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FHA tightens up on credit requirements for borrowers

By
Mortgage and Lending with Advantage Mortgage Inc NMLS 1770599 , Originating loans in CA, OR and WA. NMLS 11911

FHA has just published a significant update regarding the use of Nontraditional Credit with FHA loans.  I've summarized what you and your clients need to know.

"Nontraditional Credit" means monthly obligations that a person may pay but that is not normally reported to the credit bureaus.  Examples would be rent, utility payments, auto insurance, cell phone account, etc.  Essentially, a nontraditional credit account would be any monthly obligation being paid to a business.

Borrowers with limited or no traditional credit must have a minimum of 3 alternative trade lines with a 12-month history. One of the 3 must be rent or housing utility payments, i.e., gas, electric, water, cable, land-line phone.

Borrowers with no traditional credit AND no rent or utility accounts will need:

•Two months cash reserves from their own funds (gifts are not allowed to meet this requirement);
•Ratios of 31% (for housing expense to income ratio) and 43% (for total debt to income ratio) cannot be exceeded; and
•No exceptions will be granted.

Additional underwriting criteria for nontraditional credit are as follows:

•No history of delinquency on rent payments;
•No more than 1 x 30 day late payment in the last 12 months on all other alternative trade lines;
•No collection or judgments filed within the last 12 months (excludes medical collections, which are evaluated by the underwriter); and
•All alternative trade lines must have a 12-month history.

For more information on FHA loans just give me a call or shoot me an email

Comments(2)

Mesa, Arizona Real Estate Mesa Arizona Realtor
Homes Arizona Real Estate LLC - Mesa, AZ
AzLadyInRed

Michael, good information on FHA guidelines. That seems to be more the norm these days - FHA! ;-)

Pepper

May 31, 2008 04:05 PM
Anonymous
Brittney

This is what I disagree with. FHA is setting these ridiculuos guidelines for first time buyers.  Eventually, It is going to be impossible to get qualified. If everyone had perfect credit, the market wouldn't be in the mess it is.

 

 

Aug 29, 2008 03:33 PM
#2