Student Loan Guidelines For Qualifying for a Mortgage Loan in Kentucky.


Loan type
Student Loan Payment Requirement
FHA
Must be included in the borrower’s liabilities regardless of the payment type or
status. The payment amount must be either:
 The greater of:
·        ..5% of the outstanding balance on the loan or
·        Monthly payment reported on the borrower’s credit report, or
 The servicer’s documented payment provided the payment will fully amortize
the loan over the repayment term period
VA
Deferred
A payment does not need to be included if written evidence supports that the
student loan debt will be deferred beyond 12 months of closing.
In Repayment
Include loans with payments starting within 12 months. Calculate threshold
payment as a rate of 5% of outstanding balance divided by 12 months. If credit
report payment is higher, use credit report payment. If current documentation
from student loan servicer reflects actual terms and payment for each loan,
the verified payments may be used even if less than the threshold payment
calculation.
USDA
Fixed Payment
A permanent amortized, fixed payment is used when documentation supports fixed payment, interest and term.
Non-Fixed payment
Use .5% of the loan balance reflected on the credit report. Payment arrangements
that are deferred or non-fixed (Income Based Repayment (IBR), graduated, adjustable, interest only, etc.) may not be used.
Fannie
Loans in Repayment Period
 If provided, use the credit report payment
 If credit report is incorrect, obtain student loan documentation from the servicer
to verify the payment used for qualification
Income Driven
Repayment Plan
Use the student loan documentation to verify the actual monthly payment. Borrower
may be qualified with a $0 payment if the documentation supports it.
Loans in Deferment or
Forbearance
 A payment equal to 1% of the outstanding student loan balance (even if this
amount is lower than the actual fully amortizing payment) or
 A fully amortizing payment using the documented loan repayment terms
Freddie
Loans in Repayment
Period
Use the greater of payment reported on credit report or .5% of the higher of original
or outstanding loan balance as shown on credit report.
Loans in Deferment or
Forbearance
Use greater of payment reported on credit report or .5% of the higher of original or
current outstanding loan balance as shown on the credit report.
Loan Forgiveness
Cancelation
Discharge
Employment Contingent
Repayment
Programs
Payment may be excluded if file contains documentation that indicates:
 Monthly payment is deferred and/or in forbearance and full balance of the loan will be forgiven, canceled, discharged or will be paid if qualified for an employment-contingent repayment program and
 Borrower currently meets requirements for the student loan forgiveness/cancelation program
Obtain documentation from the student loan servicer to show the loan will be forgiven, canceled, discharged or that the borrower qualifies and is approved under an employment contingent repayment program that will extinguish the debt.

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Joel Lobb
Mortgage Loan Officer
Individual NMLS ID #57916

American Mortgage Solutions, Inc.

Text/call:      502-905-3708
fax:            502-327-9119
email:
          kentuckyloan@gmail.com







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Kentucky Mortgage Forbearance Guidelines

Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Programs For Home Mortgage Loans: Kentucky Mortgage Forbearance Guidelines for Fanni...


Conventional Mortgage Loans by Fannie Mae



Mortgage credit history for any mortgage which the borrower is obligated as borrower, co-borrower, or co-signer may be
considered acceptable if it meets one of the following:
 The borrower has made all payments due on time, prior to subject loan Note date, even though the loan was in
forbearance, or
 The borrower has not made one or more payments due, and the late payments or forbearance has been resolved
per one of these acceptable resolution plans:
Resolution Plans* Eligibility Requirements
Reinstatement ▪ Any missed payments must be made

▪ Funds to reinstate after application must be documented from eligible source
▪ Funds from the current transaction may not be used to reinstate mortgage
Repayment Plan ▪ Must have made 3 timely** payments under the repayment plan, or

▪ Repayment plan has been completed
▪ Funds from the current transaction may satisfy the existing mortgage in full
Payment Deferral ▪ Must have made 3 timely** payments after executing the deferral agreement
▪ Funds from the current transaction may satisfy the existing mortgage in full

Modification ▪ Must have made 3 timely** payments under trial modification

▪ Funds from the current transaction may satisfy the existing mortgage in full
Any Other Loss Mitigation Option ▪ Must have completed successfully or made a minimum of 3 timely payments
▪ Funds from the current transaction may satisfy the existing mortgage in full
*If loan was in forbearance, provide documentation from servicer showing the exit from forbearance into one of the
acceptable resolution plans.
** Payments cannot be made in advance to meet the 3 required payments.
 For purposes of determining acceptable mortgage payment history, missed payments under a COVID-19 forbearance
are not considered late payments.
 The above guidance does not apply to Freddie Mac Enhanced Refinance or Fannie Mae High LTV Refinance
transactions.





