Mortgage Tips
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General Mortgage Tips General Mortgage Tips
Personal Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Tips Personal Mortgage Insurance (PMI) Tips
Tip 1: PMI: Private Mortgage Insurance
Tip 2: Why Private Mortgage Insurance?
Tip 3: Eliminate PMI
Tip 4: How to Avoid Private Mortgage Insurance – Piggyback Two Loans
Tip 5: PMI Mortgage Calculator – An Online Tool
Tip 6: What Determines the Rate of Private Mortgage Insurance?
Tip 7: What Are 3 Simple Ways to Avoid PMI?
Tip 8: How to Eliminate PMI Quickly
Tip 9: Finding a Lower Private Mortgage Insurance Rate
Refinance Mortgage Rate Tips Refinance Mortgage Rate Tips
General Refinance Tips General Refinance Tips
Tip 7: What Are 3 Simple Ways to Avoid PMI?
 

 

 
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  • Buy A Home You Can Afford – You are more likely have a down payment of twenty percent. You are also more likely to build equity quickly and be able to get rid of PMI sooner if you buy a house that you can afford. Don’t try to “keep up with the Joneses” – they are probably up to their eyeballs in debt.
  • Borrow Your Down Payment – If you can borrow the twenty percent for the down payment, you can avoid PMI. Get creative and ask family or other resources. The interest rate on the loan will undoubtedly be far lower than the PMI.
  • Use Two Loans – A great way to avoid PMI is to take out two mortgage loans when you buy a home. Your first mortgage is for eighty percent and the second mortgage is for twenty percent. With this great solution, you avoid PMI and you can pay down but keep your equity line open. This gives you low interest flexibility for future home improvements!

 

<< Tip 6: What Determines the Rate of Private Mortgage Insurance?
 
Mortgage Knowledge

Credit Report Errors - You Can Fix Them

You have the right, under the Fair Credit Reporting Act, to dispute the completeness and accuracy of information in your credit file.

When a credit reporting agency receives a dispute, it must reinvestigate and record the current status of the disputed items within a "reasonable period of time," unless it believes the dispute is "frivolous or irrelevant." If the credit reporting agency cannot verify a disputed item, it must delete it. If your report contains erroneous information, the credit reporting agency must correct it. If an item is incomplete, the credit reporting agency must complete it.

For example, if your file shows that you were late in making payments on accounts, but fails to show that you are no longer delinquent, the credit reporting agency must show that your payments are now current. If your file shows an account that belongs to another person, the credit reporting agency would have to delete it. Also, at your request, the credit reporting agency must send a notice of correction to any report recipient who has checked your file in the past six months.

For items in your credit profile which you feel deserve further explanation (such as an account that was paid late due to the loss of job, military call up, or unexpected medical bills), you can send a brief statement to the appropriate credit reporting agency. The information will be placed in your credit profile and will be disclosed each time it is accessed.

 
 
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