Mortgage Types
While 30-year
fixed rate mortgages still make up the majority of mortgages
being used by home owners today, it's possible for home
buyers to secure what amounts to being a custom mortgage
specifically designed to meet their unique financing needs.
Still, even heavily
customized mortgages are typically some variation of one
of just a few basic mortgage types.
Fixed-Rate
This is typically the choice of home buyers who want to know
exactly what their payment will be month after month
for the life of the loan. Often, the holders of these
mortgages are committing to the possibility of long-term
residency. Principle and interest payments remain exactly
the same throughout the life of the loan, which usually
is 30 years, but can be 10, 15, 20, or even 40 years.
Adjustable-Rate
This mortgage has steadily gained in popularity in recent
years. It enables a home buyer to secure a loan at a
lower interest rate compared to the going fixed rate.
The lower, adjustable rate is typically locked in for
the first year, or sometimes just a few months, and then
adjusts in subsequent years in relation to some economic
index - such as the prime lending rate or interest on
one-year Treasury bills. The rate can go up only a certain
amount in any given year, usually 1-2 percent. There
is also a lifetime cap on the increase, usually 6 percent.
So an adjustable rate mortgage that is secured at 5 percent
could climb to as high as 11 percent in three years during
a period of rapid inflation and rising interest rates.
In recent years, though, with negligible inflation and
declining or relatively stable interest rates, adjustable
rate mortgages have proven to be a wise buy, with little
fluctuation occurring. Still, the primary customers for
such mortgages are home buyers having trouble qualifying
for a house at a fixed rate because of lack of income,
lack of down payment, or too high an existing debt-to-income
ratio. With an adjustable-rate mortgage, such buyers
can qualify for a larger loan. If they're anticipating
an increase in income or a lowering of debt that will
keep pace with the maximum increase in the rates, it's
a safe move. Often these buyers end up refinancing at
a fixed rate once their income enables them to do so
- especially if rates are going up or the home owner
thinks they are about to go up. An adjustable rate mortgage
also is attractive to home buyers who know they'll be
staying in a house for only a few years. Sometimes, the
total payments made during those few years can end up
being less than the total if a fixed rate had been used
- even if the adjustable rate moves up its maximum amount
during those two to three years.
Two-step
These mortgages could be described as a hybrid of the fixed
rate and adjustable rate mortgages. Typically, such loans
provide a fixed rate for the first five or seven years
of a 30-year mortgage, then revert to a fixed or adjustable
rate (convertible or nonconvertible) for the remaining
25 or 23 years. The adjustable or fixed rate at the end
of the five- or seven-year periods is typically tied
to some predetermined index and will also include a margin
for the lender. So the home buyer is accepting the risk
of facing potentially higher rates after the first five
or seven years. But during the first five or seven years,
the interest rate is typically lower than the current
30-year fixed rate and higher than adjustable rates.
So two-step mortgages enable home buyers to secure a
rate that's lower than the fixed rate, but doesn't have
the risk of the potentially rapid increase that comes
with an adjustable rate. Like adjustable rate mortgages,
these mortgages are especially attractive to home buyers
who plan to move within a short time frame - in this
case, five to seven years.
FHA
Not so much a mortgage type as it is a mortgage program,
Federal Housing Administration loans are backed by the
U.S. government. That means the lender is reimbursed
by the federal government if the borrower defaults on
the loan. The primary benefit of the program is that
it enables home buyers to purchase a home with a minimal
down payment. Typically, just 5 percent is needed, compared
to the 20 percent down payment that's usually needed
to secure conventional financing. Some FHA programs enable
certain first-time home buyers in particular income brackets
to buy a home with a down payment as small as 3 percent.
The size of an FHA loan is limited, based on the average
cost of housing within a particular geographic area.
So typically, a borrower using FHA financing in a large
metro area where housing prices are steep, can borrow
a much larger amount than the home buyer shopping in
a rural area with lower housing costs. While the down
payment qualifications are much easier to meet with FHA
financing, that doesn't necessarily translate to a better
deal over the life of the loan. Mortgage insurance premiums,
required because of the minimal down payment, will make
monthly payments higher than conventional loan payments
at the same interest rate.
VA
Another U.S. government loan program is the Veterans Administration
loan, which is primarily designed to enable qualifying
veterans of the U.S. military to buy a home with no down
payment and minimal closing costs. Depending on your
veteran status, there is an origination fee that will
add to the cost of using this financing. A disabled veteran,
for example, may not need to pay any fee at all, while
a reservist who hasn't seen active duty might pay the
maximum fee, which today can be as high as 3 percent. |