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Credit Advice for Home Buyers:
Don't Pay off Credit
Cards!
by Jeanette Joy Fisher
Credit needed for real estate mortgage
financing differs
from credit needed for consumer loans. If you need help getting a
home mortgage, these credit tips will help you.
Contrary to what many credit advisors
say, paying off credit cards each month is not always the best
action to take. When making credit card payments, don't pay the
balance in full each month -- let a little roll over. Carry a
balance on your credit card every other month --as little as a
dollar. Paying balances in full does not increase your credit score;
paying balances in full may in fact lower your credit score.
Accounts with zero balances do not compute significantly in your
total score. For instance, a credit card with a perfect payment
history and no balance will not raise your credit score as much as a
credit card with a low balance. Any balance keeps the card active so
it computes in your credit score.
You most likely have been advised to
cut up your credit cards and close your accounts. Following this
advice degrades many credit scores.
Canceling Credit
Cards
Canceling credit cards can lower your
credit score. Keep your longest-term credit card account open to
show long-term credit history. If this account has prior late
notations, negotiate with the creditor to drop negative reporting on
your credit history file. Slowly close out newer accounts after they
are paid off. Keep your best accounts open -- those paid on time or
reporting "pays as agreed" and with the longest history.
Credit card companies may raise your
rate if you cancel a card before it is paid off; it is best to keep
accounts with outstanding balances open until you pay them
off.
Perfect Balance of
Credit
1. Mortgage over one year old with all
payments on time
2. Visa Card or Master Card with less
than 10% of available credit as balance due
3. Discover or American Express Card
with less than 10% of available credit as balance due
4. Auto loan either paid off or paid
down with low payments compared to monthly income.
Debt-to-Income
Ratio
Credit scores do not reflect income --
credit bureaus do not have income reported to them. However, real
estate lenders look at the consumer debt-to-income ratio -- the
amount of monthly debts in relation to the amount of earnings.
Consumer debt is more highly regarded/scores higher if total debt is
under 20% of net income, or total monthly payments on all debts is
less than 35% of monthly gross income.
Qualifying
Ratios
Lenders want the total debt ratio (the
percentage of total monthly payments, including the new mortgage, to
income) to be less than 33% for a typical conventional mortgage.
This means the new mortgage payment, credit card payments, and all
other monthly debt payments should not equal more than about
one-third of the monthly income.
Lenders want the mortgage debt ratio
(the percentage of the new mortgage payment to income) to be less
than 28%.
Non-prime loans have lower standards;
some lenders allow debt-to-income ratios as high as 55%. Borrowers
with less than perfect credit qualify more easily for a non-prime
loan compared to an "A-paper" loan.
Once you total your monthly expenses
and determine your debt ratio, you can estimate how much you can
afford for a house payment. For example, if your income is around
$3,000 per month, you can afford a home with payments around $1,000
per month (including taxes and insurance) with a conventional loan,
if your other debt does not total more than 5% of your
income.
For investors, these equations change.
Lenders expect 10%-25% down on investment property and allow about
75% of the rental income to offset the debt ratio.
Understanding your credit helps you
manage your credit so you can obtain real estate financing, either
for the house of your dreams or for your financial
future.
(c) Copyright 2005 Jeanette J. Fisher.
All rights reserved.
Professor Jeanette Fisher is the
author of "Credit Help! Get the Credit You Need to Buy Real
Estate," "Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars: Using Design
Psychology to Increase Real Estate Profits," and other books. Forget
what you've been told about credit. Get the credit you need to
buy real estate. Visit Real Estate Credit Help Center:
http://recredithelp.com/
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