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There is no limit to the number of times you can refinance. However, you must qualify every time you apply and there will be costs associated with closing the loan each time.
Yes! There are a number of bond programs that offer low or no down payment financing options.
The key to choosing the right mortgage is to understand the range of options and features available to you, as well as your budget, circumstances, and goals. Our licensed mortgage professionals are here to help you navigate that process. The more you know, the more comfortable and confident you will be choosing the best option for you and your family.
The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) does not permit a lender to close a loan until at least seven (7) business days have passed from the date your application was received. A typical home loan takes 30 days, as a number of third-party services such as appraisals, title work, and credit are required in conjunction with the mortgage process. Once you familiarize your Loan Officer with the details of your specific loan scenario, they will be able to provide you with a more specific timeline.
The only way to find out is to speak with a qualified mortgage professional. Our Loan Officers have helped numerous clients who didn’t know if they could qualify to become home owners. We take the time to understand your financial situation and long-term financial goals, and then match you with the loan program that best fits your needs. Your approval for a loan may also largely depend on the price of the home you are financing. Getting pre-qualified prior to beginning your home search can give you an idea of what you may be able to afford.
Homeowners typically refinance to save money, either by obtaining a lower interest rate or by reducing the term of their loan. Refinancing is also a way to convert an adjustable loan to a fixed loan or to consolidate debts.
This question does not have a simple, one-size-fits-all answer. The exact amount will depend on the price of the home you buy as well the type of mortgage financing you choose. Depending on your loan program, your down payment could be as much as 20% of the home’s price or as little as 3%, while some loans require no down payment at all.
You may still qualify for a home loan even if you have experienced a bankruptcy. The best way to find out if you qualify is to talk with a Loan Officer to discuss your options. Be sure to bring all paperwork regarding your bankruptcy so your Loan Officer can find the program that best fits your situation.
Interest rates fluctuate all day, every day. If an interest rate is good, it may be in your best interest to lock now. If you wait, you run the risk of an increase in rates later. If you are concerned that rates may go down after you lock, contact your Loan Officer to discuss your options. Some programs allow you to lock for an extended period and choose to lower your rate should a better one become available.

What the Conflict With Iran Has to Do With Your Mortgage Rate and What to Do About It
A Question Worth Asking and an Answer Worth Understanding
You might be wondering what a conflict happening thousands of miles away has to do with your ability to buy a home right here in the United States. It is a reasonable question and the answer is that the connection is more direct and more immediate than most buyers ever think about.
Understanding how that connection works does not require a background in economics or finance. It requires following a chain of cause and effect that runs from a conflict zone to an energy market to an inflation reading to a bond yield to the number on your loan estimate. Once you see that chain clearly the current rate environment makes a lot more sense and more importantly you are in a better position to do something useful with that understanding.
Following the Chain From Oil to Your Payment
The conflict with Iran has pushed oil prices higher. That is the starting point. When a major oil-producing region becomes destabilized or when significant uncertainty develops around energy supply routes the market responds by pricing in that risk and oil costs rise accordingly.
Rising oil prices do not stay contained to the gas pump. Energy is embedded in virtually everything the economy produces and delivers. The cost of transporting goods to stores, manufacturing products, heating buildings, and running businesses all increases when energy becomes more expensive. Those elevated costs spread through the supply chain and eventually show up as broader inflation across the consumer economy.
When inflation rises or when markets believe it might rise the Federal Reserve holds back on cutting interest rates. Cutting rates in an inflationary environment would risk making inflation worse and the Fed is acutely aware of that risk given recent history. So rates stay where they are or the possibility of cuts gets pushed further into the future.
Mortgage rates respond to all of this through the bond market. The ten-year Treasury yield is the benchmark that mortgage rates track most closely. When investors become worried about inflation they sell bonds because inflation erodes the real value of fixed income returns. When bonds are sold prices fall and yields rise. When yields rise mortgage rates rise with them.
As Jonathan Waunch explains this is exactly the sequence that played out in recent weeks. Mortgage rates had briefly dipped below six percent for the first time in over three years which was a milestone that genuinely mattered. It brought buyers who had been sitting on the sidelines back into an active search and created real momentum in the market. Then the Iranian conflict escalated, oil prices spiked, inflation fears returned in force, and rates moved back up. The window opened, offered real opportunity to buyers who were positioned and ready, and then closed again before many buyers could act.
Why This Is Not Just Interesting Information
Understanding the chain reaction from oil to your payment is not just an intellectual exercise. It changes how you should be approaching the buying process right now in concrete and actionable ways.
The first practical implication is that rate volatility is the current reality and your planning needs to account for it rather than assuming stability. The rate available today may not be the rate available in 60 days. In a calm economic environment that assumption is reasonable. In an environment where a geopolitical development can move rates meaningfully in a matter of days it is not a safe assumption at all. Evaluate your budget across a realistic range of rates rather than at a single optimistic point and make sure the purchase makes sense across that range.
The second implication is that a direct conversation with your loan officer about rate lock strategies is worth having now based on where you are in the process and what your timeline looks like. There are options to protect yourself from upward rate movement while you are shopping and under contract. Understanding what those options cost and how they fit your specific situation is a conversation that has much more value before you need it than after rates have already moved.
The third is that seller-paid rate buydowns deserve serious consideration in the current environment. Sellers in many markets are already making concessions to close deals. Negotiating for the seller to fund a buydown of your interest rate at closing is a legitimate tool that converts a market concession into a long-term reduction in your monthly payment. A well-structured seller-funded buydown directly offsets some of the impact of rates having moved higher than you might have hoped and it uses the current negotiating environment to your advantage rather than waiting for rate conditions to cooperate on their own timeline.
What Separates Buyers Who Succeed From Those Who Stay Stuck
The buyers who are most frustrated right now share a common pattern. They are watching mortgage rates like a scoreboard, waiting for a specific number to appear before they feel ready to act, and getting discouraged each time the market moves in the wrong direction. Rate movement feels like something happening to them and the response is to wait for conditions to change.
The buyers who are moving forward successfully are doing something different. They understand why rates are moving. They have built a strategy that accounts for volatility rather than assuming it will resolve conveniently. And they are using the tools available to them, rate lock strategies, seller-funded buydowns, and smart offer structuring, to make their purchase work in the current environment rather than the environment they are hoping for.
As Jonathan Waunch points out the biggest advantage a buyer can have right now is being informed about what is actually driving the market. That information transforms the experience from passive frustration about a number you cannot control to active strategy around the tools and approaches that you genuinely can use.
Find Out What This Means for Your Specific Situation
How the current rate volatility affects your purchase depends on details that are specific to you. Your budget, your timeline, your target price range, and what the local market where you are buying looks like for seller concessions all shape which strategies are most useful and how to structure a transaction that works regardless of what happens with rates over the next several weeks.
Jonathan Waunch works with buyers to understand exactly what the current environment means for their specific financial picture and to build a purchasing strategy that protects against volatility while capturing every advantage the current market offers. Reach out to Jonathan Waunch to talk through your numbers and build a plan that works in today's market.
Sources
FederalReserve.gov CNBC.com MortgageNewsDaily.com EnergyInformationAdministration.gov TreasuryDirect.gov
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