Sellers - Is A Short Sale A Viable Option for You?
Sellers - Is A Short Sale A Viable Option for You?
Posted on Jan 11, 2011
Are Short Sales a Viable Option for Sellers? For many sellers this is a viable option; however be assured that you must prove that you have a hardship. The following criteria are just some of the hardships that the lien holder may grant a short sale status on, but there are many factors: • Death of Princiipal Borrower • Death of Principal Borrower Family Member • Serious Illness • Marital Problems (Divorce, Separation) • Unemployment • Lessened Income • Excessive Obligations • Long Distance Employment Transfer • Military Service • Unable to Sell Property or rent Property • Principal Borrower has Business Failure
If you feel you may qualify, what’s your next step? • Call a realtor who has past experience in short sales and can advise you. There is a possibility they can work out something with your lender where you can stay in your home. • If they feel you have a potential short sale, they will contact your lending institution; obtain the package that must be filled out and sent back to the lending institution; and they will speak to the lending institution, with your permission, through the whole transaction. • The realtor will place the property for sale and keep in constant contact with the lending institution for you. Is there an advantage to going this route? • It is not as distressing as facing possible foreclosure • Your future purchase will be driven by your FICO credit score And sellers take a bigger “hit” on their credit scores if they have a foreclosure vs. a short sale. Of course, this could change also. In a foreclosure your score can be reduced from 259-280 points, but with a short sale it could be reduced from 80-100 points. • The waiting time to buy another home is also a consideration. With a foreclosure, it can be 3 to 4 years before a lender will give you a reasonable interest rate and only 18 months to 2 years on a short sale.