Friday, November 17, 2006

Understanding a Reverse

The Basics:

A "reverse" mortgage is a loan against your home that you do not have to pay back for as long as you live there. No matter how this loan is paid out to you, you typically don't have to pay anything back until you die, sell your home, or permanently move out of your home. Homeowners 62 and older who have paid off their mortgages or have only small mortgage balances remaining are eligible to participate in HUD's reverse mortgage program. The property must be your principal residence. The program allows homeowners to borrow against the equity in their homes in a variety of different ways. (What is HUD? The Department of Housing and Urban Development is the Federal agency responsible for national policy and programs that address America's housing needs, that improve and develop the Nation's communities, and enforce fair housing laws.)

Obtaining a traditional loan (a "forward" mortgage) requires that the lender check your credit/income to see how much you can afford to pay back each month. But with a reverse mortgage, you don't have to make monthly repayments. Your income generally has nothing to do with getting the loan. You could have no income and still be able to get a reverse mortgage. With most home loans, if you fail to make your monthly repayments, you could lose your home. Reverse mortgages do not have monthly repayments, so you can't lose your home by failing to make them. You can turn the value of your home into cash without having to move or to repay the loan each month. The cash you get from a reverse mortgage can be paid to you in several ways:

All at once, in a single lump sum of cash
As a regular monthly cash payment to you
As a "credit line" account that lets you decide when and how much of your available cash is paid to you
As a combination of these payment methods
Another feature is that the money paid to you is not taxable. This is because it is not income, it is a loan! The amount of cash you can get from a reverse mortgage depends on the program you select and - within each program - on your age, home, and current mortgage rates. With a reverse mortgage, you are taking the equity out in cash, so your debt increases and your home equity decreases.

Reverse mortgages allow you to use debt to turn your equity into income. You are reversing the deal you used to initially buy your home. Then, you had income and wanted equity. Now, you have equity and want income. There are also no limits on the value of homes qualifying for a HUD reverse mortgage. However, the amount that may be borrowed is capped by the maximum FHA loan limit for each city and county. It varies from $172,632 in rural areas to $312,895 in many major metropolitan areas (and even higher in Alaska, Hawaii & the U.S. Virgin Islands) depending on local housing costs. The size of reverse mortgage loans is determined by the borrower's age, the interest rate, and the home's value. The older a borrower, the larger the percentage of the home's value that can be borrowed.