Welcome to Mortgage Guide
Mortgage Interest Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
Solidifying That Mortgage Quote
from:You’re in the market for a home and it’s an exciting time. Your realtor may be pressuring you to go to a lender and get a mortgage quote so that you know in what range you can buy safely and prequalify too. You may even be tech savvy enough to hop online and find networking areas where you can get several mortgage quotes from various lenders, but then you’re left wondering which one is the best deal. How do you really know whether one mortgage quote is better than another? That’s where the good faith estimate comes in.
The Breakdown of a Good Mortgage Quote
If you really want to know how it all breaks down, you have to get a good faith estimate from a lender for your mortgage quote. You can get a good faith estimate from any number of lenders that you want and for different mortgage products too. Some people shop for the best deal this way and take the best offer and show it to other lenders to try to beat that one as well. Without a good faith estimate a mortgage quote may not be reliable. The Federal government insists that lenders provide a good faith estimate within three days of applying for a loan.
Some of the things you can expect a good faith estimate to show are the potential costs at closing of the following:
• Loan application fee
• Fees for pulling credit reports
• Title work
• Attorney fees
• Cost of appraisal
• Cost of inspection
• Survey work
• Document handling and processing fees
• Taxes
• Escrow accounts
• Your interest rate
• The terms of the loan
• The amortization schedule
Comparing Two or Three Mortgage Quotes
If you are trying to find a good deal, you will want to get the good faith estimates for the different mortgage quotes on the exact same product to fully compare them. If you get one that has a teaser interest rate that shifts after six months to a year, it may initially look favorable but in the long run will cost you more money. Make sure that they all have the same length of term because a 40-year loan will look like a better deal than a 30-year loan when it comes to the amount of the monthly payment you have to make. However, you pay significantly more money over the life of the mortgage with a longer term than you do with a shorter-term mortgage. So, always make sure that you are looking at very similar offers from different lenders and not two separate types of loan products.
Mortgage Interest Specific links
Mortgage Interest News
Real estate industry pushes Senate on refi bill - MarketWatch
Real estate industry pushes Senate on refi bill MarketWatch WASHINGTON (MarketWatch) — Real estate and mortgage industry leaders urged a Senate committee on Thursday to back a plan that would lower interest rates for homeowners with government-owned mortgages. Appearing before the Senate Banking Committee, ... Don't HARP on it, refinance program too good to pass up HARP 2.0: Good News For Home Owners Who Are Upside Down Northen Virginia Refinancing Expert Explains New Home Affordable Refinance Program |
UK Lending Drops as Recession, Interest Rates Take Toll - Wall Street Journal
UK Lending Drops as Recession, Interest Rates Take Toll Wall Street Journal By Ilona Billington LONDON (Dow Jones)--Mortgage and business lending in the UK dropped in April as the slowing economy, rising interest rates and growing concern over Greece's future in the euro zone damped demand, and after a tax break for first-time ... |
30-year mortgage rate hits another record low - KETK
![]() Bloomberg | 30-year mortgage rate hits another record low KETK NEW YORK (CNNMoney) — Buying a home got even cheaper this week as interest rates on the 30-year fixed-rate mortgage set a record low for the fourth week in a row. The 30-year fixed mortgage, the most popular mortgage product, dipped slightly to 3.78% ... Freddie Mac: 30-year mortgage rate down a tick at 3.78% BofA May Turn Profit on Mortgage Buybacks, Credit Suisse Says Record Lows Rates on the Menu for Mortgage Loans |
What it takes to buy a home - Chicago Tribune
![]() Chicago Tribune | What it takes to buy a home Chicago Tribune That includes principal and interest, real estate taxes, homeowners (hazard) insurance, and homeowners association dues. Recurring monthly payments for all debts — mortgage, car loans, credit cards and student loans, even if they're deferred ... Three most common types of mortgages: 30 Year Fixed-rate, 15 Year Fixed-rate ... |
Arizonans sue to block mortgage fund raid - Yuma Sun
![]() Arizona Capitol Times | Arizonans sue to block mortgage fund raid Yuma Sun Tim Hogan of the Center for Law in the Public Interest said the state was given $97 million as part of a nationwide settlement of a mortgage fraud claim against five major lenders. He said the part of the deal signed by Attorney General Tom Horne ... Mortgage settlement money diverted to boost state budget Backing For Mortgage Plan Lawsuit challenges Arizona use of foreclosure settlement money |












