The Federal Housing Administration (FHA) makes it
easier for consumers to obtain affordable home improvement loans by insuring
loans made by private lenders to improve properties that meet certain
requirements. This is one of HUD's most frequently used loan insurance
products. By the end of fiscal year (FY) 1996, it had insured almost 35
million loans totaling $43.6 billion.
The Title I program insures loans to finance the light or moderate
rehabilitation of properties, as well as the construction of non residential
buildings on the property. This program may be used to insure such loans for
up to 20 years on either single or multi family properties. The maximum loan
amount is $25,000 for improving a single family home or for improving or
building a non residential structure.
For improving a multi family structure, the maximum loan amount is $12,000 per
family unit, not to exceed a total of $60,000 for the structure. These are
fixed rate loans, for which lenders charge interest at market rates. The
interest rates are not subsidized by HUD, although some communities
participate in local housing rehabilitation programs that provide reduced rate
property improvement loans through Title I lenders.
Only lenders approved by HUD specifically for this program can make loans
covered by Title I insurance. While most lenders and contractors use this
program responsibly, HUD urges consumers to use caution in choosing and
supervising home repair contractors conducting Title I repair/renovation work.
A recent HUD review of Title I uncovered many instances of "unscrupulous
contractors performing shoddy work, falsifying documents, overcharging
homeowners, and using deceptive advertising." HUD encourages homeowners to
work directly with their lender in selecting a home repair contractor in order
to prevent inflated estimates.
(Article Courtesy Mortgage 101)
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