Home Buyers
Tips Archive
Whats FHA Insurance
For?
FHA insurance, paid for
by the borrower (mortgagor), protects the lending institution against loss if the property
is seized for nonpayment and canīt be sold for enough to cover the debt and legal costs.
Even though the lender would be reimbursed, the borrower is still personally responsible
for any shortfall.
Because the last owner is the one who had financial
difficulty, the original borrower could be the one required to make up the loss. It is
wise, therefore, to check the financial health of the buyer who proposes to take over
ones FHA loan along with the house.
The original borrower is always personally responsible
unless a formal assumption process is used, under which the new borrower
proves satisfactory credit and income to the lending institution.
Even with non formal assumption, most FHA mortgages place
after December 1, 1986, require anyone assuming the loan to prove financial ability to the
lenders satisfaction. For many of those loans, the original borrower will be
released from liability five years after an assumption.
This Tip was excerpted from:
Dear Edith... On Real Estate by Edith Lank, Longman Financial Services Publishing,
1990
ISBN # 0-7931-0007-0
Back
to Home Buyer Tips |