New Pittsburgh Courier

Property is Power—Paperwork required for a mortgage pre-approval

ANTHONY O. KELLUM

by Anthony O. Kellum, For New Pittsburgh Courier

Even though many mortgage brokers are still quoting quick 10-minute pre-qualification over the phone or online, a true mortgage approval that holds any weight is one that has been issued by an underwriter who has had an opportunity to review all of the necessary documents.

With a constant stream of new lending guidelines, volatile mortgage rates and tightening regulation very few real estate agents will show new homes to a First-time–buyer without at least a pre-qualification letter.

Prep-Approval Letter will help you in three ways:

Get Pre-approved for a mortgage

It’s obviously a good idea to get your paperwork prepared ahead of time so that the pre-approval process is as thorough as possible. In order to get a pre=approval letter, you’ll start by filling out a loan application and submitting a few documents for the loan officer and / or underwriter to review.

Common loan pre-approval documents:

 Income/assets for self-employed:

Letter of Explanation For:

Other:

Most borrowers also want an opportunity to learn more about the loan officer before giving up all of these personal documents. Spend 15 minutes on the phone asking the loan officer to explain how mortgage rates work, quizzing them on some basic industry vocab or just to see if they know what to prepare your agent for ahead of time. The Q&A session can be more than just a mortgage broker qualifying you, as long as you’re prepared to ask the right questions. Either way, you’ll definitely want to have the above list of approval documents ready once you’ve decided on the right loan officer that you trust till meet your expectations.

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