FHA Monthly Premiums will rise on April 18, 2011
FHA Mortgage Insurance Premiums Increase
We have enjoyed several months of the lowest FHA UFMIP (Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premiums) and MMIP (Monthly Mortgage Insurance Premiums) in recent history. With monthly rates being at .9% payments have been lower resulting in higher debt-to-income ratio for home buyers and owners who have refinanced. With our dollars being stretched because of a damaged and weakened economy this has helped sales and refinances to remain higher than they would have been with higher rates.
Effective with all FHA loans at 95% LTV (Loan To Value) and higher starting with new casefile ID numbers being issued on and after April 18, 2011, the monthly rate is increasing to 1.1% per month. Here is how that stacks up on a $180,000 loan;
| Loan | UFMIP | New | MIP .9 | MIP 1.1 | Monthly + | Annual + |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 180,000 | 1,800 | 181,800 | 134.10 | 163.89 | 34.79 | 417.48 |
On a $180,000 home mortgage loan the increase in the FHA monthly mortgage insurance premium from .9% (of the principal balance) to 1.1% will mean nearly $35 more per month cost added to the mortgage. This multiplies to nearly $420 for the year.
While these numbers may not be astronomical you can see how this may make the difference to a family or single homeowner already working on a stretched budget. If income taxes are increased, deductions decreased, property taxes or home owner’s insurance increases, any of these need to be considered when purchasing a new home or refinancing.
.
I am a multi-year veteran of the industry who has served in the highest offices in the industry. I can help you get the best deals and avoid getting ripped off!
Contact form on this web site
What are closing costs?
It would be simple to say “closing costs” are the amount of money required to be brought to the closing table at the time of purchase or refinance. Oh that it were that simple yet it is not. In fact different agencies and organizations have different definitions for the same term. Perhaps we can do some good here and provide the true definition for the components of closing costs, establish which costs go where and which costs are negotiable.
If you want to say closing costs are the total fees you bring to the closing table that would include this list and maybe more in some cases:
- Appraisal fee – to the appraiser
- Credit score fee – to the credit bureau
- Origination fee – to the loan officer
- Funding fee – to the lender
- Underwriting fee – to the lender
- Processing fee – to the processing company
- Broker fee – to the mortgage broker (if there is one)
- Recording fee – to the county courthouse
- Loan registration fee – to the state department of banking and finance
- Title exam – to the title company/private investigator
- Attorney fee – to the closing attorney
- Attorney’s wire fee – to the attorney
- Lender’s title insurance – to the title insurance company
- Owner’s title insurance – to the title insurance company
- Real estate taxes and escrow – to the state, county, city where due
- Home owners insurance – to the owner’s insurance company
- HOA fees – to the HOA/COA
Some of these fees are only closing costs because the lender, unless the borrower chooses to waive escrows of taxes, insurance and HOA, would be required to be paid over time anyway. In fact most HOAs require an initiation fee even if you are paying cash. That is the best way to think of closing costs as associated with purchasing a home anyway: which fees would exist even if there were no lender: attorney fees, recording fees, appraisal fee, home owner’s insurance, etc.
Two of the biggest fees associated with the purchase of a home are not considered closing costs and those are the down payment and the real estate broker fees. Brokerage fees are not considered a closing cost because they are added to the sales price and the seller pays them and down payment is going straight to the purchase of the home. If we counted down payment as a closing cost then someone paying cash would be considered to be paying 100% closing costs.
What about “no closing costs” loans? Simple. They don’t exist. The buyer or home owner who is refinancing pays the costs either in cash, from the proceeds of the loan, using a down payment assistance program, or by the lender increasing the rate enough to earn more in interest. None of those closing costs go away when they are required. The attorney doesn’t work for free, the appraiser doesn’t work for free, the loan officer, processor and underwriters do not work for free.
Hopefully understanding these fees and where they go will help you in your next purchase or refinance to understand the cost and how to better manage or prepare for your closing.
*The set of closing costs used for this chart are typical for a mortgage broker. They will vary from state to state and lender to lender … but not by much.
Related articles
- Good-faith estimates bring higher closing costs (sfgate.com)
- Survey: Mortgage closing costs 37% higher (usatoday.com)
- New rules limit too-low estimates of closing costs (knoxnews.com)
- What are “seller concessions”? (kennycook.com)
I am a multi-year veteran of the industry who has served in the highest offices in the industry. I can help you get the best deals and avoid getting ripped off!
Contact form on this web site
No flood insurance available to millions because …
- Image via Wikipedia
June 14, 2010 04:37 PM
Representative Thomas Price
U.S. House of Representatives
424 Cannon House Office Building
Washington, DC 20515-0001
Subject: Renew Critical Housing Programs: NFIP and RHS
Dear Representative Price,
Congress left for the Memorial Day recess, leaving two critical housing programs unauthorized or unfunded. On May 31, authority for the National Flood Insurance Program (NFIP) expired. Lenders have stopped accepting applications for the Section 502 rural housing program, which has exhausted its funding.














Twitter
Skype