World Wide Property Sales
Why You Should Know About FHA Lending Limits
by David Whisnant
The subject of this article is very important to the investor who wants his
rehabs or flips to have the largest possible pool of potential buyers. While I
do invest in houses of all price ranges, I have found it easier and faster to
sell homes that fall within the FHA lending limits.
FHA loans are designed (and guaranteed by our government) to encourage home
ownership for buyers with limited financial resources and often imperfect
credit. There are several programs floating around that will actually let you
get into a house with an FHA loan for nothing down. Again, I want to make the
point that nothing down is easy in the present day and age, finding the deals is
the hard part. Your mortgage broker would know about these, as they are national
in scope. The credit score is not nearly as important with FHA (or VA) homes as
with conventional loans. In general, the underwriting requirements are easier
than on a conventional conforming loan, and the closing costs are extremely low.
Borrowers can qualify with minimal cash reserves.
The drawback of FHA loans is that the homes sold must meet FHA standards, which
means that the appraiser does not want to see any deferred maintenance due on
the property. If you are selling a beaten up house, you should be careful before
accepting an offer in which the buyer plans to obtain FHA financing. You may
have to make some repairs, at your cost, to get the house up to the appraiser's
standards. In the next article (The Average Appraisal and the "Flip"), I discuss
the requirement in most owner-occupant loans that the property be in "average"
condition. The FHA requirements are generally stricter than this requirement as
a rule of thumb.
"I heard that FHA loans are terrible from the Seller's Perspective . . ."
There are opinions about FHA financing that range from good to bad from the
seller's perspective. Many of the bad opinions concerning FHA loans arose under
the old way that these loans were set up. Under that system, there were
requirements for the types of finishes that would be inside the house. You have
probably heard the expression "FHA grade carpet or vinyl." FHA required that the
carpet be of a certain pile if they were going to do the loan.
In lieu of hypotheticals, I can give you some real examples of deals done with
FHA lending. An investor who works in some of the same neighborhoods that I do
recently sold a house to a buyer who obtained an FHA loan. The FHA guidelines as
quoted by the appraiser required my investor friend to erect hand rails off the
back steps, put in gravel for a driveway, put screens on all the windows, and
fix numerous other small items. My most recent FHA sale had no requirements (it
was on a total rehab), the one prior to that required splash blocks under the
gutter downspouts. Another house I sold FHA required that a screen door be
fixed. Not a big deal. These are really aggravation items, but nothing that
could break a deal.
Side-Note: VA Loans generally require the house to be in excellent shape. When
our family business was building new homes, many of these were sold VA in some
sub-divisions that we developed. VA put numerous requirements on the properties
before they could be conveyed, and made demands that really verged on cosmetics.
Recently, my wife's family sold a home, and the seller sought financing through
a VA lender. The only requirements they were given were to clean ants off the
electric meter and turn up the hot water temperature. Strange, but no big deal .
. .
If you are selling homes that are in generally good and clean condition, you
have nothing to worry about.
How This Relates to Choosing Your Target Neighborhood
FHA loans are important to think about when you are beginning your real estate
investing career. When we select a neighborhood to invest in, one thing for us
to consider is whether or not we could rehab the property and sell it via an FHA
loan. FHA has a maximum amount that they will lend in each given area, or
county. This amount is moved up or potentially down to reflect the actual cost
in an area for acquiring a fairly nice property. Thus, in my county, which is
metro-Atlanta, we have a much higher limit than in a more rural county with
lower housing values.
Many people just cannot qualify to buy without FHA, and if we shut them out with
a higher priced property, it may take a little longer to sell our home. If you
are selling your home within the FHA limits, you also know that you are right in
the thick of the market.
Thus, if you are trying to decide on two different areas to invest, and all else
is equal, go with the area where you can market your properties within the FHA
financing price limits. Another advantage generally on dealing with this type of
buyer is that they often are younger buyers who do not intend to stay in the
house forever. You can thus market smaller properties to them (though I prefer 3
bedroom homes!), and properties that are neat and clean but not trimmed out
expensively inside. They are probably coming from an apartment, so the house
will seem nicer than where they have been.
Bio:
Dave Whisnant is an Atlanta investor/attorney who is dedicated to helping people
land their first deals and create whatever level of success in real estate that
they desire.
After successfully building a real estate law practice, Dave walked away from it
to focus on real estate when he saw the profits that his clients were making.
Jumping in with both feet, he created a proprietary model that rocketed him to
the top of Atlanta investors almost from day one.
Dave is different than other investors in his single-minded quest to perfect a
series of cutting-edge prospecting tactics to locate and then land motivated
sellers who other investors are not even aware of.
A master investor AND teacher, Dave’s precise and easily duplicated systems have
been successfully implemented by his students around the country in competitive
markets of ALL kinds.
He believes in freely sharing his expertise and information for the benefit of
anyone who is serious about succeeding, and believes that his techniques will
create more success stories per student than any other real estate investing
coach in the world in 2006.
Real estate investing has enabled Dave to have the freedom that enables him to
spend time with his two young daughters, wife, and “herd” of golden retrievers.