ADD TO FAVORITES
Home
Automated Search
Search Mississippi MLS
Search Memphis Area MLS
PRE-QUALIFY FOR YOUR HOME LOAN
Value of Your Home?
Selling Tips
Real
Estate Q & A
Real Estate
Terms
Mortgage
Q & A
Mortgage Terms
Clients Corner
Area
Information
|
|
Parent Gifts & Loans
|
Q: |
Do I have to
disclose a parent's gift? |
|
A: |
Having
generous parents is nothing to hide. An estimated
one-third of first-time buyers purchase their home with
a loan or a money gift from their parents.
Lenders will ask for a gift letter stating that no
repayment of the "gift" is expected. In addition to the
letter, a lender can ask for two or three months' worth
of statements for the account where the down payment
funds are located. If the money was recently placed into
that account, the lender may ask where it came from and
request verification of that source as well.
Resources:
* "The Homebuyer's Survival Guide," Kenneth W. Edwards,
Dearborn Financial Publishing, Chicago; 1994.
|
|
|
Q: |
What is a gift
letter? |
|
A: |
If someone is
willing to make a gift of funds in order for you to
purchase a home, lenders will ask for a gift letter
stating that no repayment of the "gift" is expected. The
amount of the gift and the date funds were transferred
should be spelled out in the letter, along with the
donor's name, address, telephone number and relationship
to the borrower.
In addition to the letter, a lender can ask for two
or three months' worth of statements for the account
where the down payment funds are located. If the money
was recently placed into that account, the lender may
ask where it came from and request verification of that
source as well.
Gifts -- with the proper documentation -- can be from
relatives, friends, an employer, church, municipality,
or nonprofit organization. Lenders often have stricter
restrictions on gifts from friends and relatives other
than parents.
Also, if you put less than 20 percent down, some
lenders may require that a portion of the down payment
be your own cash, not a gift. If you want to use a gift
as part of your down payment, check with individual
lenders to learn the restrictions of specific private or
government-insured mortgage programs. |
|
|
|
|
|
|