Mortgage Payments Sending You
Reeling? Here’s What to Do
The possibility of losing your home
because you can’t make the mortgage
payments can be terrifying. Perhaps you
are one of the many consumers who took
out a mortgage that had a fixed rate for
the first two or three years and then
had an adjustable rate. Or maybe you’re
anticipating an adjustment, and want to
know what your payments will be and
whether you’ll be able to make them. Or
maybe you’re having trouble making ends
meet because of an unrelated financial
crisis.
Regardless of the reason for your
mortgage anxiety, the Federal Trade
Commission (FTC), the nation’s consumer
protection agency, wants you to know how
to help save your home, and how to
recognize and avoid foreclosure scams.
Know Your Mortgage
Do you know what kind of mortgage you
have? Do you know whether your payments
are going to increase? If you can’t tell
by reading the mortgage documents you
received at settlement, contact your
loan servicer and ask. A loan servicer
is responsible for collecting your
monthly loan payments and crediting your
account.
Here are some examples of types of
mortgages:
- Hybrid Adjustable Rate
Mortgages (ARMs): Mortgages
that have fixed payments for a few
years, and then turn into adjustable
loans. Some are called 2/28 or 3/27
hybrid ARMs: the first number refers
to the years the loan has a fixed
rate and the second number refers to
the years the loan has an adjustable
rate. Others are 5/1 or 3/1 hybrid
ARMs: the first number refers to the
years the loan has a fixed rate, and
the second number refers to how
often the rate changes. In a 3/1
hybrid ARM, for example, the
interest rate is fixed for three
years, then adjusts every year
thereafter.
- ARMs: Mortgages
that have adjustable rates from the
start, which means your payments
change over time.
- Fixed Rate Mortgages:
Mortgages where the rate is fixed
for the life of the loan; the only
change in your payment would result
from changes in your taxes and
insurance if you have an escrow
account with your loan servicer.
If you have a hybrid ARM or an ARM
and the payments will increase — and you
have trouble making the increased
payments, find out if you can refinance
to a fixed-rate loan. Review your
contract first, checking for prepayment
penalties. Many ARMs carry prepayment
penalties that force borrowers to come
up with thousands of dollars if they
decide to refinance within the first few
years of the loan. If you’re planning to
sell soon after your adjustment,
refinancing may not be worth the cost.
But if you’re planning to stay in your
home for a while, a fixed-rate mortgage
might be the way to go. Online
calculators can help you determine your
costs and payments.
If You Are Behind On Your Payments
If you are having trouble making your
payments, contact your loan servicer to
discuss your options as early as you
can. Most loan servicers are willing to
work with customers they believe are
acting in good faith, and those who call
them early on. The longer you wait to
call, the fewer options you will have.
After you’ve missed three or four
payments and your loan is in default,
most loan servicers won’t accept a
partial payment of what you owe. They
will start foreclosure unless you can
come up with the money to cover all your
missed payments, plus any late fees.
Avoiding Default and Foreclosure
If you have fallen behind on your
payments, consider discussing the
following foreclosure prevention options
with your loan servicer:
Reinstatement: You
pay the loan servicer the entire
past-due amount, plus any late fees or
penalties, by a date you both agree to.
This option may be appropriate if your
problem paying your mortgage is
temporary.
Repayment plan: Your
servicer gives you a fixed amount of
time to repay the amount you are behind
by adding a portion of what is past due
to your regular payment. This option may
be appropriate if you’ve missed only a
small number of payments.
Forbearance: Your
mortgage payments are reduced or
suspended for a period you and your
servicer agree to. At the end of that
time, you resume making your regular
payments as well as a lump sum payment
or additional partial payments for a
number of months to bring the loan
current. Forbearance may be an option if
your income is reduced temporarily (for
example, you are on disability leave
from a job, and you expect to go back to
your full time position shortly).
Forbearance isn’t going to help you if
you’re in a home you can’t afford.
Loan modification:
You and your loan servicer agree to
permanently change one or more of the
terms of the mortgage contract to make
your payments more manageable for you.
Modifications can include lowering the
interest rate, extending the term of the
loan, or adding missed payments to the
loan balance. A loan modification may be
necessary if you are facing a long-term
reduction in your income.
Before you ask for forbearance or a
loan modification, be prepared to show
that you are making a good-faith effort
to pay your mortgage. For example, if
you can show that you’ve reduced other
expenses, your loan servicer may be more
likely to negotiate with you.
Selling your home:
Depending on the real estate market in
your area, selling your home may provide
the funds you need to pay off your
current mortgage debt in full.
Bankruptcy: Personal
bankruptcy generally is considered the
debt management option of last resort
because the results are long-lasting and
far-reaching. A bankruptcy stays on your
credit report for 10 years, and can make
it difficult to obtain credit, buy
another home, get life insurance, or
sometimes, even get a job. Still, it is
a legal procedure that can offer a fresh
start for people who can’t satisfy their
debts.
If you and your loan servicer cannot
agree on a repayment plan or other
remedy, you may want to investigate
filing Chapter 13 bankruptcy. If you
have a regular income, Chapter 13 may
allow you to keep property, like a
mortgaged house or car, that you might
otherwise lose. In Chapter 13, the court
approves a repayment plan that allows
you to use your future income toward
payment of your debts during a
three-to-five-year period, rather than
surrender the property. After you have
made all the payments under the plan,
you receive a discharge of certain
debts.
To learn more about Chapter 13, visit
www.usdoj.gov/ust; it’s the website
of the U.S. Trustee Program, the
organization within the U.S. Department
of Justice that supervises bankruptcy
cases and trustees.
