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FREQUENTLY ASKED SHORT SALES QUESTIONS
It's when: · A homeowner is authorized to sell for less than what is owed on the mortgage. · The lender authorizes or accepts the sales price as a payoff. · The seller avoids foreclosure and many times they can also avoid a judgment. · The seller avoids a negative report, by the lender, to the credit bureaus. The seller won't get any money at closing, but they will avoid the emotional toll a foreclosure can cause. The negotiations include a favorable wording for the forgiven debt on the mortgage that can help the recovery of the homeowner.
· Financially, it's a smaller loss to accept a short sale than it would be to incur the additional expenses of a foreclosure. · Lenders are in the business to lend money not home ownership. The more resources they have tied up on a property the less they have to lend out. · With prices dropping so rapidly, even if the lenders decides to foreclose they will lose even more money when they finally try to sell the property later rather than sooner.
· It helps you avoid an emotionally draining foreclosure process. · Avoiding a foreclosure with help save your credit. Typically a foreclosure will drop your credit score up to 200 points per loan. · Avoid having a foreclosure on your credit report anywhere from 7 to 10 years, which affects your future purchasing power and interest rates. · It could help you avoid a "deficiency judgment" from the lender after the foreclosure as they try to recuperate their loses.
· The short answer is no, but there are a few variables that can affect the foreclosure timeline. · A qualified Realtor or better yet, a Certified Distresses Property Expert can help you extend the foreclosure timeline up to 6 months and in many circumstances up to 7 or 8 months. · A sale of a home can be done and approved up to the day of the bank sale or auction of the home.
· Typically the lender will not consider a short sale if there have not been any missed payments but can be overcome if we can show a compelling reason why the payments have been made but the payments are not sustainable into the near future. -- We would need to show if the payments were made with your credit cards, by borrowing from family members or even if the money came from retirement accounts, as an example. This will not guarantee the lender will accept but there are instances where they have done so.
· The homeowner does not pay any of the expenses associated with the sale of the home, such as commissions and other closing costs. Those expenses are also paid by the lender. · In December 2007, President Bush signed into law the Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act which eliminates the income tax that used to be levied on the forgiven portion of the primary home's sale. The tax is still in force for second homes and investment properties SHORT SALES
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