VA ELIGIBILITY


 Borrowers must provide a Letter of Explanation (LOE) stating the circumstances behind the forbearance.
Documentation will be required to verify the items listed in the LOE have been resolved.
 If the forbearance was on a non-subject property, the forbearance must be resolved, and new payment (if
applicable) must be included in the DTI.
 A Veteran who was granted a forbearance and continues to make payments as agreed under the terms of original
note is not considered delinquent or late and will be treated as if not in forbearance status, provided that the
forbearance plan is terminated prior to closing.


Cash-Out Refinances


 Refinance of mortgages that are in a current forbearance status, where mortgage payments are not being made,
including mortgages under the CARES Act forbearance protection program, are not eligible. The forbearance plan
must be completed/terminated prior to closing.
 Borrower in forbearance with missed payments- Borrower must have made 6 consecutive months’ timely payments
post-forbearance, regardless of method of resolution of the forbearance.
 Missed payments due to COVID-19 forbearance cannot count toward seasoning. Borrower must have made six
consecutive monthly payments prior to the CARES Act forbearance or six consecutive payments will be required post
forbearance. In addition, loans that have been modified must meet seasoning requirements based on the modified
note first payment date. The new note date must be on or after the later of: The date that is 210 days after the date
on which the first modified monthly payment was due on the mortgage being refinanced, and the date on which 6
modified payments have been made on the mortgage being refinanced.

IRRRL Refinances

 Borrowers must be current at time of application (any skipped payments under a COVID-19 forbearance have since
been made).
 Borrower in forbearance with no missed payments- standard underwriting applies.
 Borrower in forbearance with missed payments- Borrower must have made 6 consecutive months’ timely payments
post-forbearance.
 Loans must still meet loan seasoning, fee recoupment, discount points, and net tangible benefit requirements.
 Missed payments due to COVID-19 forbearance cannot count toward seasoning. Borrower must have made six
consecutive monthly payments prior to the CARES Act forbearance or will need to make six consecutive payments
post forbearance. In addition, loans that have been modified must meet seasoning requirements based on the
modified note first payment date. The new note date must be on or after the later of: The date that is 210 days after
the date on which the first modified monthly payment was due on the mortgage being refinanced, and the date on
which 6 modified payments have been made on the mortgage being refinanced.



FHA ELIGIBILITY


*NOTE: FHA Guidance is permanent, not temporary, and applies where a Forbearance Plan was granted due to COVID-19, Presidentially Declared major
disaster or other hardship. This new guidance has been included in the updated 4000.1 Handbook.
Payment
History
Documentation

When any mortgage reflects payments under a Modification or Forbearance Plan within 12 months prior to case number
assignment, obtain:
 Copy of Modification or Forbearance Plan* and
 Evidence the payment amount and the date of payments during the agreement
* A copy of Forbearance Plan due to the COVID-19 National Emergency is not required. Must be able to determine the reason for
forbearance.


Borrowers that are or were in Forbearance


Maximum base loan amount for a Streamline of an owner-occupied primary residence and HUD-approved second home is
the lesser of:
 The outstanding principal balance of the existing mortgage (including suspended payments from forbearance) as of
the month prior to mortgage disbursement; plus:
o Interest due on the existing mortgage
o Late charges and escrow shortages
o MIP due on existing mortgage; or
 The original principal balance of the existing mortgage (including financed UFMIP)
 Less any refund of UFMIP

New FHA Insured Mortgage Eligibility


 Any active forbearance plan must be terminated.
 Borrowers granted forbearance but who continued to make all payments as agreed under the terms of original Note
are not considered delinquent. No additional payment seasoning post forbearance required.
 Borrowers granted forbearance but who did not continue to make payments require additional mortgage payment
seasoning post-forbearance that document satisfactory, consecutive monthly payments. See chart below for details:
Transaction Additional Requirements
Purchase Must make three consecutive payments* post-forbearance or

▪ If home sold prior to making three payments, must be manually underwritten

Cash-Out Refinance Must make 12 consecutive payments* post-forbearance

GNMA Seasoning: Loans that have been modified must meet seasoning
requirements based on the modified note first payment date.



