The Money Advantage Podcast
Reverse Mortgage Explained, with Mike Stanley
Could a reverse mortgage help you reach your income goals? How do reverse mortgages work? Is a reverse mortgage good or bad?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=820qDZ5CkFE
Today, we’re talking with Mike Stanley, Regional Senior Lending Sale Manager for Thrive Mortgage. He shares everything you need to know about reverse mortgages explained.
So, if you want to understand just how reverse mortgages work, their pros and cons, and the costs, and get answers to your questions so you can make decisions… tune in now!
Table of contentsHow Mike Got Into Reverse MortgagesThe Baby Boomer GenerationBorrowing Qualifications for a Reverse MortgageWhat is a Reverse Mortgage? Numbers on a Reverse MortgageWhat if You’re Not Old Enough?Get in Touch with Mike StanleyBook A Strategy Call
How Mike Got Into Reverse Mortgages
[9:40] “Most people don’t know what a reverse mortgage is other than a myth or a rumor that they’ve heard.”
Mike Stanley got into the world of reverse mortgages in 2008, yet not without hesitation. He didn’t want to be taking advantage of people, and most information about reverse mortgages is a little hazy. In reality, there are quite a few reverse mortgage strategies that can help people in different ways.
10:25] “It’s not been called, technically, a reverse mortgage since 1988. That’s when congress, in 1988, passed a law called home equity conversion mortgage. You may hear it called a HECM. At that point in time, it stopped being a reverse mortgage, but it was such slang for the terminology. People still call it a reverse mortgage even though it’s a federally insured FHA loan that has all the protections of FHA.”
The Baby Boomer Generation
[13:10] “48 percent of Baby Boomers are retiring while carrying a mortgage into their retirement years… Another interesting fact, 50 percent of those 65 or older have their houses paid for, and 27 percent of those will downsize or right-size into a home that better meets their retirement needs.”
If you’re in the Baby Boomer generation, considering a reverse mortgage strategy can help you downsize. It can also help you find more retirement income by leveraging home equity. If not, those with Baby Boomer parents should be considering how they’re going to care for their parents.
Borrowing Qualifications for a Reverse Mortgage
[19:25] “Right now, to be a borrower, the borrower has to be 62 years of age minimum. It is a mortality or equity-based loan… We take four things into consideration. We take in their age… we take in the value of the home, and we take in the interest rate on the loan—and how much equity we’re going to have to leave in the house.”
What is a Reverse Mortgage?
The short and sweet answer is that you give up the equity in your home in exchange for regular payments. This can provide an income to homeowners over the age of 62, or help you keep your home in retirement. There are even options for those who have children who wish to inherit the home.
[24:18] “There’s a unique feature in the reverse mortgage… it’s called a non-recourse feature, which means and states that no one is ever responsible for paying their home back personally. Only the equity in the house can ever be used at the time the loan is due. The time the loan is due is when the last of the two borrowers… no longer live in a property as their primary residence, or one of them passes away, or they sell the house, or they refinance the house.”
[28:14] “There are four ways of taking money out. If you take a lump sum, there are two options. There’s a fixed rate option. And whatever you take out on a fixed rate is the maximum you get; there are no more funds available. On the… adjustable rate, there is a line of credit.”
[30:30] “Now they do have two other options. They could take what we call a tenure option, which a tenure is a life expectancy payout. Let’s assume that we run our numbers and based off their life expectancy and the pool of money that the...