http://finance.yahoo.com
 
Rate Alert! Rate Alerts Glossary Glossary Help Help
 
  Bankate.com
 
News and Advice Compare Rates Calculators
 
 
- advertisement -
 
Financial Literacy - Mortgages Click Here
OVERVIEW
Credit scores and mortgage rates
The higher your credit score, the better the mortgage deal. Now, whip those scores into shape.
Understanding mortgages

How credit scores affect mortgage rates

It has overtones of Judgment Day, sitting before a loan officer and applying for a mortgage. Are you creditworthy? And to make that judgment, mortgage lenders will review your all-important records, namely your credit reports and credit score.

4 steps to a good mortgage rate
Each of the three major credit bureaus, Equifax, Experian and TransUnion, collects data from your lenders about your history of borrowing and paying back credit. They compile that information into your credit report, which any lender can access whenever you apply for a loan. The Fair Isaac Corp. is the major producer of credit scores. They take the information from those credit reports, apply their own trade-secret formula and, based on the three credit reports, distill three credit scores for you into one score ranging from 300 to 850. 

A new credit scoring system has been developed by the three major credit bureaus -- the VantageScore. Their VantageScore reports are available for $5.95 each, a fraction of the cost of the FICO score. However, the scores are not a direct substitute for each other and mortgage lenders continue to look at FICO scores when reviewing mortgage applications, so they are the scores a mortgage borrower should buy.   

Borrowers with high FICO scores -- the top tier ranges between 760 and 850 -- can expect lenders to offer them lower interest rates and more loan choices. Scores of 620 or lower usually place a borrower in the "subprime" category, and they can expect to be quoted significantly higher interest rates and may be offered fewer varieties of loans. A FICO score of about 500-520 is generally the minimum that will qualify for a mortgage.

Fair Isaac's consumer Web site offers a chart that is updated regularly and shows how your FICO score can affect your interest rate.

For example, here's what a borrower could have expected to be charged in interest for a $300,000 30-year fixed rate mortgage, based on his credit score, according to March 2007 interest rates:

How FICO score affects mortgage rates
760 to 850 tier 5.780%
700-759 tier 6.002%
660-699 tier 6.286%
620-659 tier 7.096%
580-619 tier 8.583%
500-579 tier 9.494%.

Such variations in interest rate can add hundreds of dollars to your monthly payment and can make a big difference in the amount of debt for which you can be qualified.

Factors beyond credit scores
While scores are important, they are not the only thing lenders take into consideration when approving a mortgage. And low scores aren't insurmountable obstacles, says David Reed, an Austin, Texas-based mortgage broker and author of "Mortgage Confidential: What You Need to Know That Your Lender Won't Tell You."

"The FICO is one of the factors, not the only one."

Other "offsetting factors" can balance a low credit score, such as a large down payment, large cash reserves or an overall low debt-to-income ratio, says Reed. The important thing is that borrowers not assume they can't get a mortgage because of a low credit score, or that they limit their loan search to lenders that specialize in loans to people with troubled credit.

"From a credit standpoint, the biggest thing people can do to harm themselves is to prejudge their situation because they thought they wouldn't qualify," says Reed.
           
He recommends looking for a lender who does not charge a fee just to take your application and qualify you for a loan. "There are plenty of other lenders out there who will do that as a customer service," he says.

-- Posted: March 19, 2007
 
Page | 1 | 2 |


TABLE OF CONTENTS
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
- advertisement -
- advertisement -
 
- advertisement -




News & Advice | Compare Rates | Calculators
Mortgage | Home Equity | Auto | Investing | Checking & Savings | Credit Cards | Debt Management | College Finance | Taxes | Personal Finance
About Bankrate | Privacy | Online Media Kit | Partnerships | Investor Relations | Press/Broadcast | Contact Us | Sitemap
NASDAQ: RATE | RSS Feeds | Order Rate Data | Bankrate Canada | Bankrate China

* Mortgage rate may include points. See rate tables for details. Click here.
* To see the definition of overnight averages click here.

Bankrate.com ®, Copyright © 2009 Bankrate, Inc., All Rights Reserved, Terms of Use.