How
a Short Sale Can Impact Your Credit Score
While the United States
housing market improved in 2013, at the end of the year 19% of homeowners with a mortgage owed more on their
mortgage than the value of their home.
For homeowners with no
plans to move and who can comfortably afford their mortgage payments, being
underwater certainly can be frustrating. However, those homeowners have the
option of waiting until the combination of rising home values and their
continued loan repayment brings them back “above water.”
Homeowners who are
struggling financially and can’t make their payments or who must relocate for
employment face a bigger issue if they’re underwater on their home loan because
they cannot sell their home for a profit and move. Some of these homeowners can
qualify for a government refinance program or a loan modification from their
lender, but others face a choice between letting the mortgage lender take their
home in a foreclosure and negotiating a short sale.
A short sale simply refers
to the situation when a borrower asks the lender to accept a loan repayment for
less than the full amount. The amount offered depends on the sales price
negotiated between the lender, the seller and a buyer. You’ll have to provide
proof of a hardship such as a change in your finances that makes the payment
unaffordable or mandatory job relocation.
If you’re able to get your
lender to agree to a short sale, you may or may not be responsible in the
future for the gap between the balance you owe and the amount actually repaid.
This depends on the state where you live and your lender’s decision about
seeking recourse.
Short Sales and Your Credit
Many homeowners prefer a
short sale to a foreclosure because they believe there’s less of a stigma
attached to a short sale and that it won’t necessarily damage their credit as
much. However, both a foreclosure and a short sale can lower your credit score
and will stay on your credit report for seven years. Over time, though, you can
improve your credit score through credit rebuilding techniques such as paying
all your bills on time, reducing your debt, and, if necessary getting a secured
credit card and making regular payments.
The impact of a short sale
on your credit depends on several factors, including the way your lender
reports the short sale to the credit bureaus. Most lenders will use the term
“settled” for a short sale, which indicates that less than the full debt was
repaid. If you can negotiate with your lender to use the word “paid” your
credit won’t be as badly damaged, but lenders rarely agree to that.
Your credit score could
drop by anywhere from 85 to 200 points depending on whether you have been
paying your mortgage on time and your previous credit score. If, for example,
you had good credit of 700 or above, your score might drop even more than
someone who already had a low credit score of 620 or so because of a short sale
is an indication of potential future defaults on other credit, especially if
the borrower with low score had been making on-time mortgage payments. If you
had months of non-payment, partial payments or late payments on your mortgage,
your credit score will also be lower because of the combination of the short
sale and a bad mortgage history.
In spite of the impact on
your credit, a short sale may be the best option if you can’t stay in your home
because you can move on from your current situation and begin to rebuild your
credit for the future.
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