Mortgage Quote
You're in the market for a home and it's an exciting time. Your realtor may
be pressuring you to go to a lender and get a mortgage quote so that you know in
what range you can buy safely and prequalify too. You may even be tech savvy
enough to hop online and find networking areas where you can get several
mortgage quotes from various lenders, but then you're left wondering which one
is the best deal. How do you really know whether one mortgage quote is better
than another? That's where the good faith estimate comes in.
A Good Mortgage Quote
If you really want to know how it all breaks down, you have to get a good
faith estimate from a lender for your mortgage quote. You can get a good faith
estimate from any number of lenders that you want and for different mortgage
products too. Some people shop for the best deal this way and take the best
offer and show it to other lenders to try to beat that one as well. Without a
good faith estimate a mortgage quote may not be reliable. The Federal government
insists that lenders provide a good faith estimate within three days of applying
for a loan.
Some of the things you can expect a good faith estimate to show are the
potential costs at closing of the following:
• Loan application fee
• Fees for pulling credit reports
• Title work
• Attorney fees
• Cost of appraisal
• Cost of inspection
• Survey work
• Document handling and processing fees
• Taxes
• Escrow accounts
• Your interest rate
• The terms of the loan
• The amortization schedule
Comparing Two or Three Mortgage Quotes
If you are trying to find a good deal, you will want to get the good faith
estimates for the different mortgage quotes on the exact same product to fully
compare them. If you get one that has a teaser interest rate that shifts after
six months to a year, it may initially look favorable but in the long run will
cost you more money. Make sure that they all have the same length of term
because a 40-year loan will look like a better deal than a 30-year loan when it
comes to the amount of the monthly payment you have to make. However, you pay
significantly more money over the life of the mortgage with a longer term than
you do with a shorter-term mortgage. So, always make sure that you are looking
at very similar offers from different lenders and not two separate types of loan
products.
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