Mortgage Loan Modifications



Posted: Saturday, November 15, 2008

by
Goldstein and Clegg LLC

What should owners of homes know about dealing with today's economy?  The new words of "Short Sale" or "Loan Mortgage Modification" are new terms that homeowners never thought they would need to hear or understand what they mean in order to possibly save their homes or their credit.  No one planned for such a drop in home values and such a rise in costs. With all the new terms and with all the sever changes in this economy, it is no wonder that homeowners fear doing anything when they are faced with financial hardship.  Homeowners need not longer fear these terms and more importantly understand why loan modifications and short sale refinancing may make the difference between a homeowner keeping their home, avoiding bankruptcy and saving their credit.

We all heard about the great "bailout" of 2008.  We heard both the pros and the cons with our government bailing out several banks, insurance companies, financial institutions and etc.  However, the biggest pro for homeowners will come from this bailout.  The pro is that mortgage companies are now starting to stop foreclosure sales, short sales and going back to the owners to modify their loans so to allow them to keep their home irrespective of their failure to pay their mortgage payments.  Therefore, debtors will begin to see an order of process for homeowners to fight to keep their homes in these unprecedented times of financial suffering.

A loan modification will be likely the first step for homeowners to consider.  A loan modification is simply a homeowner asking the mortgage company to modify the current terms of their mortgage.  Homeowners will ask a mortgage company to modify their mortgage because of being late on payments, variable interest rates, too high of monthly mortgage payments and etc.  Homeowners can seek this relief on their own directly with the mortgage company.  However, the process is very time consuming and often frustrating for a homeowner.  It recommended that you hire a law firm to help get you through the process.

One final point is that mortgage companies today are requiring that loan modifications be conducted first and attempted by the homeowner before they will even consider a Short Sale.

Attorneys Michael Goldstein and Jill Phillips drafted the forgoing article on loan modifications for the Law Office of Goldstein and Clegg, LLC.

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