FHA Kiddie Condo…What Is That?
Posted by Kevin Kueneke | Visited 265 times, 2 so far today |
Many of my referral partners have asked about the FHA “Kiddie Condo” program. I spoke about this several months ago, but now that FHA loans are more prevalent, I felt that it is a good time to revisit the details. Here are a couple questions I have been asked recently:
Question: My child is now attending college and I do not want to throw money away on their rent. Is there a way to buy a property for them to live in without having to pay an enormously high interest rate? Can I avoid a large down payment typically associated with investment properties? 
Answer: Absolutely. FHA allows a non-occupant family member (for example, mom and dad) to go on the loan and basically carry the load. Income and debt from all parties are used to qualify, but the occupying borrower is not required to have any income or assets of their own. As long as your college student does not have credit that would otherwise disqualify them for a loan, their income and assets (if any) are irrelevant. Hence the term “Kiddie Condo”. Better yet, rent the other rooms to your child’s friends to help with cash flow.
Question: My parents are looking to retire and relocate to a new home closer to my family. Unfortunately, their verifiable income is not enough to qualify for a loan, but they do have a small down payment. Since I had planned to help them with their new mortgage payment, can I help them purchase a new home?
Answer: Absolutely. The term “Kiddie Condo” does not just apply to parents helping their children. Adult children can help their parents!
By the way…in addition to condos, all 1-unit properties are eligible: attached and detached single family residences (SFR’s), and homes in a planned unit development (PUD’s).
Far better option than standard Conventional financing due to significantly lower down payment required (3% versus 25-30%) and still get owner-occupied interest rates! **The minimum down payment for FHA loans is going to 3.5% as of January 1, 2009. Still a dramatic difference.
Remember though: these are full documentation loans for all qualifying parties and property condition is important to FHA. At this time, FHA Jumbo loans do not allow a non-occupant co-borrower…so keep your loan amounts under $417,000.
Questions? Call me at (760)500-1919 or email me at Kevin@MyCWMtg.com




























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