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blue_paperLearn About Credit

Begin With Your Credit | Credit Reports | Credit Scores | Other Factors Count | Get Your financial Picture in Order | Organize your documents


Begin With Your Credit

When you look for a mortgage, lenders will review your credit report. Your credit report is a history of how you have managed your finances and repaid debt. It provides information on money you have borrowed and a history of your payments.

Your credit history is pulled together into a credit report by three private companies: Equifax, Experian and Trans Union. These companies sell your credit report to banks and other creditors so they can review mortgage and loan applications.

Your credit report includes:

  • A list of debts, such as credit cards and car loans, and a history of how you have paid them.
  • Any bills that have been referred to a collection agency. This can include items like phone and medical bills.
  • Public record information, such as tax liens or bankruptcies, even if these have happened several years ago.
  • Inquiries made about your creditworthiness. An inquiry is made when you request credit. Many times your report will also show if you were given credit based on the inquiry.

Most of the information in your credit report is deleted after 7 years (a bankruptcy is deleted after 10 years) and is continuously updated to reflect the latest information.

It's important that you look at your credit reports from each of the three companies to make sure they are correct. Your credit report may vary from one company to the other.

Your credit report is a history of how you have managed your finances and repaid debt.

Stay on Course

Bankruptcy: Legally declared unable to pay your debts as they become due. Bankruptcy can severely impact your ability to borrow money. Talk to a credit counselor as soon as you realize you are having problems paying your bills on time to try to prevent bankruptcy.

Credit History: A credit history is a record of credit use. It is comprised of a list of individual consumer debts and an indication as to whether or not these debts were paid back in a timely fashion or "as agreed." Credit institutions have developed a complex recording system of documenting your credit history. This is called a credit report.

Credit Report: A document used by the credit industry to examine an individual's use of credit. It provides information on money that individuals have borrowed from credit institutions and a history of payments.

Creditworthy: Your ability to qualify for credit and repay debts.


Click here for the complete Glossary of Homeownership terms.

 

Credit Reports

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To obtain your credit reports, contact the three companies listed to the right. Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), you can get a free credit report once during any 12-month period if you certify it in writing that:

  • You are unemployed and intend to apply for employment within 60 days, or
  • You are receiving public welfare, or
  • You believe that your credit report contains inaccurate information due to fraud

You can also get a free copy of your credit report if you have been the subject of an adverse action – such as being denied credit – within the last 60 days.

What If My Credit Reports Contain Errors?

If you believe that any one of your credit reports contains mistakes and you wish to dispute or correct the mistake, contact the company that developed the report.

Under the Fair Credit Reporting Act (FCRA), the company must complete an investigation, usually within 30 days. Within 5 days of completion, the company must provide you written notice of the results, including a copy of your credit report if it has changed based upon the dispute.

The Federal Trade Commission (FTC) enforces the FCRA and publishes brochures about credit.

To contact the FTC, call or write:

Federal Trade Commission
Consumer Response Center
6th & Pennsylvania Avenue, N.W.
Washington, D.C. 20580
Phone: (877) FTC-HELP or (877) 382-4357
www.ftc.gov

 

Stay on Course

Credit Bureau: A company that gathers information on consumers who use credit and sells that information in the form of a credit report to credit lenders.

The 3 credit bureaus are:

Equifax
PO Box 740241
Atlanta, GA 30374
Phone: (800) 685-1111
www.equifax.com

Experian
National Consumer Assistance Center
PO Box 2002
Allen, TX 75013
Phone: (888) EXPERIAN
www.experian.com/consumer/

Trans Union LLC
Consumer Disclosure Center
PO Box 1000
Chester, PA 19022
Phone: (800) 888-4213
www.transunion.com



Click here for the complete Glossary of Homeownership terms.

 

Credit Scores

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When you apply for a mortgage, the lender may request a credit score as well as a credit report. A credit score is a computer-generated number that indicates your ability and willingness to repay a debt based on your credit record.

Your credit score is part of the mortgage information that will decide if your application is approved. Your credit score may also be used to determine the mortgage interest rate.

For example, if you charge up to the limit on your credit cards – even if combined they don't add up to a lot of money – this might hurt your credit score. Or, if you have recently applied for a number of credit cards – even if you haven't begun to use them yet – your credit score might be affected.

However, if you show a pattern of managing your credit wisely, keeping credit card balances low and paying your bills on time consistently, your credit score will be positively affected.

The most commonly used credit score today is known as a FICO® score. Developed by Fair, Isaac & Co. Inc., FICO scores are ranked on a scale of approximately 400 to 900 points. Statistically, consumers with higher credit scores are more likely to repay their debts than consumers with lower credit scores.

