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	<title>SmartView - TeleRadiología &#38; Imágenes Diagnósticas. Cali - Colombia &#187; loans not payday loans</title>
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		<title>Can You Get a Home Loan from Your Parents? Financial Aid Rules</title>
		<link>https://www.smartview.co/can-you-get-a-home-loan-from-your-parents/</link>
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		<pubDate>Mon, 12 Aug 2024 18:03:43 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Diana]]></dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[loans not payday loans]]></category>

		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://www.smartview.co/?p=67451</guid>
		<description><![CDATA[Cori Carl found it difficult to get a home loan from a bank in 2011, partly because she worked as a freelance marketing consultant and banks weren&#8217;t too generous with loans to freelancers, who typically have an unsteady income. Carl, then 26, was ready to buy a co-op apartment in Brooklyn, and thought she was [&#8230;]]]></description>
				<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Cori Carl found it difficult to get a home loan from a bank in 2011, partly because she worked as a freelance marketing consultant and banks weren&#8217;t too generous with loans to freelancers, who typically have an unsteady income.</p>
<p>Carl, then 26, was ready to buy a co-op apartment in Brooklyn, and thought she was in a good position to qualify for a mortgage from a bank. She had a large down payment, great credit, a steady income and long-term clients, she says. She was still turned down.</p>
<p>With a $60,000 down payment in hand for a $235,000 apartment she wanted to buy, Carl turned to her mother for a $175,000 private mortgage with her mom acting as the bank. Her mom had the money sitting in her checking account from a land sale she recently completed, and agreed to the loan at the then-market interest rate of 3.75 percent for 25 years in a fixed-rate loan.</p>
<p>&#8220;I feel better paying my mom interest, rather than a bank, and it seemed unlikely that she would foreclose on me,&#8221; she says.</p>
<p>From full loans from parents to down payment assistance that&#8217;s documented as gifts, there are ways for parents to help their children buy a home if they can&#8217;t get a loan from a bank or need some extra money for a down payment.<span id="more-67451"></span> All have their own rules and legal ramifications, along with tax implications, that can make wading through them difficult.</p>
<p>And many people do need the assistance from mom and dad. A survey by mortgage services firm Digital Risk found that 46 percent of first-time homebuyers in the last 12 months received help with a down payment from family.</p>
<h2>Technically a gift to mom</h2>
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<p>Carl has since sold her apartment for a good profit, repaid the loan and bought a condo in cash in Toronto. But the &#8220;loan&#8221; from her mother wasn&#8217;t technically a mortgage, Carl says, because it would have required all kinds of extra paperwork.</p>
<p>They hired a real estate attorney to help them with some of the legal paperwork, but they put together most of the contract themselves and reported the transaction to the state.</p>
<p>The interest from the loan that Carl paid her mother was technically a gift to her mom, so Carl couldn&#8217;t deduct the mortgage interest from her taxes.</p>
<p>The Internal Revenue Service allow home loans from parents, provided <a href="https://cashadvanceamerica.net/255-dollar-payday-loan/">https://cashadvanceamerica.net/255-dollar-payday-loan/</a> they charge an interest rate for a set term that is at least the rate the IRS sets. The IRS sets rates monthly for loans with various compounding periods.</p>
<p>Even though Carl&#8217;s loan wasn&#8217;t technically a loan, it did follow loan procedures required for a home loan. The loan was secured against the property and a note was prepared with the terms of the loan, such as the interest rate. If Carl defaulted, her mom would legally own the property.</p>
<h2>Giving the gift of cash</h2>
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<p>Cash gifts for a down payment on a home are just that &#8211; gifts &#8211; and the gift isn&#8217;t counted by a bank as an obligation for the person buying a home. In some cases, the entire down payment and closing costs can be 100 percent gifted by a family member, says Ken Maes of Skyline Home Loans.</p>
<p>And a gift for a home loan doesn&#8217;t have to only be from parents. &#8220;Many newlyweds are opting for a &#8216;bridal account,&#8217; like a registry, and all the funds deposited are being used as funds to help close their loan as well,&#8221; Maes says.</p>
<p>Conventional loans have restrictions on financial gifts that vary on the borrower&#8217;s down payment percentage, says Jeff Taylor, a managing partner at Digital Risk. If a down payment is less than 20 percent, Freddie Mac requires at least 5 percent to be the borrower&#8217;s own money. Fannie Mae eased its rules last year and under some circumstances eligible borrower can have their entire down payment come from gifts, Taylor says.</p>
<p>Lenders require extensive paperwork in order to track the origin of all money used toward a home purchase, and gifts are no exception, Taylor says. All gift funds require a gift letter documenting the amount of the gift and stating that the money doesn&#8217;t have to be repaid, Taylor says, along with proof of when the funds were transferred.</p>
<p>Also, the window for tracking gift money deposited into a recipient&#8217;s account is usually 90 days, Taylor says. Money given earlier than 90 days before a closing is considered &#8220;seasoned&#8221; and doesn&#8217;t need to be documented, he says. Any money deposited within 90 days of a mortgage application require a paper trial.</p>
<p>Gift funds for a loan can&#8217;t come from the home seller, real estate agent or anyone who is a party to the sale.</p>
<h2>Providing collateral for the loan</h2>
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<p>Without being a co-signer on a home loan, parents can help by pledging their assets as collateral, says Tom Anderson, author of &#8220;The Value of Debt in Retirement,&#8221; where he explains how the pledge works.</p>
<p>In Anderson&#8217;s example, someone wants to purchase a $300,000 home and needs about a 20 percent down payment of $60,000. The parents can pledge about $120,000 of assets to cover the down payment. Their child, the borrower, is then on the hook for the full loan of $300,000, but they&#8217;re not required to pay private mortgage insurance, or PMI, which is needed when a borrower doesn&#8217;t have 20 percent equity in the home.</p>
<p>Unlike co-signing, if the child defaults on their payments, the parent is only on the hook for the $60,000 portion they covered, Anderson says.</p>
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