Thursday, August 20, 2009

6 Things To Avoid While Waiting For A Mortgage Approval

by Rob Kosberg

Stage 1 of the 2 stages of the mortgage loan approval process begins when a potential buyer submits the completed mortgage application to his loan officer for a pre-approval.

A pre-approval is a "walk-through" mortgage approval that says -- at a given purchase price and downpayment amount -- the home loan application will very likely be approved.

Stage 1 ends when the buyer signs a purchase contract on a home. At this point, the "walk-through" approval is useless because the buyer now needs a real home loan approval from an underwriter and not a loan officer.

It is the job of the "underwriter" to make sure that the buyer can meet the lending criteria of the banking institution. He does this by reviewing the buyer's credit, assets, income, job history and other factors. This is Stage 2.

This procedure should be a formality if the Stage 1 loan officer did an appropriate job. Usually this stage moves along as anticipated. However, sometimes the buyer changes his loan "risk" without intending to do this, but affecting the mortgage approval. The buyer doesn't mean to decrease his loan probability, it "happens."

During the mortgage approval process, the buyer must not do anything that will increase his loan risk during the time between Stages 1 &2. Risk needs to remain consistent. The following are 6 things of the "Honey Don't" list for this interim period:

1. Don 't miss a payment to a creditor 2. Don't transfer large amounts of money in or out of your bank accounts (large may have different meanings to different people) 3. Don 't accept gift of cash without talking with your loan officer first (There are rules for gifts) 4. Don't buy a new car (or increase loan or lease payment) 5. Don 't quit your job or change career(don't switch to a "commission" job ) 6. Don 't open a new credit card (no matter the deal)

This is the basic starter list of things not to do. You may still make some errors, but talk to your loan officer if you have concerns or need to break a "rule." There can be "glitches." throughout the mortgage loan process. Therefore, keep the lines of communication open between you and your loan officer.

About the Author:

If you are in the market to Buy a Home then VisitRob Kosbergs' Detailed FREE Guide on Buying your Dream Home with a Zero Down Mortgage or for up to date Mortgage info visit my Mortgage Blog

Get all the information and photos:: http://coringa.info/realestate/6-things-to-avoid-while-waiting-for-a-mortgage-approval

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