In a move expected to bring 250,000 first-time homebuyers into the market, FHA will reduce annual Daytona Beach mortgage insurance premiums by half a percentage point, to 0.85 percent. The move is expected to make homeownership more affordable for more than 2 million homeowners in the next three years.
After raising Daytona Beach mortgage insurance premiums six times during the housing bust, the Obama administration is reversing course and rolling back mortgage insurance premiums charged by the Federal Housing Administration by enough to save homeowners an average of $900 a year.
Upfront Daytona Beach Mortgage Insurance Premiums Will Remain Unchanged
FHA’s upfront premiums of 1.75 percent will remain unchanged. So a first-time homebuyer taking out a $180,000 mortgage will pay $3,150 upfront and $1,530 a year in premiums for access to FHA mortgage programs that let them purchase a home with as little as 3.5 percent down. Today, the same homeowner pays $2,430 a year in annual premiums.
The National Association of Realtors claims that FHA premium increases priced nearly 400,000 borrowers out of the housing market in 2013, and 234,000 in 2014. In the past four years, NAR said, the share of first-time buyers using FHA-backed loans shrank from 56 percent to 39 percent.
The hope is for the premium rollback to provide greater access to homeownership for entry-level and underrepresented buyers.
We’ll keep you informed on this reduction of Daytona Beach mortgage insurance rates as it moves forward. In the meantime, you can get more information about Daytona Beach mortgage insurance and mortgages in our section on Daytona Beach Mortgage Info to your right under Daytona Beach Real Estate Categories.
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