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6 Things To Avoid While Waiting For A Mortgage Approval

By
Real Estate Agent with Southern Classic Realtors Atlanta Area Realtor

When buying a home, there are two stages in the home loan approval 6 Things To Avoid While Waiting For A Mortgage Approvalprocess.

Stage 1 starts when a homebuyer submits a mortgage application to his loan officer for a pre-approval. 

A pre-approval is a "walk-through" mortgage approval that says -- at a given purchase price and downpayment amount -- the home loan application will very likely be approved.

Stage 1 ends when the buyer signs a purchase contract on a home.  At this point, the "walk-through" approval is useless because the buyer now needs a real home loan approval from an underwriter and not a loan officer.

Thus begins Stage 2.

During the second phase of the approval process, a mortgage underwriter is reviewing income, assets, credit, job history, and other items, too; the underwriters job is to make sure that the buyer meets the bank's criteria for lending.

If the loan officer did his job in Stage 1, Stage 2 is just a formality.  And most times, it all goes according to plan.

Occasionally, though, a homebuyer sabotages his own mortgage approval by inadvertently changing his "risk profile".  It doesn't happen on purpose, of course -- it just happens.

So, consider this a quick primer of what not to do while you're between Stage 1 and the completion of Stage 2 of the home loan approval process.   Following these pointers will help keep the risk profile consistent.

  1. Don't buy a new car (or take on a larger lease payment)
  2. Don't quit your job or change industries (and certainly don't switch to a heavily commissioned role)
  3. Don't transfer large sums of money into or out from your bank accounts (and remember that "large" is relative)
  4. Don't miss a payment to a creditor (even if you don't think you owe it)
  5. Don't open a new credit card (even if you're getting 10% off your new bedding)
  6. Don't accept a cash gift without talking to your loan officer first (because there's rules on how to accept them)

There's other items, too, but this a good start. 

Now, avoiding these mistakes may not be practical for everyone.  Therefore, if you know you're going to violate a "rule", check with your loan officer first. 

There are a lot of "gotchas" in mortgage lending and it helps to have professional guidance for your individual questions.

Ron Tarvin
Residential, Investment properties, rehab projects, property management, luxury homes, new construction! - Katy, TX
Broker, Katy, Houston, Cypress 77450,77494,77095

Good Stuff on what NOT to do!

I had a home buyer a couple of years ago that decided the night before closing, they needed a NEW BMW convertible to go with their new home.  It was in my paperwork I gave to them, it was in my instructions that we discussed about the home buying process, but they simply got to over excited about everything going on and they went and purchased the car, in the early evening the night before closing.  Their thought was that it wouldn't show up anywhere until after they closed on their house (the car salesman even told them they wouldn't see anything until the following month--guess he meant their first payment statement!).

So they pulled up to the title company in their new car and sure enough...the lender, in their final approval process pulled credit one more time and ultimately they were denied a home loan and could not close on their home.  Very sad indeed!

Feb 25, 2008 03:28 AM
Jackie Cross
Real Living All Florida Realty - Port St Lucie, FL
Great advice.  We try to teach this our clients but they don't always listen.
Feb 25, 2008 03:39 AM