice for today’s borrowers (it’s estimated that 65% of all loans closed in 2008 will be FHA insured!)
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