Mortgage Refinancing Below 500 FICO
by Tristan Hunt
If you have been turned down for a mortgage refinance, especially a cash out or debt
consolidation refinance, because your lender says your credit score is under 500, there
are a variety of new options and strategies available which can help you get the cash you
need now to pay off your credit card debts, collection accounts, and other derogatory or
poor credit accounts and improve your FICO credit score to the point where you can qualify
for a low interest, fixed rate loan.
First, you may be wondering why the number 500 is such a
big deal.
A FICO credit score is a number from 300 to 850 which is
meant to represent your reliability as a borrower, and takes into account how much credit
has been extended to you, how much money you owe and whether or not you pay it on time.
Banks like to tell us that 99% of people in the US have credit scores of 500 or higher,
and use this as an excuse not to even bother lending to people with credit scores under
the magic 500 FICO score.
As far as theyre concerned, since only 1% of the
population has a FICO below 500, they simply dont have the time to design programs
to help these people buy or refinance homes.
Weve worked with dozens of people who have come to us
with FICO scores below 500 over the years, and every one of them says the same thing.
I just need help right now, and everyone I talk to keeps saying NO. This is
because until very recently, it was extremely difficult to get a loan if your credit score
was 499 or less, and even today, only a few mortgage lenders, whether theyre banks
or brokers, have the time or attention required to focus on the needs of what they think
are a few unfortunate people. So until very recently, if your credit score was under 500,
the only chance you had at refinancing or obtaining a home loan was if you went to a
hard money lender.
If youve ever come across these individuals, you
might not have been able to tell the difference between hard money or private mortgage
lenders and a loan shark, and while that comparison is not entirely fair, it is to a
certain extent accurate.
Hard money lenders are small investors who lend only
against the hard equity in your home, generally not more than 60% or 70% of
the property value, the loans are generally short term, very high interest rate (12% to
15% or more), command huge up-front fees and closing costs, often up to 10% of the loan
amount, and rarely if ever do they report your timely payments to your credit bureaus,
making it harder to improve your credit. Why would anyone borrow money from a lender like
this?
In the past and even today, banks and other mortgage
lenders have said no to sub 500 credit score mortgages or home loan refinances, and
sometimes you just need the money that badly.
Many people have touted the benefits of credit repair
services to prospective borrowers with scores under 500. The proposal often reads like
this, first, give them a thousand dollars out of your pocket to fix your credit, which
they will accomplish in six months, and then once your scores are over 500, they get a
loan done for you.
Of course never mind that $1,000 is a lot of money for most
people with 700 credit scores, and very often a heck of a lot for an individual seeking a
mortgage / refinance to consolidate debts. Add to that the fact that conventional credit
repair takes too long for most people to wait without the extra cash to pay off bills that
you get with a refinance, and you can see that credit repair by itself is not a very
efficient proposition if what you really need is a refinance loan today. Thats not
to say credit repair doesnt work, its just that it doesnt work very well
for most people who are under 500 FICO seeking a debt consolidation, refinance or home
purchase loan.
Over the years weve taken a harder look at the
numbers, and it turns out that the banks and credit reporting agencies may have
drastically underestimated the number of people in this country whose credit ratings are
actually under 500 FICO. There are literally millions of people nationwide who fit into
this category, and we have spoken with our share. What do we know?
That most people with credit scores below 500 are
hardworking, honest people whose credit is suffering from the realities of living and
working in America today. As tight as our budgets are stretched in this country today, it
only takes a very short term disability or unemployment to severely damage our credit
scores.
And some of us might have gotten in a little over our heads
when we were younger, but in the years since weve been trying to get back on the
road to good credit, and were sick of getting charged sky high interest rates every
time we get a new credit card, apply for a car loan, or get denied for a bank loan and
wind up calling on the aforementioned hard money / private mortgage lenders. We knew the
banks had missed something. Our friends below 500 were not only more numerous than they
had previously estimated, they were also more than some credit score, they were good
people.
So we developed a strategy which we are sharing in the
hopes that other borrowers under 500 can reap some of the benefits that our own clients
have. Weve helped borrowers with no money in the bank, $50,000 of bad debt, and sky
high monthly payments driving them into the poor house get out of debt, get some money in
their pockets and eventually achieve major financial improvement in a very short amount of
time.
And how does it work?
First, there are a few major, institutional lenders which
have programs that allow us to arrange and refinance real mortgage loans at competitive
interest rates for borrowers with credit scores under 500. These are real, federally and
state regulated lenders, not private investor groups who will take your last dollar and
send you on your way. Ask your mortgage broker about these programs, and if he
doesnt know what youre talking about, get a new broker.
The typical strategy is a credit improvement strategy,
where the goal is to take enough cash out of your home to pay off as many of your past
due, high interest, or high payment debts as possible. We recommend taking a little extra
cash from closing if possible, or to use some of the savings from your lower overall
payments so that you can enter stage two of the strategy, which is third party credit
repair. A good quality credit repair agency should cost less than 300 dollars overall and
can clean up your credit and remove a lot of delinquencies and other items which are
negatively impacting your credit.
Combined with all the truly harmful items which youve
paid off with your debt consolidation refinance, you should be able to improve your credit
score by 50, 100 points or even more. I have seen a client go from a 485 FICO and $65K in
combined credit card and auto loan debt and a total monthly payment of over $2800 to a 610
credit score and a payment of $1900 per month in less than 4 months. How did that payment
get so low?
Once their credit score went over 600, we were able to
qualify them for a new mortgage at a low interest rate, because now our friends had
good credit, and paid off the few remaining debts which they had by
consolidating through refinance. Before the process, their average interest rate across
all debts including home, cards and cars was nearly 22%, and afterwards, the average rate
was under 9%.
Tristan Hunt is a seasoned financial
professional with a wealth of experience in the mortgage industry, advising clients on
debt consolidation, refinancing & investor loans. Website: http://www.RefinanceOne.net
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