VA Loans
REM #F810
By Ilyce R. Glink
Summary: A home buyer who is also a veteran, asks about buying a home from his girlfriend with a loan from the Veterans Administration, or a VA loan. He wants to know whether he can use his girlfriend's income on his VA home loan application. He needs to consider not only the VA's requirements, but also the future of his relationship with his girlfriend.
Q: If I was to get a VA loan to buy my girlfriend's home could she sell it to me for less than the appraised value of the home? And if so, would her income be considered part of my total income on the VA loan?
A: According to the Veterans Administration, which backs VA loans, there is nothing in the rules that prohibits a seller from selling a home for less than the VA determined value of the property.
As far as using a girlfriend's income to help qualify for the loan, it is possible to do this, according to a VA spokesperson. "When a veteran obtains a loan with a person who is not his or her spouse, the VA is only authorized to guarantee the veteran's portion of the loan. This sometimes creates a problem for the lender."
It doesn't sound as though your girlfriend is selling you her house. It sounds like she is selling you half of the house, but you are hoping to qualify for the purchase with her. If you buy half of the house from her, and then you refinance the entire purchase, will there be enough money to pay off her old loans on the home?
There are other considerations as well. In some states, your "purchase" of your share of the home will cause you to pay transfer taxes and other costs. Your girlfriend, in some circumstances, may be considered to have sold part of the home to you for federal income tax purposes. If she has a gain from the sale of that share and she has not lived in the home for 2 of the last 5 years, she might have to pay capital gains taxes on the sale to you.
There may be other issues for you to consider and you need to sit down with a good mortgage person to go through them. You may also want to talk to a real estate attorney or estate planner to review your options in moving forward. Since you are not married, you might want an agreement between the two of you to cover the many issues that may arise if you breakup – division of the equity in the home, who would get to keep the home and forcing the person that stays in the home to refinance to pay off the old debt.
NOTE: Ilyce R. Glink's latest ebooks are "Credit Scoring Secrets" and "How to Find a Great Real Estate Agent," which are available at her new, all-video website, www.expertrealestatetips.net. If you have questions, you can call her radio show toll-free (800-972-8255) any Sunday, from 11a-1p EST. You can also write to Real Estate Matters Syndicate, PO Box 366, Glencoe, IL 60022 or contact her through her website, www.thinkglink.com ©2008 by Ilyce R. Glink. Distributed by Tribune Media Services.
Quit Claim Deed Transfers Property Taxes
Quit-Claim Deed Question
Deed in Lieu of Foreclosure Will Hurt Credit Rating
Apartment Finder
Mortgage Fraud
Link to This Article
Like what you've read? Spread the word! You can link to this article
from your website by copying the following code and adding it to
a page on your website:
Copyright ©2001-2007. ThinkGlink, Inc.
All rights reserved. Reproduction of material from any www.ThinkGlink.com pages without permission is strictly prohibited.
Site designed by Walker Sands Communications