Company Logo
Contact us: 563.441.1776
SIGN UP Sign In
Company Logo
Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS

Subscribe and receive email notifications of new blog posts.




rss logo RSS Feed
Buying a Home | 90 Posts
Company Events | 19 Posts
COVID-19 | 4 Posts
Facts and Trends | 17 Posts
Farm and Land | 19 Posts
Homeownership | 21 Posts
Local Flavor | 1 Posts
Market Updates | 48 Posts
Mortgage Rates | 3 Posts
NAR Survey | 4 Posts
Nelson Brothers | 2 Posts
New Construction | 17 Posts
Parade of Homes | 11 Posts
Quad Cities | 4 Posts
Recognition | 44 Posts
Ruhl Commercial | 4 Posts
Ruhl Mortgage | 31 Posts
Selling a Home | 62 Posts
Why Realtors? | 5 Posts
house improvements window treatments winter preparation holiday declutter owning a home home buyers home sellers inventory mortgage rates company events toys for tots inspections real estate specialist realtor using a realtor farm and land farmland land values selling farm land home buying home selling real estate trends home price appreciation residential real estate sales volume best year ever commercial real estate facts and trends iowa brokerage iowa real estate largest independently owned eastern iowa eastern iowa real estate home appreciation buying a home loan approval mortgage mortgages preapproval interest rates costs involved home improvements taxes Brokerage Rankings Real Estate Ranking RealTrends500 Top Independent Dubuque Community CNBC homeownership house appreciation housing market inflation midwest real estate sellers market worldwide exchange economics house appreciate house price percent change Amana Colonies Iowa City IA Iowa City Shopping Shop Local University of Iowa Cedar Rapids IA Cedar Rapids Community Events Corridor Community Events Czech Village NewBo The District Ruhl Mortgage Buyers Market Homebyers Housing inventory Real Estate Clinton Community Clinton Restaurants Fulton IL Clinton IA Apple Picking Burlington IA Dubuque IA Galena Muscatine IA Pumpkin Patches Quad Cities cleaning tips spring prep building a home new construction Bettendorf IA Davenport IA Fall Activities Farms Moline IL Orchards Silvis Local Businesses Outdoors Things to Do For Buyers Home-Buying Tips Iowa Quad Cities Illinois Quad Cities Community Rock Island Home-Selling Tips For Sellers DeWitt, IA Home Improvement Restaurants Parks Recreation Iowa Mutual Lofts Apartment Living Moving Relocating Food & Drink Home Maintenance Homeowner Tips For Owners Local Attractions Dubuque Area Holidays Shopping Remodeling Staging East Moline Coal Valley IL builders new construction homes Milan Financing First-Time Buyers New Bohemia District (Newbo) Northwest Quadrant - Cedar Rapids Northeast Quadrant - Cedar Rapids Clinton Area East Dubuque Monmouth Blue Grass, IA West Burlington Wilton Fulton Burlington Area Cedar Rapids Area Muscatine Area Wapello Geneseo Port Byron LeClaire, IA Durango, IA
May
24

We get asked this question quite often. In a rapidly changing market, it is difficult to give absolute answers. Much depends on your family's personal situation. However, if you realize that you can no longer make the payments, you may have to decide between doing a short sale or letting the home go to foreclosure. Here are three things you may wish to consider: 1.) Impact on Your Future Ability to Get a Mortgage There are many different lending institutions, each with their own requirements when it comes to your ability to obtain a mortgage in the future. However, a common trend is to be much more lenient with someone working through a short sale rather than letting the house go to foreclosure. As an example, the Fannie Mae site, Know Your Options explains you: May be able to get a Fannie Mae mortgage to purchase a home sooner (in as little as 2 years) than if you went through foreclosure (at least 7 years) However, in a rapidly changing environment, make sure you get the latest information available from the actual lending institutions mentioned. 2.) Impact on Your Credit Score There has been much dialogue on this issue. The question is whether or not a foreclosure will have a more severe impact on your credit score than a short sale. A recent FICO study sheds needed light on this question. Here is a chart from that report. The first chart shows the impact on the score for each stage of delinquency, and the second shows how long it takes the score to fully "recover" after the fact. We can see that there is very little difference in impact on your credit score whether you choose a short sale or a foreclosure. 3.) Impact on Your Family during the Move Usually a family asking this question is already experiencing major financial difficulties. This may be putting immense pressure on both parents and the children. If you allow your home to go to foreclosure, you move and leave it vacant or you stay waiting for an official to knock on your door demanding you move. That added burden can cause even more stress for a family. In the short sale process, you work with the bank and pre-determine the day you will move. The new purchasers usually move in the same day. Your family moves with a plan and you don't leave the neighborhood with a vacant house to deal with. There is a level of dignity in this type of move that does not always take place in a foreclosure situation. Bottom Line For several reasons, a short sale may be the better option for your family. It is best to get professional advice if faced with this decision. If you have more questions on short sales vs. foreclosures, or would like to be introduced to an agent that specializes in them please contact the Ruhl&Ruhl Customer Service Department at 563-441-1776, CustomerService@ruhlhomes.com or toll free at 866-441-1776.  They are here to help answer your questions and make the process as easy as possible on you. Keep checking RuhlHomes.com for more information on the housing market.

Provided by: KCM Blog

Login to My Homefinder

Pixel