Saturday, March 21, 2009

How does short sale affect credit

(My Original Blog Post: http://ping.fm/FUEn7)
 

Know lot's of people who are in foreclosure or have been in foreclosure?, they always ask how it affects their credit, well here is what I tell them...


How Does a Short Sale Hurt or Affect Your Credit Score or Report?


*Note that since about 2007-2008 some recent legislation passed on which scenarios taxes can be forgiven in owner occupied situations and the timeline has been extended, please refer to the IRS and your CPA or account for this recent changes.  The biggest changes affecting your credit with legislation these days is how Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA change their guidelines how how many years after a foreclosure or short sale until you can purchase your next property, due to the constant changing laws, where today it's around 5, 7, 3 years respectively, please check with a loan officer, or we can put you in touch with one.  Some may treat short sale similar to foreclosure, but recent laws have come out where short sales are not suppose to effect you as badly as a full foreclosure, meaning less time until your next purchase, due to recent 2008 laws. 


This is a very common question asked all the time as far as what effect it will have, how a short sale on your record will affect your credit score and credit report. A short sale in general will affect your credit report less than a full foreclosure or deed in lieu of foreclosure. You can have a “settlement paid in full” negotiated with the lender, and obviously this will show better than simply doing nothing. No one may know exactly to perfection what the difference is in points on how your credit score would be affected whether you do a short sale vs. a foreclosure. If you are behind in payments and you owe too much on the house, what choices do you really have anyways, you are over financed. If you have lots of money, assets, reserves, and a high net worth and you just don’t feel like making payments or feel like paying down your principle balance, your lender won’t want to do a short sale.They will first want to get financial info from you, and a written hardship letter. This will make it quite clear to the bank that your only option is some help from the lender. This is where you see a seller that has a property listed on the MLS reading as “subject to bank approval”. A full foreclosure can stay on your credit for up to 7 years. I recently heard that Freddie Mac was trying to pass some new laws for their company that would not allow some borrowers to finance a home for up to 5 years through them. This was more in the cases where people were just walking away, and didn’t have a true hardship case. Currently you can get a FHA loan where your last foreclosure was only 3 years ago. That’s how it is in the current market. You can always just go buy on a contract for deed, get into a rent to own, or rent a property while you are improving your credit. As a general rule you can still get loans with 30 day late payment on your record, it becomes less likely with a 60 day late, and very hard with 90 day late mortgage payment, etc. Also in today’s market you can get a lender and the loss mitigation department to agree to a short sale without being behind on payments. In the recent past you had to be behind up to 90 days. It’s slowly been easier and easier as the lenders want to solve this currently large problem with foreclosures. You will probably have many questions about credit, credit repair, bankruptcy, and how all of this affects you and works together, the guy you will want to talk to locally is: Todd Rooker 763-383-0959, he is the owner of Armor Financial Services Credit and Debt Specialists. He is good to talk to about credit repair, financial planning, and he can even refer you to a specialized bankruptcy attorney that understands short sales and a tax specialist on how the “short payoff”, 1099, or deficiency judgment could affect you as it relates to your taxes. There are situations where you, as the seller, are “insolvent” as the definition put forth by the IRS. Please consult a tax advisor on this. You should check out the new Fannie Mae guidelines for foreclosures and short sales.

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