| |
Home
Loan Application
Overview
Services
Contact "The Closer"
Mortgage Programs
The Loan Process
Credit Scores & Reports
Mortgage Information
RE Mortgage Glossary
Site Map
Links
|
|
Settlement costs
There are so many different charges involved in buying
a home, it is important to know what to expect at the settlement. Your
lender is required to give you a Good Faith Estimate (GFE) of your settlement
costs within three business days of your loan application. Once you
get it, review the charges below to avoid any surprises when you sit
down to close on your loan.
There are three basic categories of settlement costs:
1. Fees to get a mortgage. This includes
lender fees and points, as well as a host of other charges involved
in obtaining and processing your loan. Points are an upfront charge
expressed as a percent of the loan amount (e.g., 1 point is 1 percent
of the loan) to increase the lender's effective yield on a loan.
Specific lender fees can include:
- Loan Origination Fee. This is a charge for your
lender's work in evaluating and preparing your mortgage loan.
- Application Fee – This charge covers the initial
costs of processing your loan application and obtaining your credit
report.
- Appraisal Fee – Your lender will need an opinion
from an independent appraiser of the market value of the home you
wish to purchase.
- Survey – This fee goes to a surveying firm
who will verify that your lot has not been encroached upon by any
structures since the last survey conducted on the property and to
ensure that the home and other structures and legally where the
seller says they are.
- Mortgage Insurance – A lender may require this
type of insurance for buyers who make a down payment of less than
20 percent of the value of the house. The policy covers the lender's
risk in the event the buyer fails to make the loan payments. Premiums
are typically paid annually from an escrow or reserve account, or
in a lump sum at closing.
- Homeowner's Insurance – Insurance that protects
property against loss caused by fire, some natural causes, vandalism,
etc., depending on the terms of the policy. Also includes coverage
such as personal liability and theft away from home. Your lender
will expect you to have a policy in effect by closing.
2. Fees to establish and transfer ownership
of the property. Your lending institution is not likely to give you
a loan on a house unless you can prove that the seller owns the property
you want to buy. This is where title search and title insurance fees
come into play. A title agent will verify that the seller is, indeed,
the owner of the property and issue a title insurance policy to guard
the lender against any errors that could have occurred in the searching
process. The cost of the policy is usually based on the loan amount.
There may also be attorney, escrow, courier fees and other charges
involved in the settlement process.
3. Fees to state and local governments.
These fees include transfer, recordation and property taxes collected
by local and state governments. Your taxes based on the assessed value
of the home, which you pay for community services such as schools, public
works, and other costs of local government. Taxes can often be paid
as a part of your monthly mortgage payment.
|
|