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Frequently
Asked Questions
Mortgages
- Q & A
Private Mortgage Insurance
Q:
What is PMI?
A: Private mortgage insurance, or PMI, insures the lender
against a default. It is required when the borrower is making
a cash down payment of less than 20 percent of the purchase
price.
PMI costs vary from one mortgage insurance firm to another,
but premiums usually run about 0.50 percent of the loan amount
for the first year of the loan. Most PMI premiums are a bit
lower for subsequent years. The first year's mortgage insurance
premium is usually paid in advance at the close of escrow, and
there is usually a separate PMI approval process.
Lenders generally turn to a list of companies with whom they
regularly work when lining up private mortgage insurance.
In most cases, PMI can be dropped after the loan to value
ration drops below 80 percent. Find out from your lender what
procedure to follow to have PMI removed when your equity reaches
20 percent.
For homeowners who have improved their properties and believe
that their equity has increased as a result of these improvements,
refinancing the property at a loan-to-value ratio of 80 percent
or less is another possible way of eliminating PMI payments.
Q:
Is PMI always required on low-down home loans?
A: A growing number of private lenders are loosening
up their requirements for low-down-payment loans. But private
mortgage insurance, or PMI, usually is required on very low-down
loans.
Q:
What does PMI cost?
A: PMI costs vary from one mortgage insurance
firm to another, but premiums usually run about 0.50 percent of
the loan amount for the first year of the loan. Most PMI premiums
are a bit lower for subsequent years. The first year's mortgage
insurance premium is usually paid in advance at the closing.
Q:
How do I drop PMI?
A: In some states, the loans have to be at least
two years old, and the borrower can not have made any late payments
in the last year in order to drop private mortgage insurance.
In addition, the loan-to-value ratio must be less than 75 percent.
Some state disclosure laws require lenders to notify borrowers
after the close of escrow whether the borrower has the right to
cancel private mortgage insurance. This eventually may be a federal
requirement as well.
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