SaggyWoman
Active Member
What is usually the process of refinancing?
Welcome to Baptist Board, a friendly forum to discuss the Baptist Faith in a friendly surrounding.
Your voice is missing! You will need to register to get access to all the features that our community has to offer.
We hope to see you as a part of our community soon and God Bless!
I am going through that now..SaggyWoman said:What is usually the process of refinancing?
Hi Tom,TomVols said:Be careful about shopping around. Everytime your credit report is checked by a lender regarding your wish to obtain credit, you can lose 1-3 points per inquiry. I've seen this make a difference in what type of loan a borrower can qualify for, and in many cases, whether they get one or not. With today's credit tightening, this will only be exacerbated.
Be careful about who advertises what on closing costs. Get a GFE (Good Faith Estimate). Lenders/brokers can legally say they charge so and so closing costs, but there is a section of the GFE called "settlement costs." They can say they charge no closing costs, charge $10,000 in settlement costs, and be legally compliant, and you wouldn't know the difference.
While I agree with you that the score I get is different than the actual score, but it's close and for the purpose of seeing what you're starting with it works. I also use it to monitor my credit file.TomVols said:A mortgage broker is the only scenario (if they pull credit once) where your score will only be affected once. If you go to one broker, then another, then another, your score takes three hits. Same is true if you go to 3 banks. 3 hits can happen regardless of the time frame. The rules for this are very vague and while intended to let people shop, the bureaus are notoriously unreliable and can enforce them as they wish, especially since the rules are not explicit.
Remember that a credit report you get will often not have a score that would be similar to what a bank/broker would use in evaluating your application. What you get from the bureaus (like the subscription you have) does give you an idea of what your general credit history looks like. The scores are not necessarily those the bank/broker would use in your evaluation.
billwald said:Don't think that is the site for a free credit report. I think that outfit makes you sign up for a monthly service and if you don't quit in time you are stuck paying.
Marla said:A free credit report is available at freecreditreport.com. A tidbit- certain loans are not available if you have listed your home on the market within 6 months.