| |
Increase |
Decrease |
| Amount of Loan |
Rates Up |
Rates Down |
| Length of Loan |
Rates Up |
Rates Down |
| Adjustable Rate |
Rates Down |
Rates Up |
| Down Payment |
Rates Down |
Rates Up |
| Discount Points |
Rates Down |
Rates Up |
| Closing Costs |
Rates Down |
Rates Up |
| Credit Quality |
Rates Down |
Rates Up |
| Income Level |
Rates Down |
Rates Up |
| Lock In Period |
Rates Up |
Rates Down |
The amount of your loan can increase your interest
rate if the amount financed exceeds the conforming loan limits established by
Fannie Mae
and
Freddie Mac.
The conforming loan limit changes at the beginning
of each year.
Shorter loans, such as 20 year or 15 year note, can save you thousand of
dollars in interest payments over the life of the loan, but your monthly
payments will be higher. An adjustable rate mortgage may get you started with
a lower interest rate than a fixed rate mortgage, but your payments could get
higher when the interest rate changes.
A larger down payment ? greater than 20% - will give you the best possible
rate.
Down payments of 5% or less should expect to pay a higher rate as you
are starting with less equity as collateral. If you've got the cash now and
want to lower your payments, you can
pay points on your loan to lower your
mortgage rate. It's a simple concept, really: In exchange for more money
upfront, lenders are willing to lower the interest rate they charge, cutting
the borrower's payments. Closing costs are fees paid by the lender, if you
don?t want to pay all of the closing costs, expect a higher rate which will
pay the lender additional interest over the life of the loan.
Credit quality and debt-to-income-ratio affect the terms of your loan through
your
FICO Score.
If you have good credit and your monthly income far surpasses
your monthly debt obligations, you will get approved at a lower interest rate.
However, if your monthly income barely covers your minimum debt obligations,
even if you have a good
credit report,
you will not receive the lowest available interest rate.
(Article Courtesy Mortgage 101)
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