Single Family
Mortgage Insurance
FHA's mortgage
insurance programs help low- and moderate-income families become
homeowners by lowering some of the costs of their mortgage loans.
FHA mortgage insurance also encourages mortgage companies to make
loans to otherwise creditworthy borrowers and projects that might
not be able to meet conventional underwriting requirements, by
protecting the mortgage company against loan default on mortgages
for properties that meet certain minimum requirements--including
manufactured homes, single-family and multifamily properties, and
some health-related facilities.
Section 203(b) is
the centerpiece of FHA's single-family insurance programs. It is
the successor of the program that helped save homeowners from
default in the 1930s, that helped open the suburbs for returning
veterans in the 1940s and 1950s, and that helped shape the modern
mortgage finance system. Today, FHA One- to Four-Family Mortgage
Insurance is still an important tool through which the Federal
Government expands homeownership opportunities for first-time
homebuyers and other borrowers who would not otherwise qualify for
conventional loans on affordable terms, as well as for those who
live in underserved areas where mortgages may be harder to get. In
FY 1997, FHA insured more than 790,000 homes, valued at almost $60
billion, under this program. FHA currently insures a total of
about 7 million loans valued at nearly $400 billion. These
obligations are protected by FHA's Mutual Mortgage Insurance Fund,
which is sustained entirely by borrower premiums.
Section 203(b)
has several important features:
Downpayment requirements can be low.
In contrast to conventional mortgage products, which frequently
require downpayments of 10 percent or more of the purchase price
of the home, single-family mortgages insured by FHA under Section
203(b) make it possible to reduce downpayments to as little as 3
percent. This is because FHA insurance allows borrowers to finance
approximately 97 percent of the value of their home purchase
through their mortgage, in some cases.
Many closing costs can be financed.
With most conventional loans, the borrower must pay, at the time
of purchase, closing costs (the many fees and charges associated
with buying a home) equivalent to 2-3 percent of the price of the
home. This program allows the borrower to finance many of these
charges, thus reducing the up-front cost of buying a home. FHA
mortgage insurance is not free: borrowers pay an up-front
insurance premium (which may be financed) at the time of purchase,
as well as monthly premiums that are not financed, but instead are
added to the regular mortgage payment.
Some fees are limited. FHA
rules impose limits on some of the fees that mortgage companies
may charge in making a loan. For example, the loan origination fee
charged by the mortgage company for the administrative cost of
processing the loan may not exceed one percent of the amount of
the mortgage.
HUD sets limits on the amount that
may be insured. To make sure that its programs serve low-
and moderate-income people, FHA sets limits on the dollar value of
the mortgage loan.