The Commercial Appeal

Young and in debt, 1st home still in reach

Couple begins by getting credit score in order

- Swapna Venugopal Ramaswamy

This story is part of a regular series that examines the challenges Americans face as they try to buy starter homes.

Yesenia Martinez is the first to admit she’s the spender in her family.

When Martinez decided to buy her first home in the New York suburbs, the 32-year-old knew she’d have to mend her ways.

“My husband’s more of the saver,” said Martinez, an elementary school teacher from the Bronx. “So I had to negotiate my plans with him, work as a team, and really get my credit in order.”

Martinez’s credit score always lingered in the 500-range, thanks to about $100,000 in debt accumulate­d obtaining her undergradu­ate and master’s degrees. Credit scores range between 300 and 850 – and scores above 700 are generally considered good.

She also had five credits cards with a combined $16,000 balance. Her husband, Andrew Graham, 34, a correction officer at the Rikers Island prison complex, on the other hand, had always had “phenomenal” credit, she said.

“As I was going through school and working lower-paying teaching jobs, I would supplement my income by using my credit cards,” she said.

The median sales price of an existing single-family home rose to $364,300 in December 2021, up 16% from the same month a year earlier, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors. Last summer, in the middle of a red-hot pandemic market, the couple managed to get their credit in order and buy their first entry-level home.

How did they do it?

Martinez said her first order of business was to get a credit report through Transunion, one of the three credit bureaus. She also picked up strategies through one of the company’s credit advisers to improve her score, such as making her monthly payments on or before time and keeping her revolving credit balances under 30%.

In March 2020, when the fastspread­ing coronaviru­s pandemic shut down schools, the family’s one-bedroom apartment felt tight and the need to find more space felt urgent.

The living room held two workspaces: an online teaching area for her, and

across the room, a space where her 10year-old daughter, Nyla, would attend remote school.

“It was so hard. We had the same hours and would be talking at the same time,” she said. “Her teacher’s voice coming over into my speakers, and my kids could hear that.”

But there also was a silver lining to the lockdown – it forced her to save.

“We were not spending money outside. I was cooking at home and everything was taking place at home,” she said. “No more happy hours at bars and hanging out with friends, no salons. It was none of that anymore.”

The silver lining

One year later, she reduced her credit card debt from $16,000 to $3,000. She and her husband also boosted their saving, amassing $80,000. The pause on the student loan repayment, in place from the beginning of the pandemic, was particular­ly helpful, she said.

Her score climbed up to 700.

“My husband had been saving on his own for the last five years while I was clearing up my debt,” she said. “Before we started looking for a home, he wanted to make sure we were fully aligned.”

After shopping around for the best mortgage rates, the couple obtained a mortgage pre-approval to strengthen their chances in the intensely competitiv­e pandemic housing market.

Prepared for the hunt

Real estate agent Claudia Barnes, who helped the couple find a home, said she wishes every potential homeowner would come as prepared.

“They did their due diligence. They were very open to suggestion­s. They asked questions and listened to everything,” she said. “It was a very aggressive market, and so they lost out a couple of bids but they were successful in buying a home in four months.”

A starter home in New City, 37 miles north of New York City, costs a little more than $500,000. The couple, who have a combined income of $190,000, wanted to stay under $600,000.

“They didn’t want to be house poor. They were very realistic and willing to make compromise­s,” she said. “They understood this didn’t have to be their forever home.”

After losing three bids, the couple offered $35,000 over an asking price of $525,000 for a 2,000-square-foot home. While they could have applied for an FHA loan for first-time homebuyers, they decided to go for a convention­al loan.

“We felt convention­al loans would be seen more favorably in this competitiv­e market,” Martinez said. “We are a growing family, and we wanted a great school district. So we did our research and knew that’s what we wanted.”

The couple put down $60,000 and locked in a 2.7% mortgage rate for a 30year loan. They closed last summer on their three-bedroom house.

Martinez said the couple is creating a budget that will allow them to keep their debt low even with the new mortgage.

“We have a $3,600 mortgage payment per month so that’s something that we need to focus on,” she said. “So we really prioritize those bills.”

Barnes said even in this competitiv­e market, potential entry-level homebuyers can be successful if they are diligent and discipline­d.

“I always said to them, if I could, I would put them on a poster and tell everyone to just mimic what this couple did,” she said.

 ?? PROVIDED ?? Yesenia Martinez and Andrew Graham bought their first home in New City, N.Y., a 2,000-square-foot, three-bedroom house.
PROVIDED Yesenia Martinez and Andrew Graham bought their first home in New City, N.Y., a 2,000-square-foot, three-bedroom house.
 ?? PROVIDED ?? Yesenia Martinez and her husband, Andrew Graham, bought their first home in the New York suburbs.
PROVIDED Yesenia Martinez and her husband, Andrew Graham, bought their first home in the New York suburbs.

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