No Cash Out Refinance Must make three consecutive payments* post-forbearance (six payments if

mortgage was modified after forbearance)

Simple Refinance Must make three consecutive payments* post-forbearance
*NOTE: The consecutive payments must be documented on the credit report and read by AUS to follow AUS approval.
Streamline Refinance  Missed payments under forbearance do not count toward mortgage

seasoning requirements
 If mortgage modified after forbearance, six payments under
modification required.
Non-Credit Qualifying
 At time of case number assignment, borrower has made three post
forbearance payments.
Credit Qualifying
 At time of case number assignment, borrower is still in mortgage
payment forbearance or has made less than three monthly payments,
and
 Has made all mortgage payments due within the month due for the six
months prior to forbearance
***ALL Streamlines: GNMA Seasoning: Loans that have been modified must
meet seasoning requirements based on the modified note first payment date.

References FHA Mortgagee Letter 2020-30:


USDA ELIGIBILITY




 For each open mortgage, confirm the forbearance status and payment history.
 Borrowers who have a current mortgage that was placed in COVID-19 forbearance, but continued to make all
payments as scheduled, are not subject to additional seasoning.
 Purchases: Borrowers who missed any payments as allowed under the forbearance plan must have resumed
repayment of their mortgage loan for a period of at least 3 months prior to applying for a new loan.
 Refinances: the loan must have closed at least 12 months prior to the request to refinance, borrower must have
resumed making payments for a period of at least 3 months and have a total 180-day period of satisfactory
payments, excluding the time the loan was in forbearance.




LOANS MADE TO BORROWERS POST-FORBEARANCE


The guidance herein is based on Agency and Investor eligibility. The below is a summary and not all-inclusive of Agency announcements. For full

Agency guidance see the Resources section under each program section below.


IN ALL CASES THE FOLLOWING REQUIREMENTS APPLY:


 BORROWER MAY NOT BE IN FORBEARANCE ON THE SUBJECT PROPERTY MORTGAGE OR ANY OTHER NON-SUBJECT PROPERTY
MORTGAGES AT THE TIME OF LOAN CLOSING.
 Explanation from Borrower(s) for forbearance reason and how any hardship has been overcome is required. If borrower faced hardship,
documentation supporting resolution is required. (e.g. borrower was furloughed for a time and is now back to work and employer
documentation supports).
 Payment history required for most recent 12-months to see payment made dates to determine if borrower skipped any payments.
 Documentation from servicer that forbearance has ended.
 Asset sourcing to document funds for any lump-sum payments made to reinstate/bring mortgage current- 2 months consecutive
statements required.
 If borrower entered into modification/work out plan rather than reinstating the forbearance, a copy of plan must be obtained. See
applicable Agency guidance for eligibility in this case.


Joel Lobb
Mortgage Loan Officer
Individual NMLS ID #57916

American Mortgage Solutions, Inc.

Text/call:      502-905-3708
fax:            502-327-9119
email:
          kentuckyloan@gmail.com

 


 --

Inspecting and Testing Requirements for a Kentucky FHA, VA, Conventional and USDA Mortgage loan.

 

Inspection & Testing Requirements for a Kentucky Mortgage 

Each Kentucky Home loan program for Conventional, FHA, VA and USDA government mortgage loans  has slightly different guidelines when it comes to water tests, septic inspections, and pest/termite inspections. Here's a quick comparison of the general guidelines for each program.



Inspecting and Testing Requirements for a Kentucky FHA, VA, Conventional and USDA Mortgage loan. Water test, septic test, termite test, well or septic


FHA vs. Conventional Loans – What is the Difference?

FHA vs. Conventional Loans – What is the Difference?: pOne of the most common questions from first-time buyers pertains to the difference between an FHA and a conventional loan, and which one is best for them. We'll clearly define each one and go into further detail about which one might be best for you in your pursuit of purchasing a home./p


fha vs. conventional comparison chart


What is the difference between Conventional, FHA and VA Mortgage loans in Kentucky?

 

Conventional vs. FHA vs. VA loans in Kentucky

 I will outline below the credit score, loan limits, down payment and mortgage insurance requirements for FHA, VA and Conventional Mortgage Loans in Kentucky!








Upfront funding fee of 1.4% to 3.6%

Thank you!- Joel Lobb
Licensed Loan Officer (NMLS# 57916)
American Mortgage Solutions, Inc. (NMLS# 1364)
Email: joel@loansolutionsnow.com

Text or call: 502-905-3708



https://twitter.com/i/status/1184873239249592326







fha vs. conventional comparison chart


Louisville Kentucky Mortgage Lender for FHA, VA, KHC, USDA and Rural Housing Kentucky Mortgage: What is the difference between Conventional, FHA a...

Louisville Kentucky Mortgage Lender for FHA, VA, KHC, USDA and Rural Housing Kentucky Mortgage: What is the difference between Conventional, FHA a...:   Conventional vs. FHA vs. VA loans in Kentucky  I will outline below the credit score, loan limits, down payment and mortgage insurance req...

