Vital Advice for Mobile Home Owners Offering Note Financing

Jesse D Evans
Knowing how to successfully manage your owner financing for a Mobile Home buyer is deafening important. Learning some guiding principles for maintaining your private note on a mobile household will help make sure you end up with a qualified borrower and hopefully, devalue the likelihood of facing a manufactured home foreclosure situation down the road.

First, you will always yearn to require that a potential buyer supply you with a recent credit report. Providing financing for someone without knowing their credit score and payment history might abandon you open for deplorable circumstances, despite how well you may know the person.

Second, itīs sensible to advise a potential buyer to dig out a substantial below payment on the mobile home. This is the buyer's financial commitment to the home. While some lenders ask a buyer to put below the largest amount possible, itīs discreet to realize that requiring a buyer to put down the majority of their savings could leave them in a degree where they have no reserves to fall back on for their monthly mobile home mortgage payments, should they require to rely on their saved monies. After you have qualified your buyer's credit and below payment, there are other important tips that you require to know before moving forward with your owner financing.

Always Maintain the Original Loan Documents

A Promissory note is the borrowerīs promise to repay the home loan. This is an important document to keep safe. Itīs recommended that you store the note and any other original documents in a fireproof box or in a safe deposit box at your bank. Be sure to keep copies of the originals as well, for your records. Itīs advisable to save a digital copy, or PDF, of the documents on your computer or on a disk in the event that the original documents are lost. If you have an attorney that assisted you with preparation of your loan documents, they will typically delay these documents in their files and provide you with a copy.

Keeping a Payment Ledger or Journal of Received Payments

Having a true record of when you receive each of the monthly Mobile Home payments, and the exact amounts of payments, is very important. It will help keep things streamlined when it is time for the borrower to make their loan payoff and also ignore any misunderstandings on the amounts paid and owed. Itīs also advisable to deposit the payment into your bank account to provide a verifiable record of when you received each payment.

Make sure Manufactured Home Taxes, Registration Renewals, and Monthly Space Rent is Paid

Ensuring that real estate taxes, registration, and space rent is paid on time is a very important consideration in protecting yourself and the household from other debtors. One discretion is to factor in an impound account for monthly space rent & taxations. This would require your accurate formula of the yearly rent and taxes, divided into twelve monthly payments that you collect from the borrower and compensate to the appropriate party. If this is the route you determine to take, youīll yearn to make sure that the monthly space rent bill, and tax bills or registration bills, are sent to you directly from the parties when they become due. If you are not collecting monthly impounds, you will want to verify that the taxes and rent have been paid as necessary.


Be Sure the Home is protected with Fire/Hazard Insurance

Having a sufficient amount of homeowner's insurance is cultured for protecting the household and the mobile household note you hold. When the fire insurance policy is being originated, make sure that you are listed as the Lender or Mortgagee on the insurance policy and that the policy is written for at least the total amount of the mobile household note. Make sure that the policy is renewed and paid annually. The yearly premium for the insurance can also be included in the impound account, and collected from the borrower in monthly installments, rather that requiring the buyer to pay the entire insurance premium up-front.

What To do If your Borrower starts to make Late Payments

If you start to receive late payments from your borrower on the mobile home, itīs strategic to check your note for the policy that you and the borrower agreed upon. Your note should reference a "grace" period, wherein the borrower has so many days to make a payment before itīs deemed "late". If your note was not set up with a grace period, or the grace period has already past, you will want to contact your borrower and ask about the late payment. Itīs discreet to keep a journal of the date and time of the call and keep this ledger with your other records. Itīs also a strategic idea to write a letter to follow up on your phone call that identifies the borrowers default. You will want to also recap any action the borrower has promised to make and haste the letter via USPS certified mail with a return receipt request. Last but not least, you will want to contact your attorney for further legal suggestion and explanation on default proceedings.

If you have digitize through this article and do not feel prepared to handle such an undertaking, then perhaps owner financing and note holding isnīt for you. There are conventional manufactured household lenders out there that can also offer traditional Manufactured Home Loans for your buyers.
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Jesse D Evans

Jesse Evans is an American Chronicle Author, writing on a variety of topics. He graduated with a Bachelors in Science degree in Cognitive Science from UC San Diego, and has been published extensively online and in print. He has also been an executive in the security and finance industries for over five years.

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