FHA’s New Student Loan Rule Could Impact Kentucky Mortgage Borrowers
Student Loan Payment Calculations for FHA, VA, USDA, and Fannie Mae Loans in Kentucky
Fannie Mae Guidelines for Student Loans
- If a monthly payment is on the credit report, the lender may use that amount for qualifying purposes.
- If a monthly payment is on the credit report is incorrect, the lender may use the monthly payment on the most recent student loan statement
- If the monthly payment on the credit report is zero, the lender must use one of the following options to calculate the payment for qualifying purposes
- Document the borrower is on an income driven payment plan and the actual monthly payment is zero
- Use 1% of the outstanding student loan balance as the monthly payment
- Calculate a fully amortized payment using documented loan repayment terms
FHA Guidelines for Student LoansRegardless of the payment status (currently in payment or deferred), the lender must use either:
- The greater of:
- 1% of the outstanding balance; or
- The monthly payment reported on the credit; or
- Calculate a fully amortized payment using documented loan repayment terms
USDA Rural Housing Guidelines for Student LoansRegardless of the payment amount reporting on the credit, the lender must include the payment as follows:
- A permanent amortized, fixed payment may be used in the debt ratio when the lender retains documentation to verify the payment is fixed, the interest rate is fixed, and the repayment term is fixed.
- Payments for deferred loans, Income Based Repayment (IBR), Graduated, Adjustable, and other types of repayment agreements which are not fixed cannot be used in the total debt ratio calculation. One percent of the loan balance reflected on the credit report must be used as the monthly payment. No additional documentation is required.
VA Mortgage Guidelines for Student Loans
- If the borrower can document the student loan will be deferred 12 months from the closing date, the monthly payment does not need to be considered
- If a student loan is in repayment or scheduled to begin repayment within 12 months from the closing date, the threshold payment amount must be calculated by using 5% of the loan balance divided by 12 months
- If the payment reporting on the credit report is greater than the threshold payment calculation amount, then the credit report payment must be used for ratios.
- If the payment reporting on the credit report is less than the threshold payment calculation and the lender is using the lower payment to qualify the borrower then:
- A statement from the student loan servicer reflecting the actual loan terms and payment information must be included in the file.
- The statement must be dated within 60 days of closing
- It is the underwriter’s discretion to use the lower payment
Last month, the FHA changed its rules for how it deals with student loan deferments and mortgage applications.
Source: FHA’s New Student Loan Rule Could Impact Mortgage Borrowers
But some of that leniency, at least when it comes to student loan debt, changed on September 14, when the FHA tightened its requirements for how mortgage lenders treat deferred student loan debt. In the past, student loan debt that was deferred for more than 12 months before the mortgage closing date wasn’t counted in the debt-to-income ratio. Now, 2% of that debt is included in the calculation…
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