- Text
Right Financial Plan: Reverse Mortgages
- Sell it
- Rent it
- Borrow against it using either a cash-out refinance or a home-equity loan
People who take out reverse mortgages often:
- Have a regular need for additional funds
- Live on a fixed income with their home equity as their most significant asset
- Do not plan to leave their home to their heirs
Borrowers can repay reverse mortgages with other assets but typically repay them by selling the home. Any equity remaining after selling the home belongs to the homeowners or their heirs. Most reverse mortgages have a nonrecourse clause, meaning the debt cannot be passed along to the estate or heirs.
The amount borrowers receive depends on several factors, including:
- Age
- The current interest rate
- Loan fees
- The home's appraised value or the Federal Housing Administration's (FHA's) mortgage limits for the area, whichever is less
Loan Considerations Reverse mortgages involve several costs: origination fees, other up-front closing costs, as well as service fees during the term of the mortgage. Private mortgage insurance may also be required.
The amount owed on reverse mortgages generally grows over time. Interest is charged on the outstanding balance and added each month. If the debt exceeds the value of the property, the FHA or lender would take the losses due to the nonrecourse nature of most reverse mortgages.
Interest rates on reverse mortgages can be either fixed or variable. Because borrowers retain the titles to their homes, they remain responsible for property taxes and all other homeowner expenses. Failing to pay property taxes or maintain homeowners insurance puts borrowers at risk of the loan becoming due.
Eligible Property Types The home must be a one-to-four unit property, which includes townhouses, detached or manufactured homes, and units in condominiums. Condominiums must be FHA-approved.
How Are Payments Received? In addition to taking a lump-sum payment, borrowers have five options:
- Tenure -- Indefinite equal monthly payments
- Term -- Equal monthly payments over a certain time period
- Line of credit -- A set amount borrowers can draw from whenever necessary
- Modified tenure -- Combination of line of credit and tenure
- Modified term -- Combination of line of credit and term
The Only Guide You'll Ever Need for the Right Financial Plan is available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Borders.
-
Larry Swedroe Larry Swedroe is a principal and the director of research for The Buckingham Family of Financial Services, comprised of Buckingham Asset Management, LLC, BAM Risk Management, LLC and BAM Advisor Services, LLC (and its network of independent registered investment advisor firms). He has authored or co-authored 10 books, including his most recent, The Quest For Alpha. Follow him on Twitter at http://twitter.com/larryswedroe. His opinions and comments expressed on this site are his own and may not accurately reflect those of the firm.
- Ask the Experts: Gas Prices
- HP sales miss highlights growth challenges
- HP earnings sink, miss analyst targets
- Microsoft files EU complaint against Motorola, Google
- Why Apple's labor practices may never improve
- Geithner presses case for revamping corporate taxes
- The 10 best places to retire
- How much is your leisure time worth?
- What Uncle Sam can REALLY do for small business owners
- Existing home sales up, inventory down -- for now
- Corporate tax cut: Good idea, but won't stimulate economy
- Generate leads like a management guru
- The Investor Edition: Featuring Allison Goldberg and David S. Rose
- A simple strategy to keep your inbox clean
- Why even great employees get average evaluations
- Fitch downgrades Greece
- Retirement planning inspiration from the Oscars
- Police: Girl forced to run 3 hours dies; 2 charged
- Nebraska lawmakers to tackle cancer insurance bill
- Summary Box: Russian paper claims Kremlin pressure
- Ex-Philippine President Arroyo pleads not guilty to poll fraud charge
on Facebook
- Adele flips off producers at Brit Awards
- American, French journalists killed in Syria
- Is world's shortest man this 22-inch-tall Nepalese 72-year-old?
- Six decades of Oscar fashion
on CBS News






