What is Mortgage Insurance?
Saturday, May 23rd, 2009Lender’s Mortgage Insurance, also know as Private Mortgage Insurance, (PMI), is required on more and more NJ mortgage loans nowadays. Basically, in a nutshell, it protects the New Jersey mortgage lender. To give it a more professional definition, as defined by Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, is insurance payable to a lender or trustee for a pool of securities that may be required when taking out a mortgage loan. So, essentially, it protects the mortgage lender if you default on your mortgage loan. There really isn’t any more to it than that.
Mortgage Insurance in New Jersey is used to offset the losses a lender faces when the property goes into default, then total foreclosure, then can’t recover those losses fromt eh foced sale of the property in a foreclosure aution that takes place in NJ. The annual cost of PMI varies greatly and depends on a number of factors. NJ mortgage loan term, loan type, loan-to-value ratio, and total coverage amount, all factor into exactly what a PMI payment amount will be , on a monthly basis, for some who refinances in NJ or purchases houses in NJ for sale. Basically, anyone who gets a mortgage in the Garden State, likely will pay PMI.
The “catch” to PMI is that it is ONLY required on FHA loans, or conventional loans, when the buyer of NJ homes is putting less than 20% down. PMI may be paid up front on the mortgage loan, or built into the loan through monthly payments, very similar to when you are getting any other type of insurance in New Jersey. If you are putting less than 20% down when buying NJ homes, then the PMI “falls off” of your monthly mortgage payment, when the loan to value (LTV) of your property, gets below the 80% mark, wether it is by paying down the loan, or simply by market appreciation. Please keep in mind, that PMI and Homeowners Insurance, are two TOTALLY different types of insurance!
In the past, a borrower was able to get a second mortgage to avoid paying the PMI, if they did not have the required 20% down payment. Say they had 15% to put down on an NJ home for sale, and they wanted to avoid paying PMI, they would get a “subordinate” mortgage for the other 5%. Nowadays, getting secon mortgages is much harder, and more costly, so buyers of New Jersey homes for sale generally just accept the PMI, knowing that it won’t be there forever.