Las Vegas Review-Journal

Five biggest benefits of VA loans

- By Chris Birk

Tight credit, tougher mortgage lending and flat-lining wages have all breathed new life into the historic VA loan program. Veterans and military families are turning to these flexible, no-down payment loans like never before.

The Department of Veterans Affairs backed a record number of loans in fiscal year 2015, with volume expected to increase 36 percent over the next five years. Created originally to help World War II veterans get a foothold in the housing market, this hardearned benefit has evolved into one of the most powerful mortgage options on the market.

A handful of key benefits have spurred the program’s emergence as a lifeline for today’s military homebuyers. to save that upfront cost.

This is another big expense that VA buyers don’t face. Convention­al borrowers who can’t muster a 20 percent down payment often get stuck paying for private mortgage insurance. FHA buyers pay both an upfront and an annual form of mortgage insurance. These expenses can add $100 or more to your monthly mortgage payment and linger until you’ve built sufficient equity in the home. Federal Housing Administra­tion buyers now pay mortgage insurance fees for the life of their loans.

VA buyers don’t pay for mortgage insurance, but they do have an upfront funding fee that most choose to roll into the loan. The VA funding fee is paid to the VA and helps keep the loan program running. Buyers who receive compensati­on for a service-connected disability are exempt from this cost.

This loan program’s financial flexibilit­y is matched by common-sense credit underwriti­ng. VA loans were created to boost access to homeowners­hip for those who serve our country, and the government urges lenders to take a more holistic look at a buyer’s credit and financial profile.

In fact, the VA doesn’t set a credit score requiremen­t for these loans.

But the private companies actually making these loans typically will have a score cutoff, albeit a lower one than convention­al lenders often require.

Would-be buyers can also bounce back faster in the wake of a bankruptcy or foreclosur­e. Veterans can often obtain a VA loan just a year removed from filing a Chapter 13 bankruptcy and two years following a Chapter 7 discharge or a foreclosur­e.

For convention­al mortgages, the “seasoning period” can be considerab­ly longer – four years following a Chapter 7 discharge, two years after a Chapter 13 discharge and seven years after a foreclosur­e.

Veterans and military members also have access to the lowest-rate loan product out there. VA loans have had a lower average interest rate than convention­al and FHA loans for the past 30 consecutiv­e months and counting, according to data from mortgage software firm Ellie Mae.

That benefit helps boost buying power. Rates will ultimately vary depending on your credit, the lender you’re working with and more.

VA buyers can ask a seller to pay all of their loan-related closing costs and up to 4 percent of the home’s value in concession­s. Those concession­s can cover a host of costs, from prepaid property taxes and homeowners insurance to paying a buyer’s funding fee and even paying off collection­s or judgments at closing.

The VA also limits what costs and fees lenders can charge, and there are a few that buyers aren’t actually allowed to pay.

To be sure, VA loans aren’t the right fit for every military homebuyer. But these flexible government-backed loans continue to make a critical difference for millions of veterans and military families.

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