January 22, 2001, Revised December 1, 2006, December 12, 2007
Under Federal legislation passed in 1999, private mortgage insurance is
cancelled automatically at some point, but borrowers who take the
initiative may be able to terminate earlier than those who wait. For the
background to this legislation, see
Cancelling Private Mortgage
Insurance (1).
Mortgage Insurance Termination Rules
Under one provision of the 1999 law, lenders are required to cancel
private mortgage insurance on most home mortgage loans made after July
29, 1999. Cancellation will occur automatically when amortization has
reduced the loan balance to 78% of the value of the property at the time
the loan was made.
But under another provision of this law, lenders must terminate
insurance at the borrower’s request when the loan balance hits 80% of
the original value. Borrowers who take the initiative can thus terminate
earlier.
Warning: The lender need not accept your request for cancellation if:
*You have a second mortgage.
*The property has declined in value.
*You had a payment late by 30 days or more within the year preceding the
cancellation date, or late by 60 days or more within the year preceding
the cancellation date, or late by 60 days or more in the year before
that.
Time to Termination
Because termination is based on original rather than current value, the
wait can be a long one. With normal amortization, it takes 142 months
for the loan balance on a 8% 30-year loan equal to 95% of property
value, to fall to 80%. A 15-year loan that is otherwise identical will
get there in 47 months.
However, borrowers who add to their regular monthly payment will reach
the 80% target more quickly. If they add 1/12 of the payment every month
-- for example, a $600 payment is raised to $650 -- the mortgages cited
above will hit the 80% target in 91 months and 38 months, respectively.
If your loan was made before July 29, 1999, you are not covered by the
1999 law. If you were lucky enough to have your loan sold to Fannie Mae
or Freddie Mac, however, you are subject to the cancellation rules of
the agencies regardless of when the loan was made.
Mortgage Insurance Termination Rules of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac
The agencies' rules are more favorable to homeowners because they are
based on the current appraised value of the property rather than the
value at the time the loan was made.
Under these rules:
* You can terminate after two years if the loan balance is no more than
75% of current appraised value, and after 5 years if it is no more than
80%.
*You must request cancellation, and obtain an appraisal acceptable to
the agencies and to the lender.
*The ratios required for termination are lower if there is a second
mortgage, if the property is held for investment rather than occupancy,
or if the property is other than single-family.
*The agencies will not accept termination if your payment has been
30-days late within the prior year, or 60-days late in the year before
that.
Using current value rather than original value can substantially shorten
the period to termination. For example, the 30-year 8% loan that takes
142 months to reach 80% of original value, will get there in 96 months
with just 1% annual appreciation, and in 53 months with 3% appreciation.
If your loan was made before July 29, 1999, and if it is not held by
Fannie or Freddie, the termination rules that apply are those of your
lender. In some states (California, Connecticut, Maryland, Minnesota,
Missouri, New York, North Carolina, Oregon, Texas and Virginia),
lenders’ rules may be affected by state law.
Developing Your Mortgage Insurance Termination Strategy
The best strategy is to assume you are subject to the liberal
Fannie/Freddie rules. After 2 years, begin periodically to estimate the
current value of your house. Web sites offering tools that can help
include Homegain.com, zillow.com, Dataquick.com, Propertyview.com and Domania.com.
Simple explanations of how these sites work can be found in Randy
Johnson’s excellent book, "How to Find a Home and Get a Mortgage on the
Internet." Then you can use my calculator 4a,
How Long Before Mortgage Insurance Terminates.
When it appears that you might meet the agencies’ requirements, contact
your lender and ask whether your mortgage is held by one of the
agencies. If it is, confirm the ratio of balance to current value that
permits termination in your case, and ask about acceptable appraisers.
If your loan isn’t held by one of the agencies, ask the lender for a
written statement of its own termination policy. If your loan was made
after July 29, 1999, follow the more liberal of the lender’s rules or
the Federal law. If your loan was made before July 29, 1999, you are
stuck with the lender’s rules.
But don’t accept rules substantially less liberal than those of
Fannie/Freddie without protest. Let the lender know that so long as you
are forced to pay for insurance that Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac say
isn't necessary, the lender need not try to cross-sell you anything
else.
NOTE: If you have an FHA mortgage, the termination rules are different.
See
Cancelling FHA
Insurance.