Serving: Maryland, Virginia and Washington, DC
17097 Briardale Road Ste A
Rockville, MD 20855

(301) 332-7381 Broker

Buyer's Guide

The first step: To buying a home is getting a mortgage. Shopping for a mortgage is the first step toward owning a home. First and foremost, you must determine how your mortgage payment will fit your current budget and, to some extent, your future obligations 15 to 30 years down the road. If you discover too late that you can't afford your mortgage, you'll not only face the possibility of losing the roof over your head, but you could also damage your ability to purchase a home later.

The second step: You must examine your finances. If you can afford to buy a home, you must then determine how much mortgage you can afford. Lenders are apt to put your loan application in the best light and qualify you for as much as they are willing to lend, which can be more than you can afford.

It's up to you to take stock of your income and expenses, both current and projected to determine what you can comfortably manage each month. Along with your mortgage payment, don't forget related insurance, taxes, homeowner association dues and any other costs rolled into the mortgage payment.

The third step: When you are ready to shop for a loan you have two basic types of mortgage stores to shop direct lenders and mortgage brokers (ask "Your Educated Realtors" for recommendation). Direct lenders have money to lend. They make the final decision on your application. Brokers are intermediaries who, like you, have many lenders from which to choose.

Lenders have a limited number of in-house loans available. Brokers can shop many lenders. If you have special financing needs and can't find a lender to suit them, an experienced broker will help you get a loan. Mortgage brokers, however, are paid with a slice of the amount you borrow, some more than others some less. Along with shopping the source, you'll also have to shop loan costs, including the interest rate, broker fees, points (each point is one percent of the amount you borrow), prepayment penalties, the loan term, application fees, credit report fee, appraisal and a host of others.

Finally: The application process is the easy part. The loan officer will help you with this process. The application will ask for information about your job tenure, employment stability, income, your assets (property, cars, bank accounts and investments) and your liabilities (auto loans, installment loans, mortgages, credit-card debt, household expenses and others). The lender will run a credit check on you to take a look at your credit status, but you'll have to supply additional documentation including paycheck stubs, bank account statements, tax returns, investment earnings reports, rental agreements, divorce decrees, proof of insurance, and other documentation

What is a mortgage? Visit this link
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