I want to refi my house. I tried to last summer, but the appraisal came in 30k under what I owed on house due to a few forclosers in the neighborhood. I have been getting stuff In the mail about the fha streamline. No appraisal needed. Just wondering if anybody on the board has done one of these and how it worked out.
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Originally posted by 2000 vert View PostI want to refi my house. I tried to last summer, but the appraisal came in 30k under what I owed on house due to a few forclosers in the neighborhood. I have been getting stuff In the mail about the fha streamline. No appraisal needed. Just wondering if anybody on the board has done one of these and how it worked out.
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To my knowledge the only way to do it without an appraisal is to go back through your current servicer.
Also, just FYI, unless you closed before May 2009 you don't get a break on MI and the new FHA stuff is expensive (and it never comes off if your LTV is > 90%), so you might be better off where you are (with lower mortgage insurance and a higher rate).
They do start with a fresh term.
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Originally posted by SVT Lurch View PostTo my knowledge the only way to do it without an appraisal is to go back through your current servicer.
Also, just FYI, unless you closed before May 2009 you don't get a break on MI and the new FHA stuff is expensive (and it never comes off if your LTV is > 90%), so you might be better off where you are (with lower mortgage insurance and a higher rate).
They do start with a fresh term.
Stay with same servicer to avoid appraisal.
Closed before 5/2009 and your UFMIP is .01% of your balance instead of 1.75%. You keep your same MI payment amount
640 min FICO (our guideline)
5% net benefit to payment (lowered by 5%)
No mortgage lates in 12 months
Must bring any fees and escrow amount to closing
If you closed after 5/2009 then you'd need over 6% on your current rate in order to actaully see a monthly savings where rates are today because your monthly mortgage insurance is going to double.
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Originally posted by 2000 vert View PostThanks for responses. The possible increase in mip is one of my concerns. Guess I need to call a company and see what happens. Right now I'm just looking to save some cash each month with a lower payment untill my current situation changes.
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Originally posted by AdamLX View PostBingo.
Stay with same servicer to avoid appraisal.
Closed before 5/2009 and your UFMIP is .01% of your balance instead of 1.75%. You keep your same MI payment amount
640 min FICO (our guideline)
5% net benefit to payment (lowered by 5%)
No mortgage lates in 12 months
Must bring any fees and escrow amount to closing
If you closed after 5/2009 then you'd need over 6% on your current rate in order to actaully see a monthly savings where rates are today because your monthly mortgage insurance is going to double.
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I just did one with my current lender, Chase. 3.375% fixed 30-yr. No points, no fees, no closing costs, no appraisal, nothing tacked onto the principal, etc.
All I had to provide was homeowners insurance declaration page, 2 months bank statements, and approval to run my credit.Atlantic Blue '00 - '03 Cobra motor and TKO600, solid axle, full MM suspension
Silver '01 Vette - D1 blown LS
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Seems every mortgage broker I talked to tried to point out a bunch of false negatives about a streamline refi , if they can't make their usual cut it's a bad deal all of a sudden. I used FedTrust Mortgage, no appraisal, very minimal amount of paperwork, and there were no fees paid by me, all fees were paid by the lender. I got a 3.5% rate on a 25 year note,and the term was actually shortened by about 6 months as I was almost 5 years in to a 30 year note. I'm impressed with how easy and quick it was.
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Originally posted by turboskull1 View Post, if they can't make their usual cut it's a bad deal all of a sudden.
The true FHA streamline is a fantastic product (like Trick Pony described). The problem is that so few people qualify that it's useless 99% of the time.
You also have to compare apples to apples when shopping and not a 0+0 quote (like I provided) to one that covers closing costs.
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Originally posted by SVT Lurch View PostAll loan officers are paid the same now, regardless of loan type. Part of the Dodd Frank mess. It can vary as a percentage, salary, hourly, etc. by company, but the loan type cannot play a part in compensation.
The true FHA streamline is a fantastic product (like Trick Pony described). The problem is that so few people qualify that it's useless 99% of the time.
You also have to compare apples to apples when shopping and not a 0+0 quote (like I provided) to one that covers closing costs.
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