Can a home loan consist of two separate loans combined to cover one loan total?
Question : Can a home loan consist of two separate loans combined to cover one loan total?
My sister is buying a home for 131,700. This their first home and they went through a company that supposedly finds them the best loan possibly for them and then the get a builder to start building their home over the next six months. Their credit score is in the low and mid six hundreds and they are looking at a fixed interest rate of 9.3%. the taxes are about 310 monthly and the insurance is 127 monthly. Im helping her go through the paper work and I notice that there are two loans being combined, one for 104 thousand and the other is around 27 thousand. Can you do this? I want her to know as much as possible because they are set to close on March 13, 2007 and I want to make they can afford this and that they are actually getting a good deal. They make over 4000 monthly. Please provide any information possible and thank you in advance for any responses. I would hate for them to get in over there head.
The house has been built, inspected, and appraised already. They started this process in October I believe
Yall are giving my sister and I wonder information. We are really appreciating this.
I just found out that they didnt have a downpayment and they arent paying any closing costs. Also why wasnt they offered something like a first time homebuyers deal. Im a college student dormer so I dont know anything about home loans.
home building loans
Best answer:
Answer by Niklaus Pfirsig
That sounds like what I had to do on my home. It can make the money really tight though..
Yes. Sometimes you need to have two loans. Banks consider Loan to Value (LTV) when approving loans. Most lenders do not lend more than 75% LTV (example: if your property is worth $ 100,000 you cannot borrow more than 75% of that value from them, which would be $ 75,000). Some lenders will go to 80%, but anything above that would require mortgage insurance. Some lenders will lend more than that without “requiring” you to purchase mortgage insurance, but you are paying a higher rate and the mortgage insurance is built into that on their end.
If a borrower needs to borrower more than 75% LTV, they would get a First Trust Deed for that amount and then take out a Second Trust Deed for the remainder, either as a Home Equity Line of Credit or a standard second mortgage.