Equity is attached to your home; thus, the home equity loans are loans that utilize the home as a ticket to security when offering loans. The lender will force the homebuyer or homeowner to put up his home as collateral when applying for an equity loan. Thus, if you are considering taking a loan to payoff bills, or to roll bills into one or payoff high interest on credit cards, then you will need to consider the risks. Few lenders online claim to offer home equity loans with no upfront
fees, which includes negative closing, appraisal, valuation, and so forth.
However, the lenders often do not illustrate the restrictions, stipulations or exclusions when presenting these loans upfront. Thus, reading the fine print and terms can spare you when you are considering loans.
For example, a lender may offer you a “30-year” fixed rate loan and tell you that you will get one point for applying for x amount, meaning that you will receive a couple thousand off the closing costs by utilizing the point. Furthermore, if you have a zero-point equity loan, you could use points to refinance your mortgage to receive cheaper interest rates. Thus, the “zero-point, zero-fee loan” is one of the loans that often have higher interest rates and repayments toward mortgage.
Some loans have clauses and penalties; and apparently few of the “zero-point, zero-fee” loans do not, which is worth paying higher costs, including interest rates, since you can use the points to reduce the interest rates over time without suffering penalty. If a loan comes with penalties, youmay be paying out more than you bargain for when refinancing your home. Finally, when searching for loans be sure to read, listen and consider carefully before signing a contract that could put you in bankruptcy or foreclosure.
Related posts:
- Try and Stay Away From Bad Home Equity Loans
- Managing Joint Equity Loans
- The HELOC and Home Equity Loans: A Comparison
- Various Kinds of Mortgage Products
- Ensuring An Approval When Getting a Mortgage
This entry was posted on Wednesday, December 30th, 2009 at 7:12 pm and is filed under home loans. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.
