Hands On The Heartland
Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market
As a Kansas City home buyer, the Golden Rule for how much you can afford is to simply ask yourself. No one is more qualified than YOU to decide what YOU can afford. Now a mortgage lender is going to tell you the max amount they’ll let you borrow. But that amount may be much more than you can or want to truly afford. And by afford, I mean how much you can “afford” to sacrifice other things in your life. It’s one thing to afford a $2000 a month house payment and another completely to be able to do so without compromising your favorite boat or expensive dining habits.
So when the lender says here’s your Pre-Approval Letter and you can buy up to a $290,000 home, the better question is “how much will my payments be? Once you know that you’ll know if buying a $290,000 works into your master plan. If it doesn’t, then maybe you should be looking at $200,000 or $250,000 homes. It’s up to you and this is not something than any loan officer, Kansas City Realtor, friend or family member can decide for you. When a lender pre-approves you, the underwriting guidelines are designed to minimize the lender’s losses and are not in place to protect your future finances. A good loan officer will certainly help you with that, but the underwriting guidelines that spit out a Pre-Approval Letter don’t factor it into the equation.
So what are some good rules of thumb when deciding what’s the right amount of mortgage payment? A good general rule of thumb is that your house (including principal, interest, taxes, insurance and PMI on the loan and also including your HOA dues) should not take up more than 25% of your gross income. But if you use this rule of them then you’ve already broken the Golden Rule in the first paragraph. I know that I’m seeing buyers purchase homes at double to quadruple the amount they make per year. In other words you could use as a general rule of them that someone who makes $50,000 may be able to purchase a $200,000 home — of course that’s making a whole lot of assumptions. But you would never use a rule of thumb anyhow when making such an important decision, would you?
Posted by Jason A. Brown
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