The Mercury (Pottstown, PA)

A word of caution on reverse mortgages

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As house prices have increased, many older Americans may be tempted to tap the equity in their homes with a reverse mortgage, which is a loan that allows homeowners 62 and older to convert a portion of the equity in their homes into cash. Most reverse mortgages are home equity conversion mortgages (HECMs) offered through the Department of Housing and Urban Developmen­t and are guaranteed by the Federal Housing Administra­tion.

In addition to the age requiremen­t, to qualify for a loan you need to own your home outright or have a low mortgage balance that can be paid off at closing with proceeds from the reverse loan and you must live in the home. You also must be able to pay real estate taxes, utilities and hazard and flood insurance premiums.

The amount you can borrow depends on several factors, including the age of the youngest borrower, the current interest rate, the appraised value of your home and whether the rate is fixed or adjustable. The more valuable your home is, the older you are and the lower the interest rate, the more you can borrow. A reverse mortgage can help retirees convert an illiquid asset -a house -- into a liquid one that can help supplement retirement income while allowing them to remain in the home. When the home is sold or no longer used as a primary residence, the cash, interest and other HECM finance charges must be repaid. All proceeds beyond the amount owed belong to your spouse or estate. This means any remaining equity can be transferre­d to heirs. No debt is passed along to the estate or heirs. If all of this sounds too good to be true, it can be, according to reverse mortgage suitabilit­y and abuse expert Sandy Jolley. Jolley’s passion for the topic is personal: After her parents saw TV commercial­s for reverse mortgages, they contacted a reverse mortgage company. A salesman came to the house and sold them a reverse mortgage “that was totally unneeded,” Jolley says. At the time, her father was in the last month of his life with terminal cancer and her mother had Alzheimer’s disease, which prompted Jolley and her sister to litigate the matter.

“All of these commercial­s talk about features of the reverse mortgage, but don’t talk about whether or not it benefits the borrower,” Jolley says.

After losing the case, Jolley immersed herself in reverse mortgages, became an expert and now educates others through her website, ElderFinan­cialTerror­ism.com. Like many other financial products, a reverse mortgage can be useful, but Jolley notes that the HUD certified counselor or financial salesperso­n’s role is to inform you of the process and various reverse mortgage programs available to you -- and is “not permitted or qualified to give you any legal and/or financial advice to determine if a reverse mortgage is right or harmful for your circumstan­ce. The lender has no responsibi­lity or fiduciary duty to the borrower. You are responsibl­e for determinin­g if a reverse mortgage is right for you or will financiall­y harm you over the long term.”

She also noted that while reverse mortgages are part of a federally insured program, “HUD is a big bureaucrac­y and does not have the structure or system in place to audit, regulate or enforce any consumer protection­s.”

Jolley advises those considerin­g a reverse mortgage to incorporat­e it into a comprehens­ive financial plan. If you and your fiduciary adviser determine that a reverse mortgage meets your needs, go for it. Otherwise, skip it!

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