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June 13, 2010

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FHA’s 90-day Property Anti-Flipping Rule

by Bob Schwartz

FHA home loans

FHA home loans

In January, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) instituted a one-year moratorium on the FHA’s 90-day anti-flipping rule. As a result, beginning Feb. 1, buyers could use FHA-insured financing to purchase properties resold through private developers and investors, providing access to a broader array of recently foreclosed properties. Under the temporary waiver all transactions must be arm’s-length, and most properties will require additional documentation of improvements and justification of the price increase. Additional documentation may include a second appraisal and a property inspection ordered by the lender.

FHA loans come with mortgage insurance regardless of the down payment, for at least five years, and the premium drops off only when the loan amount hits 78 percent of the purchase price. The Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premium was raised in January from 1.78 percent of the loan amount to 2.25 percent, starting April 5, 2010.
Three to eight months’ worth of property taxes are collected at closing, depending n the month of closing, to set up a mandatory impound account for property taxes.
The minimum down payment required is 3.5 percent, which can be fully gifted through  help from friends.

New borrowers will be required to have a minimum FICO score of 580 to qualify for the FHA’s 3.5 percent down payment program. New borrowers with less than a 580 FICO score will be required to put down at least 10 percent. FHA expects this to take effect in early summer after it goes through the normal regulatory process.
The agency is lowering the maximum permissible level of allowable seller concession to 3 percent from its current 6 percent limit. FHA expects this to take effect in early summer.

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3 Comments
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