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Should You Choose a Short Sale Over a Foreclosure?

By
Real Estate Agent with Keller Williams Preferred Properties

Question: Should You Choose a Short Sale Over a Foreclosure?

Client Question: My husband and I have been making our mortgage payments every month even though our home is underwater. We owe a lot more than our home is worth. Now, my husband has lost his job. We're thinking about walking away from our home and letting it go to foreclosure, but my parents are telling us that we may qualify for a short sale. Which is better for us? A short sale or a foreclosure?"

Answer: Whether you should do a short sale or let the home go to foreclosure depends on several factors. While for some homeowners, it is easier to throw up your hands and let the bank take your home, that might not be the wisest thing to do.

Short Sale Benefits

Here are a few benefits for doing a short sale that may not have occurred to you:

* You are in control of the sale, not the bank. * You may sleep better at night knowing who is buying your home.

* You will spare yourself the social stigma of the "F" word, foreclosure.

* Contrary to popular belief, you can be current on your payments and still effect a short sale.

* Your home sale will be handled like any other home sale. Buying Again After a Short Sale If your payments have never fallen behind 30 days late and the lender does not require that you pay back the loan, Fannie Mae guidelines may allow you to buy another home immediately. The wait for an FHA loan is 3 years. If your payments are in arrears yet a short sale is granted by your lender, you may qualify to buy another home with a Fannie-Mae backed mortgage within two years, regardless of whether the home is your primary residence. Buying Again After a Foreclosure With certain restrictions, you may be eligible to buy another home in 5 years if the home was your primary residence. Without restrictions, the wait is 7 years. If you are an investor and do not occupy the home, the wait to buy with a Fannie Mae insured loan is 7 years.

Affects on Credit After a Short Sale

A short sale is not a derogatory mark on your credit because credit bureaus do not show the word "short sale" on your credit report. It may say "pay as agreed" or "paid as less than agreed," among other categories. Some clients have reported negative FICO score drops from 50 points to 130 points. The point drop is typically due to being in default, that is behind on your payments. Affects on Credit After a Foreclosure A number of sources have reported FICO score drops from 200 to 400 points after a foreclosure. Generally this credit score will remain on your credit report as a public record for 10 years. Credit Reports After a Short Sale All lenders report short sales differently and some do not report them to the credit bureaus at all.

Credit Reports After a Foreclosure

If a prospective employer runs a credit check on you, your job application may be denied if you have a foreclosure on your record. Deficiency Judgments After a Short Sale Judgments are often negotiated between the seller and the short sale bank. In some cases, such as California, if the home is your personal residence and was financed through purchase money, there is no deficiency judgment. Deficiency Judgments After a Foreclosure Banks are unwilling to negotiate deficiency judgments with the homeowner after a foreclosure. In California, for example, according to the California Association of REALTORS, a deficiency judgment may be filed if the lender forecloses under a judicial foreclosure versus a trustee sale or if the second loan is a hard money loan and the sale takes place as a trustee's sale.

Loan Application Questions After a Short Sale

Loan applications do not ask questions about a short sale. You may report that you sold your home.

Loan Application Questions After a Foreclosure

You are required to answer the question: "Have you ever had a property foreclosed upon or given a deed-in-lieu thereof in the past 7 years." If the bank sees you have had a foreclosure, your loan most likely will be denied. If you lie, you may be subject to investigation by the FBI for mortgage fraud.

Length of Time to Move After a Short Sale

If you've had a foreclosure notice filed, you may be able to postpone that action while the bank considers your short sale. The wait for short sale approval can be from 2 to 3 months, or longer.

Length of Time to Move After a Foreclosure

Unless prior arrangements have been made, the bank may want you to immediately vacate the property and can commence eviction proceedings.

Taxation After a Short Sale

A personal residence is exempt from mortgage debt relief until the end of 2012 on a federal level. Some states will still tax you unless you qualify for an exemption. An investor is not exempt from mortgage debt relief, subject to certain conditions.

Taxation After a Foreclosure

Same as with a short sale. Except some lenders immediately send out 1099s, even if the owner is exempt.

In closing, always obtain legal and tax advice before making a decision between a short sale or a foreclosure.

Anonymous
Martha Kolko

Thanks for this post.  I do not have a great deal of experience in short sales.  It has been easy to avoid up until now.  I am signing up for the next short sale course when offered in my area.  I have had several clients being told recently by attorneys to just stop paying their mortgages and wait for the bank to throw them out instead of working for a short sale.  I keep trying to think what I would do if it were me and I would rather move into a rental while I still had good credit, give the short sale a try and then use the foreclosure option if I had to.  Especially considering that there are kids involved and a great amount of pride!  It would be so hard to have my neighbors see me being evicted by the local Sheriff's office.  Plus, you have no time to plan where you are going when they tell you to get out quickly! 

Jul 06, 2010 11:16 AM
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