Co-signing a mortgage loan? Know the dangers
If it looks like a jointly held mortgage will be the answer to getting a transaction done, don’t sugarcoat the facts.
Younger customers frequently look to parents or grandparents to help them get into a first home. As rising home prices and interest rates present even greater challenges for first-time buyers these days, you may encounter more situations involving co-signed mortgage loans.
While it’s not your role as a real estate agent to provide financial advice to your customers or their relatives, it’s wise to be prepared with information if you are asked.
There’s little doubt such joint purchases are on the rise. Of home purchase loans in the U.S. in 2017, the latest year for which data is available, 22.8 percent included a co-signer, up from 21.3 percent in 2016, according to real estate data company ATTOM Data Solutions.
Now, what is appropriate to share if your customers raise the issue with you?
Start by encouraging them to speak to a lender or a financial planning professional and recommend that they take no action until they have that conversation. Once you’ve laid out that ground rule, share a few facts with them:
First, as co-signer, you’re 100 percent responsible for the obligation. If the person benefitting from the co-signing loses their job and can’t make mortgage payments, you’re now responsible for them.
Co-signing the mortgage will affect your credit. Any delinquency will appear on your credit report. This could affect your ability to get credit in the future – and the interest rate you’ll qualify for – if you apply for a home, auto, personal, business or student loan.
Even if mortgage payments are made on time and in full each month, being a mortgage co-signer can count against you when trying to qualify for future loans. That co-signed loan takes up part of your debt-to-income ratio and restricts your ability to borrow additional money for your own purchases. For that reason, if you have plans to purchase a new car or home in the near future, talk to the lender about how this co-signing act of generosity will change your borrowing capacity.
Your debts will be looked at. As a co-signer, be prepared to provide paperwork to meet the same credit requirements that the borrower is subject to. These include bank statements and income tax returns. Your debt as co-signer will be considered in the loan approval process. The expected outcome? The debt and income from two borrowers will lower the debt-to-income ratio (DTI) for the loan. For conforming loans, Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac will allow a “blended ratio” DTI that combines the incomes of the occupant and non-occupant co-borrowers. This can help when you aren’t going to live in the house and have most of the income, a common scenario when parents help a child buy a home.
As co-signer, consider whether your help is truly helping the buyers. If they could not afford this home without your contributions, is it appropriate for you to offer help? Do they have the cash flow to make the monthly payments? Do you have the capacity to make the payments if they fall behind? Consider whether they are better off in a smaller, less expensive home that they can qualify for on their own.
As an agent, you know that when affordability worsens, the chance of having a transaction involving co-signers grows.
To be clear: It remains the responsibility of the homebuyer and co-signer to talk to a lender or professional financial planner to understand the ramifications. But by sharing these considerations with customers, you can help set them on the right track.
Meg Kalimon Realtor at Treeline Realty
meg@treelinerealty.com
www.MegKalimon.com
239-789-7772
Lise Howe, CRS, GRI, is an attorney and associate broker at Keller Williams Capital Properties in Bethesda, Md.
Source: Realtor Magazine
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