by RhondaPorter » Thu Dec 03, 2009 9:54 am
Sasha,
As the others have mentioned in this thread, you will need to have your home appraise high enough to where there is at least 20% equity. Appraisals with refinances have been pretty challenging in our area as the appraised value is based on what other homes similar to yours have recently sold and closed for (less seller concessions). If you're planning on financing your closing costs, you'll need your home to appraise high enough to pay off your existing mortgage (which will be about one payment higher than your mortgage statement) plus the closing costs and prepaids/reserves for the new loan amount plus at least 20% home equity on top of that.
Assuming a minimum down payment and financed upfront mortgage insurance, your payoff may be close to your purchase price. Your home will probably need to appraise for around $450k or higher, as Ira mentions.
With conventional financing, if you're not taking cash out, you should be able to refinance now assuming your home does appraise. The appraiser will have to justify the higher value (when you purchased your home, if the appraisal came in with a significantly higher value than the sales price, this could be good documentation to support your case). Be prepared for the underwriters to completely pick the new appraisal apart.
You can take advantage of an FHA streamline refi which may reduce your rate however you will still have FHA mortgage insurance--guidelines recently tightened to where you will need to have a minimum of 6 months mortgaae payments and a portion of your upfront mortgage insurance premium (1.75% of the loan amount when you purchases) will be credited towards the new refinance. FHA loans may actually be a benefit right now since the rates are low and because they are assumable. When our rates increase in the future (due to inflation and the government no longer keeping them artificially low); when you sell your home, should mortgage rates be much higher, offering an assumable mortgage at 5.5 (or lower) may give you an advantage over other listings.
Appraisals are the "wild card" with refinancing...worse case, you could be out $500 for paying for a low appraisal...best case, you may wind up with a lower rate and no monthly mortgage insurance. The other factor with conventional financing is credit scores. Any mid-credit score under 740 has a price hit.
Good luck!