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Are You Ready For A Home Mortgage Loan? Buying a Home and Committing to a Mortgage can be very scary!
A home mortgage loan is the largest debt that most Americans will take on in their life time. As such, making the decision to take out a mortgage is not one that most first time home buyers take lightly. Not only will your monthly mortgage payments probably be the largest bill that you face each month, but the total amount of debt realized with a home mortgage loan can have a staggering, and sobering effect on the first time home buyer.
I can remember the months leading up to my decision to fill out a mortgage application. I had nightmares about loosing my job, not being able to keep up with my payments and finding myself homeless. And those were on the good nights when I was able to sleep at all!
Committing to a Home Mortgage Doesnt Have To Cost You Your Sleep
In hindsight I realize that the fear that I faced when considering a home mortgage loan was irrational and the stress that I put myself under unwarranted. However, at the time, it surely didnt seem that way!
Lets take a closer look at common mortgage fears.
The major fear is that you wont be able to carry the debt responsibility and you will loose your house.
Okay: worse case scenario, you are not able to keep up with the payments, the lender forecloses and you do loose your home. What are you really loosing? Something that you do not have right now anyway! Therefore, even with the worse case scenario, you will not be any worse off than you are right now. Furthermore, it is important to realize that the chances of the lender foreclosing are pretty slim. The lender doesnt really want your home, he wants you to make good on your home mortgage loan, and will usually work with you to make that happen.
You should also remember that the fear of loosing your home is one that you already faced and survived. When you signed your first lease on an apartment you were taking that same chance. If you were not able to pay your rent your landlord would have made you leave your home. Taking out a mortgage can be less scary once you realize that this is a fear you have already faced and conquered.
Knowing You Can Afford the Mortgage Will Allay a Lot of Fears
You can lesson the amount of fear that you will experience when you sign on the dotted line of a mortgage application if you are confident that you will be able to handle the monthly payments. Therefore, it is important to take stock of your financial situation before applying for a mortgage.
Sit down with a real estate agent and honestly discuss your financial situation, this includes your income and your expenses. It only makes sense to determine how much of a home mortgage loan you can comfortably afford, and it is essential to having financial confidence and avoiding common mortgage fears.
Now, quit worrying and go out and look for your new home!
About the Author This article provided courtesy of http://www.2nd-mortgage-guide.com
More Useful Resource and Updates on home mortgage refinance loan
- Upside-down on mortgage: Now what? (Lodi News-Sentinel)
Q: My husband and I live in a house that I own on my own. I paid $500,000 for the house in 2005. I took out a 100 percent loan with a 5-year fixed-rate first mortgage for $400,000 and an adjustable $100,000 home equity line of credit as the second loan.
- Mortgage relief plans offer some help (The Monterey County Herald)
The prospect of mortgage debt forgiveness will entice hundreds of thousands of homeowners into picking up the phone this fall to play the home-preservation game of "Let's Make a Deal." The federal government's Hope for Homeowners plan started Oct.
- McCain's Mortgage Plan Calls for Lowering Rates for Homeowners (Bloomberg)
Oct. 10 (Bloomberg) -- Republican John McCain 's plan to refinance distressed home loans includes cutting mortgage rates to just above 5 percent for troubled borrowers, an adviser said.
- McCain's plan for troubled home loans called impractical (Newsday)
WASHINGTON - John McCain's proposal to have the federal government directly buy and refinance troubled home loans would cost about $300 billion, his campaign said yesterday, as the plan was criticized in light of the scale of the mortgage meltdown.
- Taxpayers, Not Lenders, Would Bear Costs of McCain?s Mortgage Proposal (New York Times)
The plan that John McCain announced without detail in the debate Tuesday would allow millions of financially stretched Americans to refinance their mortgages with government help.
- Will mortgage plan help you? (The Nashua Telegraph)
The prospect of mortgage debt forgiveness will entice hundreds of thousands of homeowners into picking up the phone to play the home-preservation game of "Let's Make a Deal," beginning this fall. The federal government's Hope for Homeowners plan started Oct. ...
- McCain plan to buy bad home mortgages hit (The Washington Times)
Sen. John McCain's $300 billion plan to buy up all bad home mortgages and refinance them at a lower fixed rate came under fire Wednesday from economists on the left and the right who said his idea was a redundant, unworkable, costly scheme that would plunge taxpayers deeper into debt.
- Mortgage rates could dip before election (Lodi News-Sentinel)
Q: What economic indicators should I be watching when trying to decide when to refinance my mortgage or home equity line of credit? A: I'd just watch the price of the mortgages themselves. Right now, we're waiting for interest rates to drop further. But interest rates have become rather volatile.
- U.S. MBA's Mortgage Applications Index Rose 2.2% Last Week (Bloomberg)
Oct. 8 (Bloomberg) -- Mortgage applications in the U.S. rose last week as lower interest rates lifted purchases from a six-year low. The Mortgage Bankers Association's index of applications to purchase a home or refinance a loan increased 2.2 percent to 465.5 from 455.4 the prior week.
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