Credit Scores Don't Last Forever!

If your credit score is low, remember that no credit score lasts forever. A credit score is a snapshot based on current information in your credit report. There are things you can do today to improve your credit score in the future.

Paying one of your bills a few days late one time usually will not impact a credit score immediately or significantly. Credit scores reflect credit patterns over time. However, an adverse action, like a tax lien or bankruptcy filing, can immediately and significantly impact a credit score.

So manage your credit responsibly. A strong credit history will give you a strong credit score.

 

 

Stay on Course

Credit Score: A computer-generated number that summarizes an individual's credit profile that indicates the likelihood that a borrower will repay future obligations.

How to improve your credit score:

·   Pay your bills regularly and on time.

·   Keep your credit card balances low.

·   Don't apply for too much credit.



Click here for the complete Glossary of Homeownership terms.

 

Other Factors Count

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Information besides your credit score and credit record before deciding whether to give you a mortgage. They look at:

  • Stability of your income
  • Employment history
  • Monthly debt payments (credit card bills, car loans, etc.) in relation to your income
  • How you save money and how much you have saved
  • The type of mortgage you are considering
  • The type and value of the property you want to buy
  • The amount of the down payment you plan to make
  • On-time payment of rent and utilities

The key is to have a good balance between your capacity, credit and collateral, the three C's.

Stay on Course

Mortgage lenders look at the three C's when approving mortgage applications:

Capacity: Your ability to make your mortgage payments on time. This depends on your income and income stability, your assets and reserves, and the amount of your income each month that is available after you have paid for your housing costs, debts and other obligations.

Collateral: Property which is pledged as security for a debt. In the case of a mortgage, the collateral would be the land, the house, and other buildings and improvements.

Credit: The ability of a person to borrow money, or obtain goods with payments over time, as a consequence of the favorable opinion held by a lender as to the person's financial situation and reliability.



Click here for the complete Glossary of Homeownership terms.

 

 

Get Your Financial Picture in Order

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Now that you have reviewed your credit, focus on the rest of your financial picture before you buy a home.

Make a Budget and Live Within It!

A budget will help you meet your monthly bills, and therefore help your credit. It also can help increase your savings for things like a down payment on a house.

Demonstrating your ability to save and having funds on hand will help you in the mortgage approval process. Your personal savings should be sufficient to last several months should you lose your job or source of income.

How to Make a Budget:

1.       Gather receipts and other records of your past spending.

2.       Monitor your spending for a month to find out how much you spend and where you spend it.

3.       Set your financial goals. You will be able to afford a home if you plan and save for it over time.

4.       Make a plan and stick to it.

5.       Make budgeting a part of your regular routine.

Once you get comfortable with a budget, you can be more flexible and make adjustments so you are spending money on things that are most important to you. Use your budget to help you stay within your means and make difficult choices. Set goals for what you can't afford today to ensure that you can afford it in the future.

Take Another Step

·         Set a budget for yourself on your projected mortgage payment.

 

·         Remember that your budget should include your utility costs and a set savings amount for future home maintenance and repair costs.

Stay on Course

Tips for Developing a Budget:

·   Determine your monthly income

·   List your fixed expenses (bills that stay the same month-to-month)

·   List your flexible expenses

·   Plan for large, periodic expenses

·   Compare your income with your expenses

·   Set priorities, goals and limits

·   Set a savings plan and make it a priority

·   Keep an emergency fund

·   Plan ahead for major purchases to avoid impulse decisions

Tips for Sticking to a Budget:

·   Be determined and exercise willpower

·   Be prepared to compromise

·   Develop a user-friendly system of documenting expenses

·   Be creative and use non-monetary incentives



Click here for the complete Glossary of Homeownership terms.

 

 

Organize Your Documents

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When you're ready to meet with a mortgage lender to apply for a mortgage, you'll need to provide documentation of your income, taxes, bank accounts and other financial papers.

Begin to gather the following documents from your files:

·   Your pay stubs for the past 30 days

·   Your W-2 forms for the past 2 years

·   Information on your long-term debts (car loans, student loans, etc.)

·   Recent statements from all of your bank accounts and other savings accounts

·   Tax returns for the past 2 years if self-employed

·   Proof of any supplemental income

·   Records of any past derogatory credit history that have since been paid off

·   Records of child support or alimony (either going out or coming in)

Other Advice

·   Do not take money away from your down payment savings to pay off debts with less than 10 months – these debts don't count in underwriting.

·   Do not incur any new debt. For example, don't buy a new car a week before you apply for a mortgage.

·   Keep your spending in check. Save as much money as possible.

 

This information has been provided by Freddie Mac