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Seller Buydown (For Buyers)

More Tips and Tricks on the LoansByJoanna Guide

Coming soon: Seller Buydown (For Sellers)

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When you qualify for a home loan, you’re actually qualifying for the monthly payments

We know that for a home buyer, nothing takes priority quite like having an affordable mortgage payment. The price you’ll be approved for depends entirely on both your down payment and the maximum payment for which you qualify. And the most significant factor in determining what that payment will be is your interest rate.

For those buyers who opt to use an interest rate reduction mortgage, your real estate agent will negotiate with the seller to accept a fair price if they will give you credit to permanently reduce, or buydown, your interest rate.

Just a reduction of 0.25% in your interest rate could mean tens of thousands of dollars of interest that you will save over the term of your home loan. And this, of course, can mean the difference between affording your dream home and going with option B.

At the end of the day, this is a win-win situation for both the buyer and the seller of a home.

Using this credit (also known as a seller’s concession) to permanently lower your interest rate will lead to a reduction in your mortgage payment, allowing you to afford a higher sales price while keeping your payments right where you needed them to be all along.

The seller benefits as much as the buyer in that the seller gets the offer they wanted, and your below-market interest rate means a lower total payment— even though you offered a fair purchase price at market value.

You may be thinking, “Why don’t I just ask the seller to reduce the price of the home?”

That’s a great question, and most buyers are going to default to assuming this is the way to go. But using an interest rate reduction mortgage means your offer will stand out from the competition. A higher offer gives you a higher chance of sealing the deal.

Because it’s been established you aren’t trying to take any precious money out of the seller’s pocket (by having to make a lower offer), your far more desirable offer will inevitably stand out from all of the other buyers trying to get the lowest price possible.

While a desperate seller may take a low offer, most sellers are going to take the offer that will allow them to make the most money from the sale. Period.

If your offer keeps your payment where you want it to be while the seller also gets what they want, then everybody wins.

A successful negotiation is when all parties feel like they got the best deal. You get your payment. The seller receives their money. Everybody wins when everybody wins.

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More Tips and Tricks on the LoansByJoanna Guide

Coming soon: Seller Buydown (For Sellers)

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Seller Credits: How They Work, How They Benefit you in the Home Buying Process, How Much you Really End Up Spending on Your New Home? 

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Imagine trying to buy a Starbucks Frappuccino and having to separately compute what it costs to make the coffee, to pay for the coffee bean collectors, distribute the inventory, and stock the store. Wouldn’t it be nice if houses came with a bottom-line price tag, from upfront fees to ongoing monthly expenses, so that a buyer could easily compare “all-in” costs?

The costs of buying a home can very quickly add up. After you decide that homeownership is your best bet, you’ll need to convince a lender of that too. That means that your credit is in good shape, you aren’t struggling with debt, and you have a sizeable cushion for expenses that may arise. 

For financed deals, in addition to a down payment, you pay loan-acquisition costs and for services used during the escrow process. You may ask the seller to credit you a specified amount at closing to help with many of the expenses. 

Homeowners anxious to sell their homes will sometimes entice buyers with seller credits. These credits are a loan option that allows buyers to finance their closing costs and be able to purchase their home with less cash down. The seller concession must be included in the sales contract, and the amount and terms of the credit can be negotiated. 

Homeowners anxious to sell their homes will sometimes entice you with seller credits. These credits are a loan option that allows you to finance your closing costs and be able to purchase their home with less cash down. Here are 4 things that you should do (and know) as a buyer:

1.) Review closing costs

To settle the transaction, you and the seller will pay your own share of closing costs including escrow fees, title insurance, and property taxes. The allocation of fees depend on market customs. Buyers are typically required to pay only the fees that are considered customary and reasonable for a particular market, and the seller credit covers fees that fit the description. Lenders cap the amount of fees a seller credit may cover at 3-9% of the loan amount.

2.) Negotiate the terms

If you are the buyer, you and the seller will typically negotiate the terms of a seller credit early in the transaction. You will request an amount, as a percentage or dollar amount, in the offer to purchase. The seller may accept, reject, or counter the seller credit. The seller pays the credit as a lump sum at closing, and limitations to what the credit covers may apply. 

3.) Enjoy The Benefits

Seller credits can be beneficial to both sides of the transactions. As a buyer, you may be offered seller credit that can reduce your out-of-pocket expenses at closing. You can even request a seller credit, and increase the sales price to entice a seller to accept. A seller credit allows you to finance your closing costs into the new loan amount, however, your lender must approve the credit, and the value of the home must merit the increase in sale price. 

4.) Know The Limitations

Limitations on what the buyer and a seller credit can pay for are placed by lenders. Prohibited items are known as non-allowable fees. If you overestimate our closing costs, a credit surplus may occur. Then, you should renegotiate the sale price for the unused amount so that the seller does not end up with more net proceeds at closing for the unused portion. 

Whether the seller markets the home with an offer to credit some of your closing costs, or you request that the seller assists in your offer, the process for applying the credit is generally the same: the amount of the credit is noted in the sales contract as a dollar amount or as a percentage of the offer price, then, it’s added to the offer price.

Because the buyer adds the concession to the offer price, he increases the amount he pays for the home. For example, a buyer who needs $3,000 in concessions for a $100,000 home requests 3 percent seller assist and offers $103,000 for the home. Although the buyer is paying $103,000 for the house, the seller nets only $100,000 – the remaining $3,000 is loan money the buyer applies to his closing costs.

Sellers often feel as though they’re “giving” the buyer the amount of the assist. However, the assist amount is built into the offer price. The buyer is offering the seller $100,000 but asking the lender to originate a loan based on a $103,000 purchase price.