Manufactured Home Finance or Refinance: Get a Credit Report

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Credit Report and Manufactured Home Financing

Credit Report and Manufactured Home Financing

If you are considering buying or refinancing a manufactured home, make sure you get a copy of your credit report and review it for its accuracy. It is possible that there are errors on your credit report, and if they aren’t corrected before you apply for a manufactured home loan, the errors can derail the entire process.  Each year as a consumer, you can request a free copy of your credit report from each of the credit reporting agencies.   You can contact them via phone to request or on line by visiting www.Experian.com, www.Equifax.com and www.Transunion.com.  Please note, these reports will NOT provide a credit score for free, only a credit report. In order to secure a par interest rate you must have a FICO score of 740 or higher. If you are looking to use FHA financing, expect the rate to be higher than conventional financing.

This morning, we are seeing the best mortgage rates of the last several weeks.  Each time rates fall below 5%, they have not remained there for very long. The last time we saw 4.875%, it was available for all of one day!  This has been a very consistent pattern since early Summer. As such, I will caution you to not get too greedy. Can rates move lower?  Absolutely, but there is much more room above for rates to go higher. Rates move much faster upward than they move lower as lenders are reluctant to pass along lower rates. If you can lock a rate today under 5% on your mobile home financing or refinance your manufactured home loan you might want to take advantage.

Are Mobile Home Loans more Difficult than Real Property Loans?

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Mobile Home Loans

Many people are curious, or stumped, when it comes to the differences between loans for mobile homes and loans real property site built homes. A lot of lenders that finance condominiums and single family real property homes do not lend on mobile homes, and a lot of people do not understand why. Well, there are some big differences in the properties themselves, and these differences affect the types of loans that can be done on the homes.

Basically, when you are looking at getting a loan, you need to put down collateral for that loan. The collateral for your loan is going to be the main factor where there are differences between a Mobile Home and Manufactured Home Loan and traditional “stick built” home mortgages. Just like how getting a loan for your vehicle and getting a loan for your business are two different types of loans, so are loans for mobile homes and real property site built homes.

In the United States, a mobile home loan is also referred to as a “chattel mortgage”. Chattel mortgages are securitized transactions, governed by Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code. The lender on a chattel loan secures the loan with a mortgage over the chattel, or the Mobile Home. Because chattel is defined as personal property, movable or immovable, for example, a book, a coat, a pencil, growing corn, a lease, a mobile home is considered a piece of personal property that could, for all intents and purposes, be moved; often times mobile homes are considered as riskier collateral than a real property, site built home.

Traditional homes that are built on site and include real property are a bit different from chattel, or mobile home loans. A mortgage loan for this type of home is a loan secured by real property through the use of a Note, which is a document that evidences the existence of the loan. Real property mortgages can and should be additionally evidenced by a Deed of Trust document, which is recorded with the County Recorder. The Recorder is a county official that insures that instruments are recorded, giving public notice of such transactions. The Deed of Trust will be recorded with the County Recorder of the County where the real property is located. Because there is no real property ownership involved with a mobile home loan, a lender cannot record any documents against the title to a mobile home, to further secure the loan.

Mobile Home Mortgages are not recorded or secured in the same fashion as real estate, or real property loans. The title information for mobile and manufactured homes is maintained by agencies directed by The United States Department of Housing and Urban Development. In the State of California, The Department of Housing has “Registration and Titling” offices that are specifically assigned to maintaining the title information on Mobile and Manufactured Homes. The homeowner, or purchaser, of a mobile home shall be shown on the title as the registered owner, and the lender shall be shown as the Legal Owner to the mobile or manufactured Home. When a mobile or manufactured home is encumbered by a Legal Owner, the actual Certificate of Title to the mobile home is issued to the lender, or legal owner. The homeowner, or borrower, is issued a Registration Card, which evidences the homeowner´s Registered Ownership interest to the mobile home. With site-built, real property homes, the homeowner retains a Grant Deed to evidence their ownership in the home, and the lender maintains the Note and Deed of Trust to evidence their ownership interest in the real property home.

It´s helpful to understand these title and security differences, as they play a major role in determining the actual loan type, qualifying agents and the loan process itself. Manufactured Homes  and real property site built homes are not only built differently, but titled differently and mortgaged uniquely as well.

Manufactured Home Financing Has Changed

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We are still the go to company for manufactured home finance

We are still the "go to" company for manufactured home finance

The old days of stated income, stated asset, no down, and B Paper lending to mobile home buyers are over. As underwriters have tightened their belts, you now must have decent/good credit, with no lates or missed payments and a down payment on the home you are looking to buy. A new obstacle in manufactured home financing and refinancing is that home values are declining, and comparrisons are dragging the appraisal prices down. In times like these, it helps to know a great lender or broker, and we are both. We can still get a good amount of our customers loans, but its not as easy as it used to be. I hate to think about how hard other companies have to try to get funding, without the experience we have. It must feel like banging your head against the wall. The only people we feel worse for is their customers who pay hundreds of dollars, out of pocket, just to get declined on their loan. Since we know the programs that are still available for manufactured home financing, and we can even fund our own loans, we can offer the best rates and a far greater chance of completing your financing. Call us today, or fill out our secure online application if you are interested in mobile home financing.