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Bankruptcy And Buying A Home - 3 Benefits To Buying A Home After Bankruptcy
If you have filed bankruptcy recently, you may wonder if you can get approved for a home loan. You may also wonder if buying a home after a recent bankruptcy is a good idea for you. While a bankruptcy can make getting approved for a mortgage...

Federal Student Loan Consolidation: The Other ReFi Boom
You've heard about refinancing in the mortgage market. Who hasn't? Interest rates are at all-time lows. Folks have refinanced two and three times in as many years to save thousands of dollars in interest they would have otherwise paid. There's a...

Helping Your Clients To Manage Their Debt
In the very recent past a young couple close to us broke up their marriage due to the pressures of debt. They are now fighting with lawyers over sharing that debt. Their legal bills are now over $40,000, which is more than the debt they are fighting...

Home Loans - Online Services And Resources To Help You
Copyright 2005 Dean Shainin Interest rates on home loans are at the lowest they've been in many years. Now is a great time to take advantage of home loan financial services and resources available online. With a little education online you can get...

Mortgage Tax Deduction - A Really Great Deal
We all buy homes on mortgage basis and this helps in saving a lot. We tend to pay a lot in the form of interest but what do we get in return? Here's the answer, a mortgage tax deduction. A key benefit for the new home owner wherein we can...

 
Credit Scores: Don't Waste Your Money

Did you know that your credit score that you purchase online is not the same credit score your loan officer gets?

You probably know that when you apply for a mortgage, your loan officer gets all three credit reporting agencies reports with three different scores. From your three credit scores, most mortgage companies use your middle credit score to determine your credit worthiness.

Do you know that the credit score an auto dealer sees is not the same credit score your loan officer sees?

Imagine our surprise to find out that my husband's credit score for purchasing my new car one afternoon was 50 points higher than his top credit score was earlier in the day when he refinanced an investment house. This happened because credit scores get computed differently for mortgages and auto loans!

If you think that you have a great credit score because you recently bought a new car, think again. You may have been told that your credit score was 700 by a finance company. Therefore, you think that you have the perfect credit score to buy a house. Don't be surprised to hear from your loan officer that your credit score falls short of a prime rate mortgage loan.

You don't want to have your credit history checked too often. You do get a small penalty with a few points deducted when you have too many inquiries on your credit report. However, when you're shopping for a car or a home loan, the credit reporting agencies batch your inquiries into one. In other words, you can call several mortgage lenders to shop for the best terms and rates without losing points.

Don't waste your money buying your credit scores. These scores are not the ones real estate lenders get. Instead, get your credit scores FREE by calling a loan officer.

Copyright © Jeanette J. Fisher

About the author:

Jeanette Fisher teaches how to get out from under credit card debt, how to use credit to make money, and six ways to build strong credit to finance your first home and multiple investment properties. For a free ebook "Credit Tips for Mortgage Financing," see http://worryfreecredit.com/

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