New rules
protect seniors on
reverse mortgages -- but risks remain
By Stephen Rothman
Bankrate.com
 LAFAYETTE,
Ind. -- Recent federal and state rules that require elderly
homeowners to get professional advice before taking out a reverse
mortgage is making the deals less risky, a Purdue University expert
said, but seniors still need to shop around.
"Check
the fees or a senior could wind up with less income than hoped for,"
warned Flora Williams, an associate professor of family and consumer
economics at the Indiana school and a certified financial planner.
Counseling
now is required by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
before a homeowner can take out a reverse mortgage. Most states
have adopted similar requirements, said Williams, who recently completed
a study of reverse mortgages published in the journal of the Association
for Financial Counseling and Planning Education.
Income
boosted 13-19 percent
| Reverse
mortgage: Do the math |
| According to a study by Prof. Flora
Williams of Perdue University a reverse mortgage can boost
income for a 71-year-old homeowner with a free and clear home
worth $86,000 by 13 percent to 19 percent, depending on the
term of the mortgage. A "tenure" mortgage runs for the life
of the homeowner. |
| Reverse mortgage type : |
10-Year |
Tenure |
| Income before reverse mortgage: |
$27,400 |
$27,400 |
| Income added by reverse mortgage: |
$ 5,127 |
$ 3,659 |
| Total income: |
$32,527 |
$31,059 |
| Percentage increase
in annual income: |
18.71% |
13.35% |
Williams
analyzed the income potential for 639 seniors with an average age
of 72, who owned paid-off homes with an average value of $88,587.
She found they could increase their monthly income from 13 percent
to 19 percent.
Williams
said the average seniors in the study would have increased their
monthly incomes by $427 each -- about $4.82 per $1,000 of value
-- if they had borrowed on a fixed, 10-year reverse mortgage. If
they had opted for a lifetime payment they would have received a
monthly income of $305 -- about $3.44 per $1,000 of value, Williams
said. She explained that seniors make the choice of term based on
how long they expect to live.
Williams
explained that by tapping their home equity, seniors can pay anything
from medical bills to regular living expenses with the monthly income
provided by a reverse mortgage. "I think we may be doing seniors
a disservice by not providing more information about them," she
said.
Alternative
to long-term care insurance
She
added that insurance companies may not like reverse mortgages because
it denies them the chance to sell long-term care insurance, which
can become quite costly in senior years. "I believe a reverse mortgage
is a reasonable alternative to long-term care insurance," she said,
provided mortgage fees are not unreasonable.
Williams
said seniors should be aware that a mortgage company may try to
impose a variety of fees for servicing the mortgage. Among them,
an origination fee of 1 percent of the adjusted property value,
or a flat $1,500 fee, as well as a mortgage insurance premium equal
to 2 percent of the adjusted property value, in case the home sells
for less than expected after the homeowner dies.
Unlike
a traditional home equity loan, the borrower in a reverse mortgage
must be least 65 and does not repay the money. Instead, the homeowner
remains in the house and receives income until he or she dies, Williams
explained. At that point the loan is terminated, the home is sold
and the bank is repaid, with interest, from the sale of the home.
Pluses
and minuses of reverse mortgages
Williams
says a reverse mortgage has its good and bad points. Among the pluses:
-
No repayment as long as the
borrower stays in the home and the homeowner can't be forced
to vacate so it can be sold to repay the loan
-
Income payments are received
tax-free.
-
Payments are not counted as
earnings for Social Security or Medicaid purposes.
-
Payment can continues for the
lifetime of the homeowner or spouse.
Among the negatives:
-
Since the home is sold, a reverse
mortgage means leaving less to survivors.
-
Depending on the state of residence,
a reverse mortgage may affect welfare benefits, such as food
stamps.
-
It can be an expensive way
to generate cash income, especially during periods of high interest
rates. In a reverse mortgage, a borrower is using the home's
equity and for this privilege paying out a substantial amount
of interest and loan charges.
Not
a good deal for some seniors
Reverse
mortgages are ill advised for older persons who have investments
or savings income and have no special desire to remain in the home.
"Homeownership
is the greatest source of wealth available to most elderly persons,"
Williams said. Statistics show that in 1992, 75 percent of Americans
older than 65 owned their own homes, and almost 80 percent of those
homes were mortgage free.
While
a reverse mortgage may be beneficial in many circumstances -- where
the person is unmarried, very old or with low income -- "income
realized from reverse mortgages may not always be significant,"
she said, adding it pays to do a thorough investigation before making
a decision.
|