There are plenty of refinancing horror stories online, some related to mortgage refinancing. This story is not meant to scare you stupid, but rather provide information on how to avoid other people’s mistakes and make the most of your mortgage refinancing agreement.
You may have valuable assets, an excellent payment history, a perfect credit score, and still be unable to qualify for refinancing. These include administrative errors, bank delays, and other acts of God. You might be attracted by the low mortgage rates offered on the market, especially in the wake of a recession. For example, the Canadian branch of JP Morgan Chase is offering an annual rate of 4.125 percent on a 30-year refinancing loan. If the interest rate is so low, it certainly pays to refinance your mortgage rather than stay with your current loan. This is what attracts most people. What’s the catch? A considerable amount of equity in your home is required to be approved. If you don’t meet the requirements (have less than the required equity), you will not qualify, but you can get a loan with a higher interest rate. When you draw the line, it emerges that you are not saving very much on your current loan by refinancing, and you are going to all the trouble for nothing. Or you are paying a lot to go to all the trouble because the new loan you are offered has a really high interest rate.
To sum it up, you have to give an honest answer to the following question before you refinance. Do you expect interest rates to go up? Or have they fallen already? Is your credit score decent or have you managed to increase it as to be offered a low interest rate? Whatever your decision is, do not forget that your house is your most valuable asset.
In the majority of cases where problems with refinancing arise, the key issue is lack of sufficient equity ownership. There are other possible issues as well - bank delays, clerical errors, mistakes related to appraisal of the property (claiming it is bigger or smaller than it is. Overlooking the details of your agreement can lead to problems as well. Sometimes you find that the loan is costing you more than you expected. It may happen that you cannot make payments and fall behind. You have to refinance one more time. Your credit score will be affected as a result, and the next offer you get will not even match the last one.
Eventually you may be driven into bankruptcy, hounded by collectors if you have other credit payments you are behind on, or reach a debt settlement with one or more of your creditors. With these kinds of problems, you may find yourself getting in deeper and deeper. Problems just follow one after the other from bad to worse.