November 2, 1998, Revised November 22, 2004, July 17, 2009
"My fiancee and I are first time buyers and would like to purchase a
single family home in New Jersey. He has an outstanding credit report
and I have a bad one (collections, late payments, bounced checks). We
both make 60K a year and each has 20K in the bank. What are the chances
of us getting a mortgage with a decent interest rate?"
Available Options When Good Credit Marries Bad Credit
Here are your options:
Option one: Buy the house together as co-owners and co-borrowers. In
this situation, your bad credit will result in a bad credit rating for
the transaction, and a corresponding high interest rate. This is exactly
what you are looking to avoid.
Option two: Have "good-credit" buy the house alone, leaving "bad-credit"
out of the deal. But then the mortgage would be limited to the amount
that the income of "good-credit" can support. This means that you might
not be able to purchase the house that you want and that would be
affordable if both incomes were taken into account.
Option three: Have "good credit" buy the house using a "no-income
verification" mortgage. Then the mortgage amount would not be limited by
the income of "good-credit" because the lender will not consider income
in underwriting the loan. However, qualifying for a no-income
verification loan requires that you put up a large down payment –
probably 25 or 30% of the property value. Note: The financial crisis
eliminated this option.
Option four: Have a third party with good credit and income replace
"bad-credit" as the co-borrower. Usually only a parent would be willing
to play this role.
Which way you go depends in large part on how much you want to spend on
your house. The table below provides estimates of the highest sale price
you can afford at different down payment requirements, income, and
available cash. It indicates that the no-income verification option
would limit you to a house in the $120,000 to $140,000 range because of
the large down payment requirement. On the other hand, the income of
"good-credit" alone, along with the cash from both of you, would allow a
$340,000 house at 5% down.
That looks like the way to go unless you want to spend more, in which
case you must find another co-borrower.
| Maximum House Price |
Annual Income |
Available Cash |
Down Payment (% of Price) |
| $450,000 |
$120,000 |
$40,000 |
5% |
| 290,000 |
120,000 |
40,000 |
10 |
| 140,000 |
120,000 |
40,000 |
25 |
| 120,000 |
120,000 |
40,000 |
30 |
| 220,000 |
60,000 |
20,000 |
5 |
| 340,000 |
60,000 |
40,000 |
5 |
Note: It is assumed that the loan rate is 7%, mortgage insurance raises
this to 7.79% on a 5% loan and 7.54% on a 10% loan, the mortgage payment
plus taxes and insurance cannot exceed 28% of income, taxes and
insurance are 1.825% of sale price annually, and settlement costs other
than down payment are 4% of the loan amount.
I hope that "good-credit" has the foresight to insist on a pre-nuptial
contract with "bad-credit" that spells out new ground rules for using
credit after marriage.
Will the Debts of Poor Credit Affect the Loan-Carrying Capacity of Good
Credit?
Only if the debts are joint. If they are in the name of the spouse with
poor credit, they won't appear in the other spouse's credit report.
Can Poor Credit Be Part Owner of the House?
Many lenders will allow a spouse who is not a co-borrower to be a
co-owner, provided her name appears on the mortgage.
In contrast to the note, which evidences the debt that the borrower
promises to repay, the mortgage pledges the property as security for the
debt. If the borrower doesn’t pay, the lender can acquire the property
through foreclosure. To protect the right to foreclose, the lender will
require all co-owners to sign the mortgage, whether they are
co-borrowers or not.
Can Poor Credit Be Added to the Deed After the Loan is Closed?
Yes. However, most notes have a provision that allows the lender to
demand repayment of the loan if the names on the deed are changed
without the lender’s permission. The lender is unlikely to exercise this
right so long as the loan remains in good standing. If the borrower
defaults, however, this provision allows the lender to foreclose, even
if both co-owners are not on the mortgage.