Mortgage Qualification Rules Are Not Always Black and White
Some of the more interesting questions I receive from
readers are about unusual situations that may affect their
ability to qualify for a mortgage. The rules are not
always crystal clear, which is why lenders continue
to rely on underwriters whose stock in trade is good
judgment. Here
are a few illustrations.
Will the Spouse’s Unprofitable Business Derail the
Application?
I would submit
the application in your name with your
income, indicating
that title will be
held jointly. This is common and what most couples do when
only one is working but both will own the house. You proceed
just as you would if your spouse was not employed.
If the underwriter is satisfied with
the transaction, which is very likely because of your high
credit score and down payment of 20%, that will be the end
of it.
There is the possibility, however, that the underwriter will
request your tax return. Before the financial crisis, this
seldom happened when an applicant could document income with
W-2s. Now it happens occasionally.
If it happens in your case, the underwriter will see
the losses, and in the worst case, will decide to deduct the
losses from the income used to qualify. The more likely
possibility , however, is that the underwriter will elect to
ignore the business losses because you can document that the
losses have been funded out of savings and not out of your
income. Another possible reason for ignoring the losses
would be that they have come to an end because the business
has turned the corner, or it has been shut down.
Will a High Ratio of Land Value to Structure Value Derail
the Application?
If the high ratio is due in part to the property being a
working farm, it won’t qualify with Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac
or FHA. If the property is strictly residential, you will
still have trouble because of a general rule that land value
should be no greater than 35% of total appraised value, and
properties should not exceed 10 acres. This rule is far from
rigid, however, and much depends on the extent to which the
property is similar to others in its market area, and how
large a loan you are seeking.
Qualification rules often hinge very
much on whether or not a reliable appraisal is possible,
which depends in turn on whether the property is similar to
others in its market area. Waterfront properties frequently
are acceptable with high ratios of land value to total value
because they usually exist in clusters, which means that
appraisers can usually find comparable properties that have
sold recently. At the opposite extreme, appraising a 10-acre
wooded property in a market area in which 1-acre lots
dominate is extremely difficult because there are no
transactions in properties that are comparable. A loan may
still be available,
but only if the acceptable loan amount is based on a
value that ignores the 9 extra acres.
Will a Job Change Enhance the Application?
No, you will qualify for a smaller mortgage based only on your lower salary, until such time as you can demonstrate that the bonuses are a reliable source of income.
In qualifying borrowers, lenders are interested in the income that can safely be assumed will be available, not income that might or might not be available. So if you leave a job that pays less but has a large potential bonus, the income your lender will accept goes down.
If you hold the new position for some time and can demonstrate that the bonuses come in regularly, then the lender will accept them as part of your income. But the burden of proof is yours, you must convince the underwriter.
