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Why
get pre-qualified and then pre-approved for a mortgage before you
begin your search for a home? Because there are 3 people who will
benefit from your pre-approval: You, your Agent, and the seller from
whom you eventually buy a home!
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You:
The most important beneficiary, of course, is you.
One of the most common questions we get from users of this
site goes something along the lines of "Please let us
know how much house we can afford." We're stumped! Why?
There are simply too many variables--credit history, income,
debt, special mortgage programs and variations in qualifying
guidelines between different mortgage types--to answer that
question. The only sure way of getting the question answered
is through pre-qualification. The mortgage pre-qualification
step is a relatively simple one, but it is an important one.
It begins the process of formally applying for a mortgage,
and it gives everyone involved--especially you--a clear
sense of the direction they should be headed.
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Your Agent: By knowing what your
financial parameters are, your Agent can spend more time looking for
houses that "fit" and less time pursuing dead ends. No
matter how much you might want a 4000 square foot home for
$275,000, if your qualifications say $125,000, your qualifications
say $125,000. When it comes to mortgages, "yes, but"
doesn't carry much weight!
The Seller: Want to strengthen your bargaining position? Get
pre-qualified. Want your offer to stand out in a case of multiple
offers for the same house? Get pre-qualified. Look at it from the
seller's perspective. If you had 2 offers on the table for your
house, one from a fully pre-qualified buyer and the other from an
"I'll get around to that soon" buyer--to which offer would
you devote the most attention? Even if the pre-qualified buyer's
offer was $1000 less, would you take the chance on the buyer that
perhaps may not be qualified? When it comes to a seller evaluating
offers, "a bird in the hand..." definitely applies.
It is important to remember that the amount of mortgage you will
qualify for is the maximum. It is the amount that the lender
feels you can afford, but it is not necessarily the amount
that you want to pay. It sometimes is advantageous to be
conservative here. For example, if you qualify for a $100,000
mortgage and you have $15,000 available in cash for down-payment and
closing costs, you are qualified to buy homes with a maximum selling
price of $115,000. So as to not push yourself to the limit, you may
want to look at homes that sell in the $100,000 to $110,000 range.
Too many buyers simply rush off to the $115,000 level and some find
themselves strapped when it comes time to purchase necessary items
(such as draperies, additional furniture and lawn and garden tools,
for example) or when they forget to factor in increases in monthly
expenses (for example utilities and maintenance and repair costs).
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