Effective on 9/18/21, Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying

 

Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying

Do you and your partner have very different credit scores? Great news! You may have access to more loan program options than you thought!

Here's the deal... All lenders pull FICO scores from each of the three credit bureaus to qualify a borrower. In situations with co-applicants, we will use the lower of the two middle scores for qualifying purposes. Historically, to do a Conventional Loan, both mid-scores would have to be above 620.
Effective on 9/18/21, Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying. This critical change may help many borrowers qualify and have increased advantages when putting an offer in on a home.
Long story short - we can help you now more than ever. Curious if this will help you? Reach out to me today, and we can investigate.
PS: These changes are effective September 18th, 2021 and there are still a lot of other variables to consider and guidelines are always subject to change. Let's start a conversation today! Message me for more details or to get started.

Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying
Effective on 9/18/21, Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying    Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying Do you and your partner have very different credit scores? Great news!  You may have access to more loan program options than you thought!    Here's the deal... All lenders pull FICO scores from each of the three credit bureaus to qualify a borrower.  In situations with co-applicants, we will use the lower of the two middle scores for qualifying purposes. Historically, to do a Conventional Loan, both mid-scores would have to be above 620. Effective on 9/18/21, Fannie Mae announced that their Automated Underwriting System will now take an AVERAGE of the two scores for qualifying.  This critical change may help many borrowers qualify and have increased advantages when putting an offer in on a home. Long story short - we can help you now more than ever.  Curious if this will help you?  Reach out to me today, and we can investigate. PS: These changes are effective September 18th, 2021 and there are still a lot of other variables to consider and guidelines are always subject to change.  Let's start a conversation today!  Message me for more details or to get started.



Mortgage Application Checklist of Documents Needed below  👇

W-2 forms (previous 2 years)
Paycheck stubs (last 30 days - most current)
Employer name and address (2 year history including any gaps)
Bank accounts statement (recent 2 months – all pages
Statements for 401(k)s, stocks and other investments (most recent)
federal tax returns (previous 2 years)
Residency history (2 year history)
Photo identification for applicant and co-applicant (valid Driver’s License





click on link for mortgage pre-approval


Joel Lobb (NMLS#57916)


Senior Loan Officer

American Mortgage Solutions, Inc.
10602 Timberwood Circle Suite 3
Louisville, KY 40223


Company ID #1364 | MB73346

Text/call 502-905-3708


kentuckyloan@gmail.com



If you are an individual with disabilities who needs accommodation, or you are having difficulty using our website to apply for a loan, please contact us at 502-905-3708.


Disclaimer: No statement on this site is a commitment to make a loan. Loans are subject to borrower qualifications, including income, property evaluation, sufficient equity in the home to meet Loan-to-Value requirements, and final credit approval. Approvals are subject to underwriting guidelines, interest rates, and program guidelines and are subject to change without notice based on applicant's eligibility and market conditions. Refinancing an existing loan may result in total finance charges being higher over the life of a loan. Reduction in payments may reflect a longer loan term. Terms of any loan may be subject to payment of points and fees by the applicant Equal Opportunity Lender. NMLS#57916http://www.nmlsconsumeraccess.org/


NMLS Consumer Access for Joel Lobb 

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Joel Lobb 

Joel Lobb, American Mortgage Solutions (Statewide)

Joel has worked with KHC for 12 of his 20 years in the mortgage lending business. Joel said, “A lot of my clients would not have been able to purchase a home of their own or possibly delayed their purchase due to lack of down payment but with the $6,000 DAP loan program, this gets them into a house sooner and starts their path to homeownership while building equity instead of throwing their money away.”

When you’re ready to purchase a home in Joel's area, contact him at:
Phone: 502-905-3708
Email: Kentuckyloan@gmail.com
Website: www.mylouisvillekentuckymortgage.com







Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Programs For Home Mortgage Loans: 5 Sneaky Ways to Improve Your Credit Score - Clark...

Kentucky First Time Home Buyer Programs For Home Mortgage Loans: 5 Sneaky Ways to Improve Your Credit Score - Clark...


