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October 11, 2024
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Linking Northern and Central NJ, Bronx, Manhattan, Westchester and CT

Avoid These Dont’s to Get Your Mortgage Financing

When you apply for a mortgage loan, avoiding the obstacles below will help minimize any delays during the mortgage process and lead to a smoother quicker closing (also, forewarned is forearmed).

1. Don’t change your job, quit, or become self-employed before you apply for or during the processing of your mortgage. Job security and consistency are key factors in the approval process. If you change your job, you may need 30 days on the new job to count the income. If you change your job, you may need 30 days on the new job to count the income, and if you switch to self-employment (your own company or you work on commission) you need 2 years of self-employment to use that income to qualify. In addition, lenders will verify income by calling the current employer, asking for a CPA letter, and, in addition, pull a transcript of the tax returns filed using a 4506T. It is important to make sure that the tax returns supplied, are the actual tax returns filed. Often, copies of tax returns are supplied, and amendments are made in between, and the numbers on the 4506 transcript do not agree to the furnished tax return.

2. Don’t create a paper trail nightmare. Avoid last minute bank account changes and transfers. Today, the trail of all large deposits into a savings account must be verified to ensure that additional debt has not been taken out.

3. Don’t innocently run up debt during the process. Avoid buying or leasing a new car, getting new appliances or furniture on credit. Once you are qualified on your income, you do not want any surprises to surface that can affect your mortgage commitment. The additional debt can hurt your credit score, affect your rate, and more importantly jeopardize your loan approval.

4. Don’t have multiple credit reports pulled by different companies. This may lower your credit score and any inquiries must be explained to make sure no additional credit was taken in between the initial application and the closing.

5. Don’t co-sign on a loan for it becomes –your loan and shows up on your credit report as such. The debt may also affect your ability to obtain the mortgage loan you are trying to qualify for. If you have co-signed, some lenders may accept proof that the co-borrower pays the debt if you provide 12 months cancelled checks.

6. Don’t leave out liabilities that might not appear on your credit report. Aside from misrepresenting your actual financial situation (which may be construed as fraud), lenders will perform background checks and verifications and those left off liabilities may surface, slow the process down, and jeopardize the mortgage commitment.

7. Don’t spend your savings before you close. You need more than a down payment to get to the closing table. You will have tax and insurance escrows as well as closing costs so I would suggest calling a mortgage professional to get a strong estimate of exactly how much cash you should have on hand in order to complete the deal.

8. Don’t not call me when you need sound mortgage advice and counseling and assistance in obtaining your mortgage. Great rates are important, but it’s our advice that will save you thousands.

Carl E. Guzman is president of Greenback Capital Mortgage Corporation Reach him at 201-837-6400 or [email protected].

By Carl E. Guzman

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