Mortgage companies often grade your loan based on certain
credit-related items such as payment history, amount of debt payments,
bankruptcies, equity position, and your credit
score.
Below is a guide to help you estimate your credit grade. This is only a
guide as many companies have exceptions that may result in more strict or
more lenient guidelines.
A General Guide to Credit
Grades
| Quality Level |
Credit Score |
Debt Ratio |
Max LTV Ratio |
History for Credit Type |
Delinquencies: |
Typical Additional Requirements |
| |
# of times |
# of days |
Within last |
|
| A+ to A- |
670+ 660 |
28/ 38 |
To 95% |
Mortgage Installment/ Revolving |
0 0 - 1 0 - 1 |
- 30 60 |
24 mo 12 to 24 months |
Good/excellent credit during last 2 to 5
years. No bankruptcy within the last 2 to 10 years. |
| C+ to C- |
580 |
55 |
75 |
Mortgage Installment/ Revolving |
3 - 4 0 - 2 4 - 6 2 - 4 |
30 60 30 60 |
12 mo 12 mo 12 mo 12 mo |
12 - 24 mos since bankrupt discharge. High
"rolling" lates allowable. |
| E |
520- |
65 |
50-65 |
Mortgage Installment/ Revolving |
Poor payment record with a
pattern of 30, 60, and 90+ lates |
Possible current bankruptcy, foreclosure
Stable current employment |
The figures
shown here are estimates. When trying to figure your credit grade, keep in
mind the following principles:
- Other Things Being Equal
When your have bad credit, all of the
other aspects of the loan need to be in order. Equity, stability,
income, documentation and assets play a larger role in the approval
decision.
- Worst Case Scenario
When determining your grade, various
combinations are allowed, but the worst case will push your grade to a
lower credit guide. Late mortgage payments and bankruptcies
are the most important.
- Going Once, Going Twice
Credit patterns are very important. A
high number of recent inquiries and more than a few outstanding loans
may signal a problem. A "willingness to pay" is important, thus late
payments in the same time period is better than random late payments as
they signal an effort to pay even after falling behind.