If you have a mortgage through the
Federal Housing Administration (FHA) or
Veterans Administration (VA), you may
have other foreclosure alternatives.
Contact the FHA (www.fha.gov)
or VA (www.homeloans.va.gov)
to discuss your options.
Contacting Your Loan Servicer
Before you have any conversation with
your loan servicer, prepare. Record your
income and expenses, and calculate the
equity in your home. To calculate the
equity, estimate the market value less
the balance of your first and any second
mortgage or home equity loan. Then,
write down the answers to the following
questions:
- What happened to make you miss
your mortgage payment(s)? Do you
have any documents to back up your
explanation for falling behind? How
have you tried to resolve the
problem?
- Is your problem temporary,
long-term, or permanent? What
changes in your situation do you see
in the short term, and in the long
term? What other financial issues
may be stopping you from getting
back on track with your mortgage?
- What would you like to see
happen? Do you want to keep the
home? What type of payment
arrangement would be feasible for
you?
Throughout the foreclosure prevention
process:
- Keep notes of all your
communications with the servicer,
including date and time of contact,
the nature of the contact
(face-to-face, by phone, email, fax
or postal mail), the name of the
representative, and the outcome.
- Follow up any oral requests you
make with a letter to the servicer.
Send your letter by certified mail,
“return receipt requested,” so you
can document what the servicer
received. Keep copies of your letter
and any enclosures.
- Meet all deadlines the servicer
gives you.
- Stay in your home during the
process, since you may not qualify
for certain types of assistance if
you move out. Renting your home will
change it from a primary residence
to an investment property. Most
likely, it will disqualify you for
any additional “workout” assistance
from the servicer. If you choose
this route, be sure the rental
income is enough to help you get and
keep your loan current.
Consider Giving Up Your Home Without
Foreclosure
Not every situation can be resolved
through your loan servicer’s foreclosure
prevention programs. If you’re not able
to keep your home, or if you don’t want
to keep it, consider:
Selling Your House:
Your servicers might postpone
foreclosure proceedings if you have a
pending sales contract or if you put
your home on the market. This approach
works if proceeds from the sale can pay
off the entire loan balance plus the
expenses connected to selling the home
(for example, real estate agent fees).
Such a sale also would allow you to
avoid late and legal fees and damage to
your credit rating, and protect your
equity in the property.
Short Sale: Your
servicers may allow you to sell the home
yourself before it forecloses on the
property, agreeing to forgive any
shortfall between the sale price and the
mortgage balance. This approach avoids a
damaging foreclosure entry on your
credit report. You still may face a tax
liability on the amount of debt
forgiven. Consider consulting a
financial advisor, accountant, or
attorney for more information.
Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure:
You voluntarily transfer your property
title to the servicers (with the
servicer’s agreement) in exchange for
cancellation of the remainder of your
debt. Though you lose the home, a deed
in lieu of foreclosure can be less
damaging to your credit than a
foreclosure. You will lose any equity in
the property, and you may face an income
tax liability on the amount of debt
forgiven. A deed in lieu may not be an
option for you if other loans or
obligations are secured by the property
on your home.
Housing and Credit Counseling
You don’t have to go through the
foreclosure prevention process alone. A
counselor with a housing counseling
agency can assess your situation, answer
your questions, go over your options,
prioritize your debts, and help you
prepare for discussions with your loan
servicer. Housing counseling services
usually are free or low cost.
While some agencies limit their
counseling services to homeowners with
FHA mortgages, many others offer free
help to any homeowner who is having
trouble making mortgage payments. Call
the local office of the U.S. Department
of Housing and Urban Development (www.hud.gov)
or the housing authority in your state,
city, or county for help in finding a
legitimate housing counseling agency
nearby. Or consider contacting the
NeighborWorks® Center for Foreclosure
Solutions at 888-995-HOPE or
www.nw.org. The Center is an
initiative of NeighborWorks America.
Be Alert to Scams
Scam artists follow the headlines,
and know there are homeowners falling
behind in their mortgage payments or at
risk for foreclosure. Their pitches may
sound like a way for you to get out from
under, but their intentions are as far
away from honorable as they can be. They
mean to take your money. Among the
predatory scams that have been reported
are:
- The foreclosure
prevention specialist: The
“specialist” really is a phony
counselor who charges outrageous
fees in exchange for making a few
phone calls or completing some
paperwork that a homeowner could
easily do for himself. None of the
actions results in saving the home.
This scam gives homeowners a false
sense of hope, delays them from
seeking qualified help, and exposes
their personal financial information
to a fraudster.
- The lease/buy back:
Homeowners are deceived into signing
over the deed to their home to a
scam artist who tells them they will
be able to remain in the house as a
renter and eventually buy it back.
Usually, the terms of this scheme
are so demanding that the buy-back
becomes impossible, the homeowner
gets evicted, and the “rescuer”
walks off with most or all of the
equity.
- The bait-and-switch:
Homeowners think they are signing
documents to bring the mortgage
current. Instead, they are signing
over the deed to their home.
Homeowners usually don’t know
they’ve been scammed until they get
an eviction notice.
For More Information
To learn more about mortgages and
other credit-related issues, visit
www.ftc.gov/credit and
MyMoney.gov, the U.S. government’s
portal to financial education.
The FTC works for the consumer to
prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair
business practices in the marketplace
and to provide information to help
consumers spot, stop, and avoid them. To
file a
complaint or to get
free information on consumer issues,
visit
ftc.gov or call toll-free,
1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY:
1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet,
telemarketing, identity theft, and other
fraud-related complaints into
Consumer Sentinel, a secure online
database available to hundreds of civil
and criminal law enforcement agencies in
the U.S. and abroad.