This is my situation, right now my rate is 7.something% fixed. My credit is horible, under 500. I was wondering if refinancing(we have someone that’ll give us 9.99% for 2yrs,then refi or buy) will help out our credit score so that we could by a bigger better home within the next year or so. Please help, thanks
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Mon, Sep 6, 2010





September 6th, 2010 at 1:48 am
Absolutely not! Companies want to know that you stick with them, and you are reliable on your payments. Flip-flopping companies is a terrible idea! If you have a loan with 7.5% or whatever, thats not too bad! Stay with it. If you have bad credit, it means that you probably can’t afford a newer house anyways, so you should put off that dream for a while, while your credit and income improves. Why on earth would you take a 9.99% loan when you have one now with 7%? Your home might be bigger and better, but your bank account will be tiny and over-drafted!
September 6th, 2010 at 1:48 am
Buy what is within your capability. Getting larger loan amount means getting deeper into debts. Getting into deeper debts mean bad credit score.
September 6th, 2010 at 1:48 am
Bottom line is that you need to pay your bills, all of them. And you need to do that without more debt!
September 6th, 2010 at 1:48 am
I am going to say NO. Opening new accounts does not improve your credit score.
Also based on your score I would stick with your 7% rate. I would be pretty sure your 9.99% deal is not as good as you think.
September 6th, 2010 at 1:48 am
The only way this will help your situation is if there is enough equity in your home. You can only go to 65% to 70% max LTV based on a sub 500 score. The only way this would make sense is if you consolidate all your debt and have one standard payment that you can afford for the next 2 years. Having perfect payments for 2 years, even 6 months, will increase your score significantly. It all depends on if you have a lot of debt, late payments, enought equity, and the cost vs. benifits add up. Make sure you do a lot of research before jumping into this type of loan. If you have further questions, go ahead and email me. I hope this helps. Ngrant@pacifina.com
September 11th, 2010 at 9:26 pm
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