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Tag Archive for 'mortgage modification for unemployed'

Mortgage Help for Unemployed Homeowners?

There has been a lot of talk in Washington about mortgage assistance, and how ineffective it is because it fails to address a top cause of foreclosure--unemployment. The Home Affordable Modification Plan (HAMP) is there for those who have experienced an income reduction but few lenders are modifying mortgages for borrowers who have lost their jobs. The Treasury Department, the lenders of the HOPE coalition, and Congress began talking over solutions back in July 2009. It's nearly February 2010 and still, nothing.

You May Get a Mortgage Modification when Unemployed

If your mortgage is owned or serviced by Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, or FHA, there are provisions for helping unemployed borrowers. Make sure that your lender is aware that you know this. Here are Fannie's guidelines:

"If the borrower receives public assistance or collects unemployment:
Acceptable documentation includes letters, exhibits or a benefits statement from the provider that states the amount, frequency, and duration of the benefit. The servicer must determine that the income will continue for at least nine months."

The difficulty? Modifications take so long that your unemployment may get within nine months of the end before the loan servicer gets around to modifying your mortgage. You can speed up the process by have every bit of requested paperwork to the lender as soon as possible. Get an accountant or bookkeeper to help you fill out the forms if you need help. And act the very day you lose your job for your best shot at a modification.

What if You Income Is Too Low to Qualify for a Modification?

There may be help for you there, too. Get a roommate. Have a family member with income or a friend move in. Here's why, per Fannie Mae:

"Servicers should include non-borrower household income in monthly gross income if it is voluntarily provided by the borrower and if there is documentary evidence that the income has been, and can reasonably continue to be, relied upon to support the mortgage payment. All non-borrower household income included in monthly gross income must be documented and verified by the servicer using the same standards for verifying a borrower's income. (An example of non-borrower income is boarder income.)"

What if You Have Too Much Debt?

Call your creditors. Let them know that you have just lost your job and are trying to avoid bankruptcy (that's the magic word when you need to um, motivate a creditor to help you). Try to get lower interest rates and payments for at least six months--longer if possible. If that fails, consider bankruptcy. Some lenders will work in a loan modification as part of a bankruptcy reorganization, others will pull the plug on your modification. In general, I recommend not filing bankruptcy before your modification has been approved or denied, unless foreclosure proceedings have been started.

Other Mortgage Assistance

If you have a loan with Citi mortgage, you may be in luck. Their Homeowner Unemployment Assist program lowers monthly mortgage payments to $500 for three months if you're unemployed. If you live in Connecticut, try a program called EMAP, the Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program, created to help the unemployed keep their homes out of foreclosure. And finally, hit up your mortgage insurer. The company may grant you granting you a no-cost loan to bring your mortgage current and keep you out of foreclosure. FHA mortgage insurance works in a similar way; the advance is called a partial claim.

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Joining the Party: Mortgage Loans for the Unemployed

With all the fanfare surrounding the Making Home Affordable program, it's easy to forget that one of the largest causes of foreclosure remains unaddressed--most lenders refuse to modify or refinance home loans for the unemployed, even when simply refinancing to today's lower rates would make the loan safer. Generally, there are guidelines that require the borrower to have sufficient income to refinance or make a modified payment before being granted a loan modification. So if you lose your job you are probably out of luck--in six months when you get a new one, you may have already lost your home to foreclosure. Well, Congress is trying to help you now.

Reps. Barney Frank, Chaka Fattah, Elijah Cummings, and Sen. Jack Reed have introduced bills to offer loans to the unemployed. Representative Frank's TARP for Main Street bill would provide $2 billion in TARP money to make loans that pay mortgages for those who don't qualify for other assistance. Fattah would set up a program that resembles Pennsylvania's Homeowners Emergency Mortgage Assistance Program (HEMAP), which provides assistance for the unemployed until they find work or for 24-36 months. All would get funds directly to homeowners to get their mortgages paid.

A new loan program could use funds already earmarked for foreclosure prevention to stop mortgage defaults in the unemployed. With TARP funds being funneled to the banks, foreclosures continue at record pace, and they ARE preventable. When the economy recovers (as many experts think it's already starting to do), most jobless workers will be hired again and able to resume their mortgage payments. Timely bridge loans could keep them out of default until the borrowers get back to work or for some set time period. Even some portion of the $75 billion set aside for Making Home Affordable could bring many homeowners current and not leave them at the mercy of mortgage servicers who can't or won't help them.

Such a program would be much more efficient than the time-consuming loan modification program. It's not hard to prove that you're unemployed and to show what your mortgage payment is. You could be automatically be approved for a loan that would pay any mortgage above 31% of the household income (the target amount in Making Home Affordable modifications). The Treasury would make your mortgage payments and keep you out of default.

Loans would be repayable with interest, but not until your income was sufficient to make that feasible. Pennsylvania's plan has actually made money for the state--about $10 million since its inception.

Nothing else has worked. Very little of the bailout has actually helped homeowners. It's time to bypass the banks, pay people's mortgages directly, and halt the home losses that are destroying our security and our economy.

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About Mortgage Credit Problems

Specializing in Bad Credit Mortgages… Because Life Doesn’t Always Turn Out Like You Planned. A sick child, a few late bills, or an unexpected expense can easily get you off track and your credit may suffer, but we don't think you should miss out on the opportunities available to everyone else.

Gina Pogol

Gina Pogol

About the Author:

Gina Pogol writes for an online media company about mortgage and finance. In addition to a decade in mortgage lending, she formerly consulted for Experian and other credit bureaus, and worked as a tax accountant for Deloitte. She has a BS in Financial Management from the University of Nevada.

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  • Gina Pogol: Yes there is. Check any updates you get in the mail from your card issuer, and look for changes like new fee policies....
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  • Gina Pogol: FHA allows you to qualify for a mortgage 2 years after a bankruptcy discharge. Keep in mind though that you must...
  • Gina Pogol: Rachel, it's not that hard and fast--paying the smaller ones and letting the larger ones go--for example, always pay...
  • Gina Pogol: Alan, thanks for the question. When referring to the $7,500, we are talking about Federal income tax, not property tax....