Tuesday, July 10, 2007

Home Buying Self-Assessment

Starting a home-shopping / home-buying process means answering a lot of questions:

Are you ready to buy a home? How much of a mortgage loan can you afford? How's your credit? What size house do you need? What area do you prefer to live in? How are your cash reserves?

The more Q&A, research and soul-searching you do in advance, the smoother the home buying process will be later on. Let's look, then, at some key questions you should ask yourself in the self-assessment phase.

What Can You Afford?
Before house hunting, determine how much of a mortgage you can comfortably afford. "Comfortably" means you can pay your mortgage each month and still have money for living expenses, savings, and quality-of-life niceties.

In other words, you don't want a mortgage payment that forces you to "squeak by" each month.

To determine your mortgage comfort-zone, you need three things: a budget, a price and a mortgage calculator. For the price, just start with the cost of a house you think you might be interested in buying.

At first, don't worry about whether the price is too high - you'll find that out soon enough when you run the numbers.

Next, run the home price through a mortgage calculator at current interest rates and at a 30-year fixes mortgage. (You might choose a different mortgage type later on; but this exercise is just to get a ballpark mortgage payment based on home price, so choose the 30-year fixed option for the sake of simplicity.)

Mortgage calculators can easily be found on the Internet. Just type "mortgage calculator" into any major search engine, and you'll find several. Or even easier, you can just use one of our mortgage calculators.


http://www.homebuyinginstitute.com/assessment_article3.php