5 Sneaky Ways to Improve Your Credit Score
.
How to Raise Your Credit Score Fast
1. Find Out When Your Issuer Reports Payment History

Call your credit card issuer and ask when your balance gets reported to the credit bureaus. That day is often the closing date (or the last day of the billing cycle) on your account. Note that this is different from the “due date” on your statement.
There’s something called a “credit utilization ratio.” It’s the amount of credit you’ve used compared to the amount of credit you have available. You have a ratio for your overall credit card use as well as for each credit card.
It’s best to have a ratio — overall and on individual cards — of less than 30%. But here’s an insider tip: To boost your score more quickly, keep your credit utilization ratio under 10%.
Here’s an example of how the utilization ratio is calculated:
Let’s say you have two credit cards. Card A has a $6,000 credit limit and a $2,500 balance. Card B has a $10,000 limit and you have a $1,000 balance on it.
This is your utilization ratio per card:
Card A = 42% (2,500/6,000 = .416, or 42%), which is too high.
Card B = 10% (1,000/10,000 = .100, or 10%), which is awesome.
This is your overall credit utilization ratio: 22% (3,500/16,000 = 0.218), which is very good.
But here’s the problem: Even if you pay your balance off every month (and you should), if your payment is received after the reporting date, your reported balance could be high — and that negatively impacts your score because your ratio appears inflated.
So pay your bill just before the closing date. That way, your reported balance will be low or even zero. The FICO method will then use the lower balance to calculate your score. This lowers your utilization ratio and boosts your score.
2. Pay Down Debt Strategically

Okay, let’s build on what you just learned about utilization ratios.
In the above example, you have balances on more than one card. Note that Card A has a 42% ratio, which is high, and Card B has a wonderfully low 10% ratio.
Since the FICO score also looks at each card’s ratio, you can bump up your score by paying down the card with the higher balance. In the example above, pay down the balance on Card A to about $1,500 and your new ratio for Card A is 25% (1,500/6,000 = .25). Much better!
3. Pay Twice a Month

Let’s say you’ve had a rough couple of months with your finances. Maybe you needed to rebuild your deck (raising my hand) or get a new fridge. If you put big items on a credit card to get the rewards, it can temporarily throw your utilization ratio (and your credit score) out of whack.
You know that call you made to get the closing date? Make a payment two weeks before the closing date and then make another payment just before the closing date. This, of course, assumes you have the money to pay off your big expense by the end of the month.
Take care not to use a credit card for a big bill if you plan to carry a balance. The compound interest will create an ugly pile of debt pretty quickly. Credit cards should never be used for long-term loans unless you have a card with a zero percent introductory APR on purchases. Even then, you have to be mindful of the balance on the card and make sure you can pay the bill off before the intro period ends.
4. Raise Your Credit Limits

If you tend to have problems with overspending, don’t try this.
The goal is to raise your credit limit on one or more cards so that your utilization ratio goes down. But again, this only works out in your favor if you don’t feel compelled to use the newly available credit.
I also don’t recommend trying this if you have missed payments with the issuer or have a downward-trending score. The issuer could see your request for a credit limit increase as a sign that you’re about to have a financial crisis and need the extra credit. I’ve actually seen this result in a decrease in credit limits. So be sure your situation looks stable before you ask for an increase.
That said, as long as you’ve been a great customer and your score is reasonably healthy, this is a good strategy to try.
All you have to do is call your credit card company and ask for an increase to your credit limit. Have an amount in mind before you call. Make that amount a little higher than what you want in case they feel the need to negotiate.
Remember the example in #1? Card A has a $6,000 limit and you have a $2,500 balance on it. That’s a 42% utilization ratio (2,500/6,000 = .416, or 42%).
If your limit goes up to $8,500, then your new ratio is a more pleasing 29% (2,500/8,500 = .294, or 29%). The higher the limit, the lower your ratio will be and this helps your score.
5. Mix It Up

A few years back, I realized I didn’t have much of a mix of credit. I have credit cards with low utilization ratios and a mortgage, but I hadn’t paid off an installment loan for a couple of decades.
I wanted to raise my score a nudge, so I decided to get a car loan at a very low rate. I spent a year paying it off just to get a mix in my credit. At first, my score went down a little, but after about six months, my score started increasing. Your credit mix is only 10% of your FICO score, but sometimes that little bit can bump you up from good credit to excellent credit.
A 3D pie chart calculating the 5 categories that make up a credit score including 35% for payment history, 30% for amounts owed, 10% for credit mix, 10% for new credit and 15% for credit history
5 categories that make up your credit score
I wasn’t planning on applying for credit within the next six months, so my approach was fine. But if you’re refinancing your mortgage (or planning something else really big) and you want a quick boost, don’t use this strategy. This is a good one for a long-term approach.
Bottom Line

When you want to boost your credit score, there are two basic rules you have to follow:
First, keep your credit card balances low.
Second, pay your bills on time (and in full). Do these two things and then toss in one or more of the sneaky ways above to give your score a kickstart.
And remember — you do not have to carry a balance to build a good score. If you do that, you’re on a slippery slope to debt.