Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

Credit After Bankruptcy - Getting Approved For A Mortgage
After a recent or past bankruptcy, most people want to get on the path toward establishing good credit. To accomplish this goal, some choose to purchase a home. While a new home purchase is a good way to rebuild credit and increase your credit...

Mortgage Refinance After Bankruptcy!
If you are considering remortgaging your home after Bankruptcy, there are many factors to consider in the decision making process. Here we discuss some of the essentials topics that will enable you to decide if releasing equity from your home is...

Rhode Island Mortgage Loans
Whether you live in the Blackstone Valley, Block Island, East Bay, South County, Warwick, Providence, or Newport you know that Rhode Island offers so much to you. "Little Rhodey" is rich in history and her residents love living there. You can too as...

Save My Home!
If you are facing foreclosure on your home, you are not alone! Millions of home owners will lose their homes in the next few years. Mortgage payments will skyrocket as $1 Trillion dollars of adjustable rate mortgages adjust. Their payments...

Start Again with Mortgage Refinancing
If you are interested in optimizing your monthly payments on debt, or simply looking to stretch your income a little further each month, you might want to consider refinancing your mortgage. There are two very basic ways to go about this....

 
Buying A House After Bankruptcy - Things To Consider

Bankruptcy can make getting any kind of financing much more difficult. However, it's not impossible anymore to get financing, even a few days after the discharge of a bankruptcy. But, is getting a loan soon after a bankruptcy a smart thing to do?

It can be tempting to buy a new home, new car, etc., after a bankruptcy discharge you have no debt left. You will probably feel like you can afford a larger house payment. Here are some factors to consider before committing yourself to a new house payment.

Pre-Payment Penalty - Almost every subprime loan (bad credit loan) now comes with a pre-payment penalty. This penalty is usually about 6 months worth of house payments. The pre-payment penalty period usually lasts 2-3 years. That means, if you want to refinance or sell your house in that period of time, that will make it very difficult, if not impossible to sell or refinance. That means that you are locked in. Once you sign those mortgage papers you absolutely have to make those payments. If you don't have the amount of the pre-payment penalty in savings, you are locked into making the payments or losing the house.

Two Year Mark - Keep in mind that after 2-3 years from the date of the bankruptcy discharge, mortgage loans will be much easier to get. With a small down payment, you might even be able to get a mortgage loan without a pre-payment penalty. So, if you are within 6 months or so from the 2 year mark. It would be smart to wait it out and have more mortgage loan options.

Setting Yourself Up For Failure Again? Borrowing Too Much? - If you do decide to buy a house. Buy one that you know you will be able to afford. Don't max yourself out on credit, living right up to the edge of your income. If your income suddenly drops, you'll want to make sure that you can still afford your house payment. Be conservative with how much home you need to buy.

About the author:

View our recommended Mortgage After Bankruptcy lenders. Carrie Reeder is the owner of ABC Loan Guide, an informational website about various types of loans.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.