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..... for the home Buyers & Sellers in Mississauga, Brampton, Toronto Area.
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Getting a mortgage in Toronto, Mississauga, and Brampton area may not be a stressful and sometimes frustrating process. The focus is to make the entire mortgage process go as smoothly as possible. It is very important that you are prepared before you go for the meeting with your loan or mortgage officer. Here are a few helpful tips to successfully acquire a mortgage in Ontario Canada. It is not only the loan/mortgage amount you need, it also the terms and conditions of the whole mortgage package you have to understand and negotiate in your best interest and in financial terms. 1. Look at your finances as a whole. 2. Make sure to check your credit record » http://www.equifax.ca/ For a small amount, Equifax will send you your credit report. This is the same information lenders will receive. By getting a copy of your credit report before you apply for a loan, you'll get a first look at any problems or discrepancies that have sprung up. Let's look back for a moment and talk about credit bureaus. We live In today’s high-tech computerized world where big brother is always watching, credit bureaus generally have exchange agreements with companies who provide credit, like credit cards (Visa, MasterCard, American Express, and others) and department or retail stores as well as banks, credit unions, and savings and loans. On a daily, weekly, monthly, or semiannual basis, these companies electronically send all their information to the credit bureau, which stores it in a mammoth database and updates the records of each person on file. When you go to any department store and sign up for its credit card, it calls the credit bureau (to do a credit check) to be sure you have enough funds to pay your bills. Banks do it the same way. When you go to apply for a mortgage, the lender wants to know how many debts are outstanding, and what your track record is in paying them. Credit bureaus provide that information. They can even tell if you've been paying your taxes or if you have court judgments against you. Instead, go to the source of the problem—the company or credit originator that claims you owe them money. Ask them to pull up the payment record and try to work out whose bill it actually is. (Or if it turns out to be yours, pay it.) There should be some identification other than name that can easily solve the problem, like a Social Insurance Number, the male/female check box, age, race, etc. Once you prove that the bill is not yours, the credit originator should correct its computers. Of course, it may take some time for that correction to work its way through the company's computers all the way through to the credit bureau. If you've started the process before you've found a home, you shouldn't have too much trouble. On the other hand, if you've gone to a lender because you've found the house of your dreams and then discover your credit is in jeopardy, you may want to get a letter from the credit originator that explains there has been a mistake and it has been corrected. You want to get your name cleared up as quickly as possible. 3. Gather The Information You Need Ahead of Time. 4. Know The Current Lending Guidelines. One advantage to this type of financing is that CMHC-insured mortgages become open after three years. All that's required to pay off your mortgage at that point is to pay a penalty of three months' interest. (An open mortgage means you can pay it off or refinance at current rates at any point.) 5. CMHC's 0 or 5 Per Cent Down Program These loans must be insured, and while you can choose any term you wish, your income must be able to meet the payments required under a three-year term. 6. Conventional Mortgage: 7. Qualify your lender. For example, if you're self-employed, and you've only been self-employed for a year, you may find it more difficult, even though you may have paid every bill on time in your life. The reason for that is that lenders need to see that you've been self-employed, maintaining an income for at least two years, and have the tax returns to prove it. At this point, your choices would be to wait until you've been self-employed for two years, or go with a sub-par loan (also known as a B or C loan in the lending industry).
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