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Reverse Mortgages Dallas TX

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Reverse Mortgages. You will find informative articles about Reverse Mortgages, including "Reverse Mortgage Surge Comes With Caveats". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Dallas, TX that can help answer your questions about Reverse Mortgages.

Roger Asel
5485 Belt Line
Dallas, TX
Wells Fargo - Lemmon Avenue
214-780-1280
4232 Lemmon Ave
Dallas, TX
Wells Fargo - Oaklawn & Avondale
214-599-9374
3927 Oak Lawn Ave
Dallas, TX
Washington Mutual - Bank Locations- Dallas- Cedar Springs
(214)599-9224
3421 Knight Street
DALLAS, TX
Bank of America - Cedar Springs & Knight
214.520.0473
4023 Cedar Springs Road
Dallas, TX
Michael David Kolacz (RFC®), CEP, LUTCF
972 404 9300
6860 N Dallas Pkwy Ste 200
Plano, TX
Premium Home Financing
(214)559-0383
3141 Hood Street Suite 515
DALLAS, TX
Washington Mutual Bank Locations Dallas Cedar Springs
(214)599-9224
3421 Knight Street
Dallas, TX
Davidson And Associates
(718)347-7606
2765 Pennsylvania Ave
Brooklyn, NY
Mcgriff Seibels And
(214)459-1265
3625 N Hall St Ste 900
Dallas, TX
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Reverse Mortgage Surge Comes With Caveats

A tiny fraction of the residential mortgage market, reverse mortgages made a comeback this summer, due largely to record low mortgage rates.

But some consumer advocates have advised older homeowners to consider other sources of cash before they take a knife to their home equity.

The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) insured an all-time high 1,800 reverse mortgages in June 2003, as senior homeowners turned to the loans to tap equity for cash.

The National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association says that helped put the industry on pace to break the annual volume record for reverse mortgages by the end of summer if not sooner.

An option for cash-poor but equity-rich homeowners, reverse mortgages are equity loans and like equity loans, they enable borrowers to obtain loans on the debt-free portion of the value of the home. It's a "reverse" mortgage because the lender makes payments to the borrower, instead of the borrower making payments to the lender.

Homeowners who first purchased a home 10 to 20 years ago could be sitting on an equity gold mine, especially in regions where home prices have tripled or more in the past two decades.

To qualify for the special mortgages, you must be 62 or older and own your home outright or have enough equity to pay off the original first mortgage before drawing extra cash.

You can draw the cash as an immediate lump sum cash advance, as a credit line you use as you wish, as a monthly cash advance or in some combination of all three.

You repay the loan principle and interest later, from the proceeds of a sale when you move, sell your home or die. Failure to pay taxes, homeowners insurance and other conditions can also trigger a forced pay back.

Each loan comes with different qualifications, costs, loan maximums, monthly payments and a host of other esoteric details, making understanding and comparing them a bit difficult.

Two non-profits National Center for Home Equity Conversion (NCHEC) and AARP , along with FHA, offer detailed information on the loans.

The most popular reverse mortgage is the Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM), the only federally insured reverse mortgage, insured by the FHA. To be eligible for a federally-insured HECM, a home owner must receive counseling from a U.S. Department of Housing and HUD-approved counseling agency.

Other reverse mortgages are offered by Fannie Mae lenders. National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association consumer advocates advise homeowners not to sign for any reverse ...

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