Before You Buy Why Get Pre-approved?
OK. You've made the decision. You're ready to buy a house.
Great! You've got that dream home pictured in your head. Now all
you have to do is find a Realtor, make your offer and move in.
Right? Wrong.
Your first step should be to find a trustworthy mortgage
professional. But that's not the fun part, you may say. Why
start with a mortgage professional? In a nutshell, this can save
money, time and increase your bargaining power.
Your mortgage broker is going to be able to tell you first if
you can qualify to purchase a home at all. Second, if you are in
the running for purchasing, he or she can tell you how much home
you can qualify for. Think about it. Do you and your Realtor
want to run around for a month or two worth of weekends, finally
find your dream home, just to find out that you cannot afford
it?! That's a lot of time, and time is money (or at least a lot
of wasted weekends). Wouldn't it be better up front to know what
you can and cannot buy, zero in on that, and achieve that
wonderful feeling of success? Of course.
Well, you may have already thought of all that. However, did you
realize that the seller of your dream home may give you
preferential treatment if you're pre-approved? The seller has a
life too and time lines like the rest of us. They want deals
that are going to work. They don't want their home under
contract, just to have the deal fall through because the buyer
cannot qualify! So, let's say you make a bid on a house and
another party makes a bid at the same time for the same amount.
The other bidder is pre-approved, you aren't. Which bid should
they accept? Obvious. Another scenario, let's say you (not
pre-approved) make a bid and another bidder bids slighter lower
but is pre-approved. Which bid would you accept?
And one last matter to cover, there are different levels of
pre-approvals. The lowest level might be called
pre-qualification and this involves the mortgage professional
taking your information (income, expenses, etc.), putting it all
together and letting you know how much home you can qualify for
based on the numbers you provide. Another level of pre-approval
is for the mortgage professional to run the loan through
automated underwriting (getting more technical, here) to get an
approval provided that all your info can be verified. The
highest level would be running the loan through a lender and
actually doing all the verifications. Obviously, the higher
level of pre-approval gives you more to stand on and carries the
most weight when bidding on a home. In any case, your mortgage
professional should provide you with a letter stating on what
level you are pre-approved.
Hopefully by now the picture is clear, call that mortgage
professional BEFORE starting your house search. And maybe, just
maybe, the process might even be fun.