Reverse Mortgage Pros and Cons
Pros of
Reverse Mortgages
-
Allows the homeowner to stay in the home permanently.
-
Pays off existing mortgages on the home.
-
Simple to qualify for because credit score and income are not
considered.
-
No monthly payments are due for as long as the homeowner lives
in the home.
-
The homeowner receives
payments on flexible terms:
-
Credit line for emergencies
-
Monthly income
-
Lump sum distribution
-
Any combination of the above
-
A reverse mortgage can not get "upside down" so the heirs will
never owe more than the home is worth.
-
Heirs inherit the home and keep the remaining equity after the
balance of the reverse mortgage is paid off.
-
Proceeds are not taxable.
-
The interest rate is lower than traditional mortgages and home
equity loans.
Reverse Mortgage
Cons
-
The
fees on a reverse mortgage are the same as a traditional
FHA mortgage but are higher than a conventional mortgage because
of the insurance cost. The largest costs are:
-
FHA mortgage insurance
-
Origination fee
-
Although Social Security and Medicare are not affected,
Medicaid and other need-based government assistance can be
affected if too much funds are withdrawn (and not spent) in one
month.
-
The program is not well understood by most individuals.
However, the availability of independent
reverse mortgage
counseling helps.
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