NO MONEY DOWN?

by Debra Ryll 27. April 2009 15:07

Too good to be true? Not with a little-known federal home loan program (Rural Housing 502, a.k.a. "the USDA Loan") which allows home buyers to purchase rural property with NO MONEY DOWN. This loan is available for specified "rural" areas - and all of Kauai and the Big Island are designated rural!

This loan is not just for first-time buyers. But keep in mind, the USDA Hawaii borrower/s cannot hold title to any other property and must meet the program's debt-to-income ratios.

The total annual income limits are as follows:
     1-4 persons: $88,350
     5-8 persons: $116,600

The co-borrowers do not have to be related, but they must all live in the subject property. Currently, interest rates are running around 5.25% with no points, or as low as 4% with points. There is no PMI or prepayment penalty, and the seller can contribute up to 6% towards closing costs . (In other words, the seller can even sweeten the deal by paying points and/or closing costs.) The loans are full doc, and most lenders require a minimum 620 FICO score, although lower scores may be considered.

Here is a possible scenario for 1-4 borrowers with an annual combined income of $88,000:
    Monthly income: $7,333
    Maximum housing payment: $2,126 (less approximate taxes and insurance) = $1,826

At a 5.5% interest rate, $1,826 will cover principal and interest on a $320,000 loan. At 5%, the loan amount rises to $340,000, and at 4.5% the loan amount equals $360,000. In many cases, that means buyers can own for the price of rent, and reap all the advantages of home ownership. And first time homebuyers may also qualify for the $8,000 federal tax credit—with the remainder payable in cash if the filer does not owe the full amount. (This program affects transactions between January 1 and November 30, 2009, and different income limits apply: 75K maximum for singles, and the buyer must stay in the home for three years—or pay the rebate back).

Rural USDA loans do not limit the size of the lot purchased, but the lot value (as determined by an appraiser) should not exceed 30% of the value of the total package (house and land).

This loan program should enable scores of buyers to take advantage of the hundreds of affordable condos and homes currently offered on Kauai. Remember, low interest rates and NO MONEY DOWN!

For more information, call Laura Merrifield at Central Pacific HomeLoans, 808 223-5207.

Digg It!StumbleUpon

Currently rated 5.0 by 3 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags:

WOMEN WHO MEAN BUSINESS

by Debra Ryll 7. April 2009 12:12
Debra Blachowiak of Sleeping Giant Sotheby's International Realty will be honored Thursday, April 9 as one of Hawaii's top 35 Women-Owned Business Owners by WWMB (Women Who Mean Business), a branch of the Pacific Business News network.

This year's WWMB awards event, held at the Hawaii Convention Center, seeks to honor women of distinction who are outstanding leaders in business and their communities.

Pacific Business News (PBN) defines "women-owned" as privately held firms in which women own 51 percent or more of the interest or stock of the business. The most recent census indicates that 30,000 businesses statewide fit this criteria.

PBN's Research Director Cynthia Gibson surveys as many women-owned businesses as possible and ranks them by revenue, though survey participation is voluntary. According to Gibson, 2006 census data revealed that Hawaii's women-owned businesses employed 38,600 people, produced total annual payrolls of $811,000,000, and generated $3.9 billion in annual sales.   

Blachowiak, who has been in real estate since 1979, certainly fits the definition of "women who mean business." As part-owner (along with Diane Treskon and Micki Evslin) and Principal Broker of her firm, Blachowiak has either been the number one volume producer on Kauai or ranked in the top ten for the last several years straight.

Besides servicing her large client base and overseeing a busy office with 25 sales agents, Blachowiak finds time to serve on the boards of several non-profits, including the Hawaii Children's Theatre. When her young daughter developed a passion for theater, Debra helped out behind the scenes—and quickly discovered she had a knack for producing. In the last ten years she has been involved with over twenty musicals on Kauai, from "Peter Pan" and "Into the Woods" to "Beauty and the Beast" and "Big River."


Digg It!StumbleUpon

Currently rated 5.0 by 1 people

  • Currently 5/5 Stars.
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 4
  • 5

Tags: