The agency is raising its fees in an effort to try to restore its depleted reserves, which suffered from the rising number of home owners who defaulted on their mortgages, and to try to encourage the return of more private capital to the market.
FHA loans allow for down payments as low as 3.5 percent and they often have less stringent credit requirements, which have made them soar in popularity in recent years. (The agency insures loans but doesn’t issue them.) About 40 percent of all new mortgages for home purchases in 2010 were FHA-backed mortgages.
Starting April 1, it will increase its annual mortgage insurance premium for loans under $625,500, from 1.15 percent of the loan amount to 1.25 percent. Starting June 1, larger loan premiums will see an increase of 0.35 percent of a percentage point, bringing the total premium costs up to 1.5 percent of the loan amount.
FHA also announced it will raise their upfront mortgage premium by 0.75 of a percentage point, which will now total 1.75 percent of the loan amount.
So, a borrower with a 3.5 percent down payment with a mortgage of $193,000 can expect to pay an upfront mortgage premium alone of $3,377, compared to the prior $1,930 but it can be rolled into the mortgage. The new fees will also apply to home owners who want to refinance their mortgages.
The raise in fees is expected to bring in $1.25 billion in additional revenue to the agency through September 2013.
The upfront increase is pretty stiff and isn't going to help home sales recover, not such a good idea if you ask me, but then they didn't.
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