The Assumable Guy Show

Can I Make Extra Payments on an Assumed Mortgage?

5 min · Gisteren
aflevering Can I Make Extra Payments on an Assumed Mortgage? artwork

Beschrijving

Yes, and Ryan makes a strong case for why extra payments on a 2.5% loan are basically a cheat code. Because so little of a low rate payment goes to interest, almost every extra dollar hits the principal directly. He runs the math on a $400,000 assumed loan at 2.5% where a buyer who throws the monthly savings at the principal instead of spending them pays the house off in 16 years instead of 30 and cuts their total interest from $169,000 down to $86,000. Same house, 14 years earlier, $83,000 less to the bank. He also gives you the one thing to watch when sending extra payments so the servicer applies it correctly, shares Ben and Liz's story of a couple doing exactly this on a $430,000 home at 2.99%, and is straight about when investing the difference actually makes more sense than paying down cheap debt. No prepayment penalty, no weird rules because you assumed it. It is your loan and you set the pace. Hit up assumableguy.com or DM @the.assumable.guy on Instagram.

Reacties

0

Wees de eerste die een reactie plaatst

Meld je nu aan en word lid van de The Assumable Guy Show community!

Probeer gratis

Probeer 14 dagen gratis

€ 9,99 / maand na proefperiode. · Elk moment opzegbaar.

  • Podcasts die je alleen op Podimo hoort
  • 20 uur luisterboeken / maand
  • Gratis podcasts

Alle afleveringen

20 afleveringen

aflevering Can I Make Extra Payments on an Assumed Mortgage? artwork

Can I Make Extra Payments on an Assumed Mortgage?

Yes, and Ryan makes a strong case for why extra payments on a 2.5% loan are basically a cheat code. Because so little of a low rate payment goes to interest, almost every extra dollar hits the principal directly. He runs the math on a $400,000 assumed loan at 2.5% where a buyer who throws the monthly savings at the principal instead of spending them pays the house off in 16 years instead of 30 and cuts their total interest from $169,000 down to $86,000. Same house, 14 years earlier, $83,000 less to the bank. He also gives you the one thing to watch when sending extra payments so the servicer applies it correctly, shares Ben and Liz's story of a couple doing exactly this on a $430,000 home at 2.99%, and is straight about when investing the difference actually makes more sense than paying down cheap debt. No prepayment penalty, no weird rules because you assumed it. It is your loan and you set the pace. Hit up assumableguy.com or DM @the.assumable.guy on Instagram.

Gisteren5 min
aflevering What Happens to the Seller's Escrow Account? artwork

What Happens to the Seller's Escrow Account?

A lot of sellers assume their escrow balance just disappears into the deal when a buyer takes over their mortgage. It does not. That money is yours and every dollar comes back to you. Ryan breaks down exactly what escrow is, why the balance at closing can easily be $2,500 to $3,000 or more, and the two ways it gets returned after an assumption. One way puts the money in your hands at the closing table. The other mails you a check 30 to 45 days later to an address you might not live at anymore. He also covers why getting the buyer to reimburse your escrow at closing does not cost them an extra dime since they have to fund that account either way, and why his team confirms the escrow handling with the servicer up front so nothing slips through the cracks. Escrow and equity are two separate buckets and sellers should see both back at the end of the deal. This episode makes sure that actually happens. Hit up assumableguy.com or DM @the.assumable.guy on Instagram.

9 jun 20266 min
aflevering What if I Owe More Than My Home is Worth? artwork

What if I Owe More Than My Home is Worth?

If you bought near the top in 2021 or 2022 and Zillow is telling you your home is worth less than you owe, this episode is going to change how you look at your situation. Ryan walks through exactly why being underwater is not the dealbreaker most sellers think it is when you have a low rate attached to your loan. He runs the math on a seller who owes $405,000 on a home that appraised at $390,000 and shows how a buyer saving $910 a month on the assumed payment makes back that entire $15,000 gap in about a year and a half. The rate fills the hole. He also covers why marketing an assumable property pulls in conventional and cash buyers too, not just assumption buyers, and why that competition is what gets the price up. Ryan shares Colin and Beth's story, sellers who were bracing to write a check at closing and instead walked away whole because of how the listing was positioned. If an agent has already told you your only move is a short sale, slow down and listen to this one first. Hit up assumableguy.com or DM @the.assumable.guy on Instagram.

4 jun 20266 min
aflevering Can I Assume a Mortgage if I'm Self-Employed? artwork

Can I Assume a Mortgage if I'm Self-Employed?

If the bank has ever looked at your tax returns and basically told you you're broke despite running a real business, this episode is for you. Ryan breaks down why self-employed buyers get squeezed on conventional loans and exactly how an assumable mortgage flips that dynamic. The secret is the payment. A lower rate means a lower monthly payment, which means you need less income on paper to qualify, and that changes everything for someone with aggressive write-offs. He walks through a real client, an HVAC business owner who got into a $430,000 home at 2.75% for about $1,500 a month after three lenders told him he could only afford a $350,000 home at $2,200 a month. More house, smaller payment. Ryan also covers how to handle the equity gap when self-employed income is lumpy, runs the blended rate math on combining an assumed loan with a gap loan, and is straight about what the bank still requires. If someone told you that you can not qualify, run the assumable math first. Hit up assumableguy.com or DM @the.assumable.guy on Instagram.

2 jun 20267 min
aflevering What Happens to My PMI or MIP After an Assumption? artwork

What Happens to My PMI or MIP After an Assumption?

Sellers with FHA loans ask this one constantly, and the answer is cleaner than most people expect. Ryan breaks down the difference between PMI and MIP, why VA loans do not have monthly mortgage insurance at all, and exactly what happens to that FHA insurance payment the day an assumption closes. Short version: it transfers to the buyer and the seller is done. He also walks buyers through the real math on taking over an FHA loan with MIP included, showing that even with $183 a month in insurance added to the payment, you are still saving $765 a month compared to a conventional loan at 6.5%. That is over $9,000 a year. Ryan also covers the refinance path for buyers who eventually want to drop the MIP and when that move actually makes sense. If MIP has been a sticking point in your decision to buy or sell through an assumption, this episode puts the number in perspective. Hit up assumableguy.com or DM @the.assumable.guy on Instagram.

28 mei 20266 min