You Can’t BUY a Home With a Reverse Mortgage…You Dummy

Every once in a while something so odd happens that you spend the next few days…or weeks…or MONTHS – if it’s odd enough – trying to process the various elements of the event.

Exactly a year ago I was in the middle of a complex HECM for Purchase transaction. It involved a knotty situation in which a builder had declared bankruptcy before completing construction on a condo, and another builder had finished the project. However, the new guy had never properly recorded some of the completed condo units, resulting in significant tax issues. I will sum up the details of the situation simply by saying Uncle Sam does not smile upon this business model.

After a couple weeks mucking about for resolution utilizing the obvious channels, such as the homeowners association attorney – whose job description, incidentally, does include this type of thing – I decided to go to the top of the food chain and contact my client’s US Congressman.

Imagine my surprise when I received a mini-lecture from a congressional aide, who stated with great conviction, “You can’t BUY a home with a reverse mortgage. Reverse mortgage is a refi product. So put that in your pipe and smoke it, you dumb Reverse Mortgage Specialist.”

Ok, so maybe he didn’t say this last part. But it was implied.

Well, well, well, Mr. Aide, thank you for THAT helpful input.

So, is that to say you CAN you buy a home with a reverse mortgage?

In a word, yes!

So how does Reverse for Purchase – also known as HECM for Purchase – work? And why do so few people know about it?

The concept of HECM for Purchase could not be more straightforward: the home buyer, aged 62 or older, provides a down payment, the size of which is determined by the home buyer’s age. The HECM loan provides the rest.

That’s it. End of story. You are in your home for the rest of your life – or as long as you want to live in the home as your primary residence – and never make another payment.

This smells fishy. How can I live in a home and not make payments?

Answer: Not making payments is very different from saying the loan is never repaid. The loan is always repaid – it’s just that you don’t repay it. When you are finished with the home, the home itself repays the debt.

But when is the loan repaid?

Answer: The loan is repaid when the last person on title moves, sells, or dies. In other words, the loan is repaid BY THE HOME once the senior no longer needs the home.

But where does the money come from to repay the loan?

Answer: The home is either sold, and the proceeds from the sale repay the loan, or the family secures new financing and buys the home.

But what if the home has gone down in value and the proceeds from the sale can’t repay the loan?

Answer: The home repays what it can. Any shortfall is made up by the mandatory Mortgage Insurance Premium (MIP).

But what if I want to leave the house to the kids?

Answer: You can still leave the house to the kids: it’s still your house. The kids will need to 1) line up their own financing, and buy the home, or 2) sell the house. However, they would have to do this anyway if you had a “forward” mortgage…AND they would have to make your mortgage payment every month after you were gone, or risk losing the house.

How long can I stay in my home?

Answer: As long as you want to. As long as you pay your property taxes, keep current on your homeowner’s insurance, and maintain the home, you never have to move. You can, however, move whenever you wish.

Ok, So I’ll Be Blunt: If this program is so great, why don’t more people know about it?

Answer: First, it has not been around all that long: FHA rolled it out just over three years ago. Second, despite a lot of money spent on financial education for seniors, there are still far too many people – like the congressional aide mentioned above – who are very bold in speaking very forcefully about topics they know very little about. And that is very unfortunate.

If you or someone you know needs to move into a home better suited to aging in place, call me.  FHA’s HECM for Purchase may very well make this possible.

I always love hearing from you, and I love answering questions about senior housing and matters impacting the financial health and the long-term well being of our seniors.

Laurie

Laurie MacNaughton [NMLS# 506562]
Reverse Mortgage Consultant
Senior Products Division
Middleburg Mortgage, a Division of Middleburg Bank
20937 Ashburn Road, Suite 115
Ashburn, Virginia 20147
703-477-1183 Direct
LMacNaughton@MiddleburgBank.com
www.middleburgmortgage.com/lauriem

FHA Reverse Mortgage: Rumors Of Its Death Have Been Greatly Exaggerated

Well, well, well – one thing certainly can be said of those of us living in the Washington, DC area: we read our news.

Yesterday, MetLife unexpectedly announced it was exiting the Reverse Mortgage field, catching even its own employees off guard. Met had already sold its bank and closed its home mortgage division months earlier.

Within 10 minutes of the announcement my phone began to ring. And ring…and RING. Colleagues, clients, and co-workers wanted to know if Met’s exit meant my employer, Middleburg Bank, was going to be negatively impacted.

So what does this mean for you, for your clients, and for those of us privileged enough to live here in the greater Baltimore-Washington corridor?

NOTHING. It means nothing.

And WHY? Because the FHA HECM only works when there is equity in the home sufficient to extinguish “forward” loans on the property. Put a home in Tucson or Tulsa, Denver, or Dubuque and chances are the HECM just isn’t going to work.

Put that same home in Bethesda or Brandywine, Arlington or Alexandria, Middleburg or Marshall, and it’s a different story altogether.

The Blessed Are…Well, Blessed: Using Home Equity to Supplement Retirement Income

There are no two ways about it: we here in the shadow of D.C.are blessed in many ways. History books are filled with reasons why those with options have more options still, and those with few options have still fewer.

As one nationwide lender after another exits the HECM market, the product becomes a regional offering. And it makes sense: why would a national lender maintain a workforce of hundreds – or thousands – if the product only works in a handful of regions across the country. We have always had good options – and now we still have good options.

I am grateful to live in a region in which our senior clients, adult children caring for parents, and our family and friends still have available to them the FHA HECM as a planning tool to see them safely through retirement.

Give me a call with any questions or concerns you may have. I am always delighted to hear from you. And, as always, I am privileged to work with you to find solutions to the financial needs of the seniors in your life.

Laurie

Laurie MacNaughton [NMLS# 506562]
Reverse Mortgage Consultant
Middleburg Mortgage
20937 Ashburn Road, Ste 115
Ashburn, Virginia 20147
703-477-1183 Direct
703-995-4870 Fax
LMacNaughton@MiddleburgBank.com
www.MiddleburgMortgage.com/LaurieM

More Seniors Use Reverse Mortgages to Raise Cash

Finding themselves financially strapped, more seniors at an earlier age are trying to get reverse mortgages on their homes in order to survive, according to a new report.

The study says the percentage of people aged 62 to 64 applying for reverse mortgages has increased 15 percent since 1999.

The reason for the dramatic upswing among “younger” seniors is simple, the report concludes: They need the money.

READ THE REPORT AT:

More Seniors Use Reverse Mortgages to Raise Cash