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The Homeowners Protection Act May Save You Money

If you purchased your home with a down payment of less than 20%, odds are you also purchased - and continue to pay for - private mortgage insurance (PMI).

PMI protects lenders against default on loans with low down payments by providing coverage for the costs of foreclosure that cannot be matched by the borrower's investment in the house.

This protection is particularly important to lenders when a mortgage is taken for a low-down-payment purchase because of the statistical correlation between low borrower equity and default. There is also a common sense correlation: the more of your own money you have invested in a home, the less likely you are to allow it to go into foreclosure.

Here's how it works. Your mortgage lender chooses an insurer who sells the lender a policy covering 20% to 30% of the mortgage balance - more than enough to cover the lender's costs should they be forced to foreclose on your home. The lender then includes the cost of the premiums in your monthly mortgage bill.

PMI Helps You Get the Most for Your Money

Without the availability of private mortgage insurance many people would have to wait much longer before achieving the goal of homeownership, industry experts say. In the last 25 years, home prices have appreciated at a much faster rate than salaries have grown. This means that it is much harder for today's first-time homebuyers to save enough to make a down payment than it was for their parents or grandparents.

But PMI makes it possible for lenders to offer mortgages to buyers making down payments of as little as 5% to 10% of the home's total value. This can take years off prospective homeowners' wait for savings to accrue.

PMI also allows buyers - whether first-time or not - to significantly increase their purchasing power. Because it permits the down payment to be a much smaller percentage of the total purchase price, PMI can "convert" a prospective buyer's $10,000 from a 20% down payment on a $50,000 home to a 10% down payment on a $100,000 home - or even a 5% down on a $200,000 home.

Insurance Becomes Unnecessary Over Time

What many of the homeowners taking advantage of these policies don't know is that they do not have to go on paying PMI premiums indefinitely.

A recent law, The Homeowners' Protection Act of 1998, which went into effect on July 29, 1999 requires lenders to automatically cancel PMI once a homeowner's equity in a property has hit 22%. Homeowners, whose mortgages originated prior to the enactment of this law, will still be protected by the act's mandatory requirement that lenders notify all homeowners of their right to cancel PMI and how to go about doing this. Under this law homeowners have the right to initiate cancellation themselves once they have attained 20% equity in their home.

If you are paying unnecessarily, canceling your PMI could save you hundreds of dollars each year. In addition, many PMI payment plans begin with the full first-year's premium payment placed in an escrow account by the lender, followed by 1/12 of the annual premium paid with each monthly mortgage payment. If your PMI payments were structured this way, you may also be entitled to a refund for any unused premium payments in the escrow account.
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