Monday, February 11, 2008

Foreclosure Can Be Stoped!

Getting into a rough financial situation can happen to anybody. Fortunes turn, the economy goes up and down, and there are just some circumstances that just can't be controlled. When financial disaster does strike though, there are a number of things that you can do that will serve as damage control.

Your first priority should be protecting your home from foreclosure. This is a very realistic possibility when you consider that most of us have mortgages and that those mortgages are likely to be our single biggest expense. After all, it can be tough to pay hundreds or thousands of dollars a month when you can't work or your hours at work have gotten cut back! Fortunately, there are some things that you can do to control the situation. For example, before taking any other action you should call your lender and tell a representative that you've fallen on tough times and are having trouble coming up with your monthly payments. Ideally this phone call should take place before you've missed a payment, but regardless of how many payments you've missed, the sooner this conversation takes place the better. The sooner your lender knows that you're having trouble, the more responsible you look and the more the lender can do to help.

In fact, demonstrating responsibility and being able to show that you're putting forth an effort to come up with the mortgage money is extremely important for getting as much cooperation as possible from your lender. For example, even if there's no way that you can come up with the money needed to pay your mortgage, if the lender sees that you've stopped eating out, canceled your cable TV service, and have put your second car up for sale the lender will be much more convinced of your commitment to do what it takes to fix the problem than it would be if your spending habits continued like normal.

After contacting your lender and cutting your spending, the next step that you should take is contacting a housing counselor. One great place to start is with HUD counselors. Counselors that are associated with the department of Housing and Urban Development are located all over the country and will charge little to nothing for their services. These counselors will be able to advise you of your rights and your options, and even help to work out a solution to your predicament with your lending institution.

Now, you might think that your situation is hopeless if you can't come up with your mortgage payments. However, there are a lot of actions that can be taken before you have to resign yourself to foreclosure. In fact, foreclosure should be the option of last resort. The worst that should happen is that you might have to sell your house yourself in order to pay of the mortgage, but that would only be necessary if it's fairly obvious that there's no way that you'll be able to pay anything close to your normal mortgage payments for a very long time.

Other longer term options that you'll have to keep your house include mortgage modification and refinancing. In both cases you'll have the opportunity to renegotiate the details of your mortgage like the length of time that you have to pay back the mortgage, the total amount you'll have to pay back, and the interest that you'll be paying on the loan. The only difference between the two is that with a mortgage modification, you'll renegotiate your existing mortgage and with refinancing you'll get a new mortgage and use it to pay off the old one.

By: Martin Schwartz

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