Banking/loan question

1100011CS

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Oct 5, 2007
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I posted this in the refinance thread but wanted to get some advice. We're trying to get a construction loan to finance a renovation on a house that we got through an estate. The one bank that isn't totally overwhelmed right now are saying we can't get a construction loan because we already bought the house. How do people finance major renovations if they can't get construction loans?
 
I posted this in the refinance thread but wanted to get some advice. We're trying to get a construction loan to finance a renovation on a house that we got through an estate. The one bank that isn't totally overwhelmed right now are saying we can't get a construction loan because we already bought the house. How do people finance major renovations if they can't get construction loans?


Home improvement line of credits. Basically second mortgages.
 
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I posted this in the refinance thread but wanted to get some advice. We're trying to get a construction loan to finance a renovation on a house that we got through an estate. The one bank that isn't totally overwhelmed right now are saying we can't get a construction loan because we already bought the house. How do people finance major renovations if they can't get construction loans?

I don't know much about the difference between a construction loan and a HELOC, but are you short on equity in the house? I wonder if that is their actual reason vs. "already bought the house".
 
I don't know much about the difference between a construction loan and a HELOC, but are you short on equity in the house? I wonder if that is their actual reason vs. "already bought the house".


Think he has a new person who isn't quite sure how to help him.
 
Home improvement line of credits. Basically second mortgages.
But can I roll that into a mortgage when we're done with the renovations and sell our current house? The bank we're talking to is saying we can't. We'll be stuck with HELOC until it's paid off. We're talking about a loan just as big as my current mortgage, actually bigger until we sell our current house.
 
But can I roll that into a mortgage when we're done with the renovations and sell our current house? The bank we're talking to is saying we can't. We'll be stuck with HELOC until it's paid off. We're talking about a loan just as big as my current mortgage, actually bigger until we sell our current house.

what percentage of the probable appraised price will it be after completion
 
I posted this in the refinance thread but wanted to get some advice. We're trying to get a construction loan to finance a renovation on a house that we got through an estate. The one bank that isn't totally overwhelmed right now are saying we can't get a construction loan because we already bought the house. How do people finance major renovations if they can't get construction loans?

Without knowing too many details, the fact that you own the property already shouldn't matter much on whether or not you qualify for a construction loan, home equity loan, home improvement loan, or whatever else anyone wants to call it. There are technical differences between them all, but they mostly accomplish the same thing. The only thing I can think of is maybe that bank's internal loan policy is rather strict and they do not like getting involved in these types of projects, which can carry some significant risk. Just depends on the bank.

A bigger question is how big is the renovation project? If it's a significant sum of money comparative to the as is value of the home, most banks will get the property appraised "as completed" and then set you up with a construction loan based on percentage of the as completed appraised value. That's usually around 80% but federal regulation allows banks up to 85% on those types of projects (assuming it's a 1-4 family residence). If the bank you're working with isn't wanting to do this project, there are other banks out there that will. It's pretty normal financing.
 
If I'm getting your question, around 65%. That is the loan/appraisal

Yeah that’s it. Marshalltown is a hole for me for connections. This is a basic refi with improvements. Not difficult. I’ve wrote these when I was a loan officer and appraise these now regularly. I would find a small bank in a town outside of Marshalltown and explain to them what you want. They will be able to help you.
 
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Without knowing too many details, the fact that you own the property already shouldn't matter much on whether or not you qualify for a construction loan, home equity loan, home improvement loan, or whatever else anyone wants to call it. There are technical differences between them all, but they mostly accomplish the same thing. The only thing I can think of is maybe that bank's internal loan policy is rather strict and they do not like getting involved in these types of projects, which can carry some significant risk. Just depends on the bank.

A bigger question is how big is the renovation project? If it's a significant sum of money comparative to the as is value of the home, most banks will get the property appraised "as completed" and then set you up with a construction loan based on percentage of the as completed appraised value. That's usually around 80% but federal regulation allows banks up to 85% on those types of projects (assuming it's a 1-4 family residence). If the bank you're working with isn't wanting to do this project, there are other banks out there that will. It's pretty normal financing.
Yes, the as-is value of the house is close to nothing right now. We're almost starting from scratch.
 
Yes, the as-is value of the house is close to nothing right now. We're almost starting from scratch.

And the house is NOT in the estate's name any more? You purchased it and are holding it in your personal name or a business that you own? As in you are the legal owner of the real estate, correct?
 
Ok, that makes it messier. It’s now a speculative loan. Yeah, you will have more issues now and a reduced loan to value on it. Some limit even at 50%.
To be clear, we will be living in it when complete. The thought was that we could finance the renovations with a construction loan or HELOC (equity in our current home or the speculative credit in the renovated one) then roll either one into a 15 year mortgage when complete and our current house sells (so we'd have money for down and lower the mortgage).
 
To be clear, we will be living in it when complete. The thought was that we could finance the renovations with a construction loan or HELOC (equity in our current home or the speculative credit in the renovated one) then roll either one into a 15 year mortgage when complete and our current house sells (so we'd have money for down and lower the mortgage).

Ok, so it would be classified as a bridge loan and renovation loan. Shouldn’t be awful but best to deal with a direct loan officer instead of an originator.