How Soon Can We Buy
After a Short Sale
QUESTION: We had to do a short sale on our home in
Nevada last year, but now we have landed on our feet again and want to buy a
home in our new location in Oregon. We have enough money saved up for a 20
percent down payment for a house we can afford. Is it possible for us to
qualify for a mortgage?
ANSWER: It’s great that you landed on your feet
and have been able to save money for a down payment on a new house. Your bigger
down payment can be a compensating factor that some lenders will use to qualify
you for a loan in spite of a negative credit profile that’s a likely result of
the short sale.
Conventional loan
guidelines established by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac say that you must wait two
years after the closing date on your short sale to finance another home, if you
have 20 percent for a down payment. You would have to wait longer if you had
less cash for a down payment (four years with 10 percent and seven years with
less than 10 percent). So if you want a conventional loan, you’ll need to wait
another year.
FHA-insured loans are
available with a down payment of as little as 3.5 percent after a three-year
waiting period. Veterans Administration loans, which don’t require a down
payment at all, are available after a two-year waiting period.
However, the FHA
recently introduced a “Back
to Work – Extenuating Circumstances” program to help the many people who lost their homes during
the recent housing crisis and recession. You may qualify now for this program
if you lost your home due to a job loss or a drop in income or both. This
temporary loan program will be available for FHA loans issued between Aug.t 15,
2013, and Sept. 30, 2016.
To qualify, you’ll
have to meet standard FHA guidelines for a loan approval and a mortgage
lender’s requirements. Typically, this means that your credit score must be 620
or 640 and above and your debt-to-income ratio must be 41 percent to 43 percent
or less. You’ll be required to fully document your job history, income
and assets.
In addition, the Back
to Work program has other specific requirements. You must:
§ Participate in an FHA-approved housing
counseling program.
§ Provide documentation for the “economic event”
that caused the bankruptcy, which must have reduced your income by 20 percent
or more for at least six months. In other words, you’ll need a W2 or tax
returns or a termination letter.
§ Prove that you had good credit before the
economic event damaged it.
§ Prove that you’ve fully recovered from the
event by having a credit report without any late payments for at least 12
months on installment debt and without any major derogatory comments on
revolving credit accounts. Your report cannot show any judgments or collections
unless they’re related to medical bills or identity theft.
Consult a mortgage
lender to see if you can qualify for this FHA program, but remember that FHA
loans require mortgage insurance for at least 11 years, even if you make a down
payment of 20 percent. You may want to consider asking a mortgage lender if any
exceptions are possible for individuals who want to apply for a conventional
loan after a short sale. If not, you should weigh the benefit of waiting one
more year to buy a home rather than committing to years of mortgage insurance
payments.
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