Financial Web
> A Structured Prepayment System that Works
> Selling your Home via Auction
> Selling Your Home? Don't Neglect the Yard
> Understanding Assumptions
> Discussing Mortgage Delinquency
> Know Your Home's Worth
> FSBO Selling Tips
> Prep Your Home for Sale
> Balloon Mortgages
> Interest-Only Mortgages
> Mortgage Forgiveness Debt Relief Act of 2007
> Pre-Qualifying and Pre-Approval
> Tips to Increase your Home's Value
> Advertise your Home Thoroughly
> Tips to get the Best Mortgage Rate
> To FSBO, or Not to FSBO?
> Negotiating your Home's Selling Price
> Mortgage Payment Problems?
> Help for Delinquent Borrowers
> Selling the Property Yourself
> Hiring a Realtor to Sell your Home
> Shopping for a New Home? Create a Wish List!
> Home Sellers and Buyers: Tips for Both
> Money-Saving Kitchen Remodeling to Upgrade your Home
> Is Manufactured Housing for You?
> Upgrade your Home with Landscaping
> Buy or Build?
> Staging can make the Difference
> Home Warranties
> Take Advantage of Online Marketing to Sell your Home
> Adjustable Rate Mortgages (ARMs)
> All about Prepayment
> An Examination of Discount Points
> A few Home-Buying Fast Facts
> A Mortgage Primer
> Buydowns and Rate Locks
> Buying a Home as a Long-Term Investment
> Buying a Home? Don't Forget the Insurance
> Blended Rates
> Choosing the Right Lender
> Conventional Loan Disclosures
> Conventional Loans: Pros and Cons
> Closing Expenses
> Common ARM Indexes
> Don't be Victimized by Mortgage Scams
> Evaluating the Housing Bubble
> For First-Time Home Buyers: First Things First
> FHA and VA Loans
> Foreclosure
> Financing Your Home Renovation
> Forestalling the Foreclosure
> Fixed Rate or ARM?
> Glossary of Mortgage Loan Terms
> How to Save BIG Money on Your Mortgage
> Home Equity Lines of Credit (HELOCs)
> Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM)
> HUD Foreclosure Homes
> Home-Buying Offer Strategies
> Interest-Only Loans: Good or Bad?
> More FHA Loan Programs
> Making Your Offer
> Mortgage Loan Underwriting
> Need a Mortgage but have Bad Credit?
> Negotiating with the Seller
> PMI - Do You Need It?
> Pros and Cons of FHA Loans
> Pros and Cons of Prepaying
> Paying off Your Mortgage Early
> Rent vs. Buy: How Should I Live?
> Reverse Mortgages
> Real Estate Financing Instruments
> Seller Financing
> So What Is a Mortgage, Exactly?
> Subprime and Hard Money Lenders
> Surviving the Closing
> Some HELOC Fast Facts
> Should You Buy with Cash or with a Mortgage?
> Some Mortgage Myths
> Special Mortgage Loan Programs
> Special Mortgage Loan Programs - Part 2: The Rural Development Guaranteed Housing Loan
> Some Helpful Tips when Applying for a Mortgage
> The FHA 203(k) Rehab Loan
> Ten Home-Buying Tips
> To Refinance or Not to Refinance?
> The Loan Application Process
> The Secondary Market
> Truth-in-Lending Act (TILA) - Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA)
> The Energy-Efficient Mortgage (EEM)
> The Top 6 Types of Mortgages
> The Components of Your House Payment
> Turned Down for the Loan?
> Take Note of 'Bad Mortgage' Warning Indicators
> The Self-Employed Homebuyer
> There are Plenty of Ways to Buy
> The Perils of Interest-Only Mortgages
> Which Mortgage is Best for You?
> What's Good about Reverse Mortgages?
> When should you opt for an Adjustable-Rate Mortgage?
> Your Credit Health

The Components of Your House Payment

Think you’re paying just for your house? You may be surprised to know that your mortgage payment is not just a mortgage payment, but has other components wrapped up with it. Perhaps you’ve heard the term PITI, which stands for Principal, Interest, Taxes and Insurance. Let’s take a closer look at these payment “components”, as well as other things that you may be paying in your monthly mortgage check:

  • Principal and interest payment (P&I) - This is the payment that’s necessary to amortize, or pay off, the loan amount (principal) and the interest over the specified term of the loan. This amount can be determined by using a mortgage amortization calculator.
  • One-twelfth of the annual real estate taxes (T) - Real estate taxes are escrowed by just about all lenders because unpaid and past due taxes take a superior lien to any mortgage. If the owner does not pay them, the local government has the authority and power to sell the property in order to collect the delinquent taxes. For example, if the property owner owes $3,000 in taxes and $100,000 on the mortgage, the government is only concerned with the $3,000 tax debt. When the property is sold for taxes, and the buyer pays $3,000 for a $200,000 property, the taxes are paid and the lender has lost its security. Escrowing taxes is a safeguard against the possibility that the mortgage lien position could be jeopardized by nonpayment.
  • One-twelfth of the annual homeowner’s insurance premium (I) - With homeowner’s insurance, the lender is only concerned that the dwelling itself (the security for the loan) is covered by the hazard portion of the insurance policy in the amount of the loan. (Some states now have laws that prohibit the lender from forcing the borrower to insure the dwelling for the loan amount if the value of the dwelling -- without the land -- is less than the loan amount.) However, having only enough coverage to pay off the mortgage addresses only the lender’s interest, not the homeowner’s. Coverage for other occurrences, such as theft and liability, should also be considered. Most insurance companies offer a full replacement-cost rider, which adjusts coverage to protect the full value of the dwelling.

    Most lenders require that the insurance policy be paid in full for the first year at the time the loan closes. The lender then escrows one-twelfth of that premium in the monthly payment. When the policy renewal date comes around for the next year, there will be enough money in escrow to pay it again for another full year. By doing this, the lender is protected against the possibility that the owner will forget to pay the premium.

  • Private Mortgage Insurance escrow, if the loan is over 80% LTV (MI) - This insurance covers the lender against the possibility of default and foreclosure on properties with a loan-to-value ratio (LTV) of over 80%. If a borrower buys the property with a down payment of 20% or more, then PMI is not required.
  • One-twelfth of any homeowner’s association- or maintenance fees, if any are charged (HOA) - For housing developments that have mandatory homeowner’s association fees or other types of assessment, the lender will not escrow for them, but the fees will be considered as part of the borrower’s housing expense. They will, therefore, be counted in the qualifying process because they are mandatory expenses.