Question for you gents. I"m in the process of buying out my parents" mortgage on a duplex that they own with my brother, so that they can retire somewhere. They"re gifting me the equity in the place, and my brother and I are splitting 50/50 on the remainder due.
The tricky part is that we"re converting it into condos, so that we can hang out here for a few years and then either sell when the market"s back up, or rent them out. We"ve got an attorney doing most of the condo paperwork for us for $1500, which seems pretty solid.
We both have great credit, and are prequalified for well above the cost of the place at 4.375 fixed from Citizens. I have very little debt ($3000 or so), but he has a fuckton. I"m using 20% of the equity as my DP/PMI-avoider, but unfortunately my brother has a mountain of debt that he"s looking to unload and roll in. (He"s paid down the mortgage on the place for the last 10+ years, so it"s his equity).
The loan agent that we"re working with is telling him that he can go FHA and do 85% LTV, and since it"s a condo, only one of us can go FHA so I have to stay at 20%. Not a big deal for me, but it"s a pretty decent size chunk of change that he"d like to roll in. His credit score is something around 740 FICO, but the last round of credit-card-fuckeveryone shit all over him, and they jacked all of his rates up to the 20% range on pretty huge balances.
I was under the impression that FHA was 3.5% LTV, and that he should be able to roll in everything so that the mortgage is ~95% LTV with an FHA loan, but the lender is telling me that"s not the case. Is there a different ruleset for condos as opposed to single family homes, or are we being misled?
I"ve already shelled out $2500 to surveyors to draw up floorplans, and am going to be paying the lawyer, appraisal fees, closing costs, and (I think) a bit for a market analysis. I"m basically hemorrhaging money right now and want to make sure that we"re not headed down the wrong path.
The tricky part is that we"re converting it into condos, so that we can hang out here for a few years and then either sell when the market"s back up, or rent them out. We"ve got an attorney doing most of the condo paperwork for us for $1500, which seems pretty solid.
We both have great credit, and are prequalified for well above the cost of the place at 4.375 fixed from Citizens. I have very little debt ($3000 or so), but he has a fuckton. I"m using 20% of the equity as my DP/PMI-avoider, but unfortunately my brother has a mountain of debt that he"s looking to unload and roll in. (He"s paid down the mortgage on the place for the last 10+ years, so it"s his equity).
The loan agent that we"re working with is telling him that he can go FHA and do 85% LTV, and since it"s a condo, only one of us can go FHA so I have to stay at 20%. Not a big deal for me, but it"s a pretty decent size chunk of change that he"d like to roll in. His credit score is something around 740 FICO, but the last round of credit-card-fuckeveryone shit all over him, and they jacked all of his rates up to the 20% range on pretty huge balances.
I was under the impression that FHA was 3.5% LTV, and that he should be able to roll in everything so that the mortgage is ~95% LTV with an FHA loan, but the lender is telling me that"s not the case. Is there a different ruleset for condos as opposed to single family homes, or are we being misled?
I"ve already shelled out $2500 to surveyors to draw up floorplans, and am going to be paying the lawyer, appraisal fees, closing costs, and (I think) a bit for a market analysis. I"m basically hemorrhaging money right now and want to make sure that we"re not headed down the wrong path.