Private Mortgage Insurance, Who Pays?
Chances are unless you're right in the throes of purchasing your
home, you've never even heard of private mortgage insurance.
But, if you intend to purchase a home and you don't want put the
20% down that traditional lending institutions require, you're
going to become very familiar with private mortgage insurance.
What is private mortgage insurance and who pays for private
mortgage insurance? This article will take the opportunity to
discuss private mortgage insurance and why you're required to
purchase it; we'll also examine the latest federal regulations
governing private mortgage insurance.
Let's first define what private mortgage insurance actually is,
and why you might be required to purchase the insurance. Private
mortgage insurance is an insurance purchased to protect the
lender, not the borrower. The borrower however pays for the
mortgage insurance, and is provided to the lender instead of the
20% down payment normally required when purchasing real estate.
The insurance provides the difference between the fair market
value of the home and the actual price a lender may be able to
sell the property for, in case of a default on the loan.
Normally, the lender will require a 20% down payment and forgo
the private mortgage insurance option. However, under certain
circumstances if the buyer has an excellent credit rating, is
well known to the lender, and is deemed to be low risk, private
mortgage insurance may be an option offered by the lender.
The current mortgage market seems to be flooded with such varied
products as the interest only loan and the 125 loans that
private mortgage insurance seems to be a thing of the past. You
rarely encounter a situation when the buyer is required to
purchase the private mortgage insurance; those situations most
likely to continue to require the purchase of the private
mortgage insurance are those where the lender is a traditional
lending institution. Mortgage companies have long since ceased
requiring borrowers to purchase private mortgage insurance.
Mortgage investors, such as the Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
programs, have recently come to the aid of the borrower by
introducing an option to the primary mortgage market that allows
borrowers to pay as little as 5% down and purchase only enough
mortgage insurance to cover 25% of the loan; this creates a
potential citing situation for the borrower. The borrower may
pay a slightly higher interest rate in order to lower the cost
of insurance that the advantage lays here: mortgage interest is
fully tax deductible, private mortgage insurance is not.
There's another option, also regulated by the federal government
and passed into law in 1999, known as the homeowners protection
act of 1998 established rules for regulation of private mortgage
insurance requirements once a homeowner reaches a level of 20%
equity. What the law requires, in layman's terms, is that a
lending institution must notify you once your equity levels
reach 20% of the appraised value of the home. Once you the kind
of 20% equity level, you must be given the option to drop
private mortgage insurance. If this proposal had passed into law
some 20 years ago, it would have been met with great resistance
among the lending community; today, the interest only loan and
loans that offer mortgages in excess of the appraised value of
the home overshadow the effect of the 1998 homeowner's act.
Many homeowners seem to mistake the private mortgage insurance
purchased in order to secure the loan, with that of the
homeowner's liability insurance. Lenders are responsible for
making clear the distinction between private mortgage insurance
purchased to protect the lender versus the homeowner's liability
insurance purchased to protect the homeowner. Both forms of
insurance will need to be purchased, and the borrower will be
responsible for payment of both insurance premiums.
Quite often as we go through the mortgage process, we encounter
many unexpected expenses; private mortgage insurance is normally
one of those unexpected expenses. As a consumer if you're
contemplating the purchase of a home, contact your local lending
institution, or a mortgage company in your area, and asked for
information concerning the purchase of a home for first-time
homeowners. The information you're provided should contain all
the terms, conditions and terminology explanations that you will
need in order to make an educated decision when choosing lenders
and homes.