Mortgage Tips
First Time Home Buyer Tips First Time Home Buyer Tips
Tip 1: Shop Around as a First Time Home Buyer
Tip 2: Obtaining Your First Mortgage
Tip 3: Finding First Time Home Loans
Tip 4: Low Down Payments for First Time Home Buyers
Tip 5: Enjoying Your First Time Home Buying Experience
Tip 6: Top 3 Reasons to Use a Real Estate Agent When Buying Your First Home
Tip 7: Flexible First Time Home Loans
Tip 8: Refinancing Your First Home Mortgage for a Better Rate
Tip 9: Interest Only Mortgages
Tip 10: Doing It Right: First Time Home Buying
Home Equity Loan Tips Home Equity Loan Tips
Applying For a Mortgage Tips Applying For a Mortgage Tips
Home Loan Tips Home Loan Tips
Mortgage Calculator Tips Mortgage Calculator Tips
General Mortgage Tips General Mortgage Tips
Personal Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Tips Personal Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Tips
Refinance Mortgage Rate Tips Refinance Mortgage Rate Tips
General Refinance Tips General Refinance Tips
Tip 5: Enjoying Your First Time Home Buying Experience
 

 

 
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You can make the most out of your first time home buying experience by learning and enjoying the process. Learn about your neighborhood, the school systems, average home values, and how much the home values have increased over the last five years. Take the time to assess crime rates and find out if anything is happening in terms of home or town development that will increase or decrease the value of your home in the future. Educate yourself on the various mortgage programs. Learn about first time home buyer options. Develop strong relationships with mortgage brokers and real estate agents to easily navigate through any future home buying you may do!

 

<< Tip 4: Low Down Payments for First Time Home Buyers
 
Mortgage Knowledge

What is APR?

A tool used to compare loans across different loan programs is the Annual Percentage Rate (APR). The Federal Truth in Lending law requires mortgage companies to disclose the APR when they advertise a rate. It is designed to represent the true cost of the loan to the borrower, expressed in the form of a yearly rate. The purpose is to prevent lenders from hiding fees and upfront costs behind low advertised interest rates.

One confusing aspect of APRs is that the APR on 15 year loans will carry a higher relative rate due to the fact that the points are amortized over the 15 year term rather than the 30 year term. When a Regulation Z (the mortgage company’s disclosure of cost for the loan) is prepared for a buyer/borrower, the prepaid interest is also included in the APR calculation.

Even lenders admit it is confusing since it includes some, but not all, of the various fees and insurance premiums that accompany a mortgage. The rules for calculation of this number have not been clearly defined, so APRs vary from lender to lender and from loan to loan, depending on which types of fees and charges are included.

In addition, the APR model is flawed in that when a product is variable and tied to a market index, the index is assumed to never change. This obviously is an invalid assumption that can lead again to a number, which in fact can not be compared, from one quoting source to another.

Finally, the APR won't tell you anything about balloon payments and prepayment penalties or how long your rate is locked for. You can use APRs as a guideline to shop for loans, but you should not depend solely on the APR in choosing which loan is best for your needs.

 
 
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