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						Help available for first-time buyers, if you can find it
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		 [February 07, 2019]   
		By Gail MarksJarvis 
 CHICAGO (Reuters - It took 52-year-old 
		social worker Nancy Peterson a combination of five different grants and 
		low interest loans to accumulate $80,000 for the downpayment she needed 
		to become a first-time home buyer in Seattle last summer.
 
 Peterson’s modest income was far too low for Seattle’s soaring housing 
		market, where the median home price is now over $700,000. Without the 
		assistance, Peterson would have only qualified for a $100,000 purchase 
		with a loan insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).
 
 Many middle income people give up on purchasing a home when they cannot 
		come up with a 20 percent downpayment, but Peterson was lucky enough to 
		have real estate agent Lindsey Sargent help spot local assistance 
		programs. They were able to cobble together a 40 percent downpayment to 
		get a $232,000 two bedroom condo 25 miles north of the city.
 
 "The programs are not well understood, and there aren’t nearly enough to 
		serve all the need," Sargent said.
 
 
		
		 
		The prospect of getting outside help, or a lower downpayment than the 
		traditional 20 percent, does not occur to many. In a 2015 Fannie Mae 
		survey, 76 percent did not know they did not have to have 20 percent for 
		a downpayment.
 
 With home prices rising more than wages, home buyers instead have been 
		turning increasingly to parents and family members for help. Among 
		people with FHA loans geared to first-time buyers, 26 percent got help 
		from their family – a significant increase over the 22 percent about 
		seven years ago.
 
 Yet, as a general rule of thumb, if you have solid income and a good 
		credit score over 700, you can get some conventional loans with just 3 
		to 5 percent down, said Peter Boomer, head of mortgage distribution for 
		PNC Bank. And you can get an FHA loan geared toward first-time 
		purchasers for just 3.5 percent down with a credit score as low as 640, 
		he said. There are even loans from the Veterans Administration with no 
		down payment, for those who qualify.
 
 In addition, there are over 2,500 different programs that provide grants 
		and low-interest loans for down payments and closing costs, said Rob 
		Chrane, chief executive of Down Payment Resource which tracks them 
		(https://downpaymentresource.com/).
 
 
		
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These are open to a wide range of incomes and make home purchases available to 
many first-time home buyers who think a house is out of the question, said 
Laurie Goodman, co-director of the Urban Institute’s Housing Finance Policy 
Center. For example, in Minneapolis, income can be as high as $104,000 and 
$328,000 homes qualify, according to the Urban Institute. The average assistance 
is $9,672. 
In Seattle, incomes up to $145,000 qualify, but with the median home at over 
$700,000 the cutoff price of $495,000 home is too low, Sargent said.
 FINDING HELP
 
 About 11.4 percent of home buyers were able to get downpayment assistance in the 
form of loans and grants from government entities in 2018, according to the U.S. 
Department of Housing and Urban Development.
 
 
But navigating the programs can be overwhelming because they vary by state, 
county and city, with no centralized coordination at the national level. Much of 
the funding is local, and often tracked only by local housing agencies. Even 
more frustrating is that funding can run out unexpectedly and not be renewed, 
said Chrane.
 Because of the complexity, many mortgage lenders and real estate agents do not 
bother searching for special programs to help first-time home buyers. Consumers 
should ask at the outset for them to examples of programs cobbled together for 
previous home buyers.
 
 
Diligence is crucial. Consider Peterson’s quest in Seattle: when she was still 
looking for a home, one grant program had run out of money. But as she was on 
the verge of making a purchase last July, another grant recipient could not 
close on a home purchase. So suddenly $25,000 was available and Peterson 
received it.
 (Editing by Beth Pinsker and Diane Craft)
 
				 
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