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Typical Costs In Getting a Reverse Mortgage
Many of the same costs that someone pays to obtain a home purchase loan, or
to refinance their existing mortgage, apply to reverse mortgages too. You
can expect to be charged an origination fee, up-front mortgage insurance
premium (for the FHA Home Equity Conversion Mortgage or HECM), an appraisal
fee, and certain other standard closing costs.
In most cases, these fees and costs are capped and may be financed as part
of the reverse mortgage. Below is a more in-depth explanation of each type
of fee.
Origination Fee
The origination fee covers a lender's operating expenses—including office
overhead, marketing costs, etc.—for making the reverse mortgage.
The origination fee is similar for both the HECM and the Fannie Mae Home
Keeper reverse mortgage.
Under the HECM program, the origination fee is equal to the greater of
$2,000 or 2 percent of the maximum claim amount (i.e., county FHA loan
limit). Currently, the FHA loan limit varies from a low of $160,176 (for
rural areas) to a high of $290,319 (for high-cost metropolitan areas).
Therefore, the 2 percent origination fee generally ranges between $3,204 (2
percent of $160,176) and $5,806 (2 percent of $290,319).
Home Keeper borrowers are charged an origination fee that may not exceed 2
percent of the value of the home. With either product, the entire amount of
the origination fee may be financed as part of the mortgage.
Mortgage Insurance Premium
Under the HECM program, borrowers are charged a mortgage insurance premium
(MIP), equal to 2 percent of the maximum claim amount, or home value,
whichever is less, plus an annual premium thereafter equal to 0.5 percent of
the loan balance.
The insurance premium protects both the borrower and the lender. For
example, if the company that manages the borrower's account - commonly
called the loan "servicer" - goes out of business, the FHA insurance
guarantees that the senior will have continued access to their loan funds.
Likewise, when the reverse mortgage matures - that is, when the loan must be
paid back - if the amount owed by the borrower exceeds the home's current
value, then the MIP covers the difference, so that the lender does not incur
a loss. |