Bankruptcy Home Loans: Will I Be Able
To Get A Home Loan After Filing For
Bankruptcy?
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While there is not one simple answer to this
question, there is a condensed way of looking at things that
will help you know a little more of what to expect in your
dealing with bankruptcy and acquiring home loans.
You may be able to buy a home two years after
you have been discharged from your
bankruptcy, though it is also possible that you may qualify
as soon as one year after filing Chapter 13 bankruptcy, or one
year following discharge from a Chapter 7 bankruptcy.
A large sector of home loans depend on VA or
Federal Housing Administration loan guarantees, so your ability
to qualify for these guarantees may be able to determine when
you will be able to get a home loan.
The Federal Housing Administration will
insure mortgages for individuals that have filed Chapter 7
bankruptcy at the point of two years after being discharged
from bankruptcy, “if the borrower has re-established good
credit (or chosen not to incur new credit obligations), and has
demonstrated an ability to manage financial affairs.”
For Chapter 13 bankruptcy cases, the FHA has
regulations that specify the borrower still in Chapter 13 debt
adjustment, and who has completed the one year payment plans
and has court approval of said transaction also qualify for
insured mortgages.
The Veterans Benefits Administration also has
regulations about insured home loans similar to those of the
FHA.
These types of loan guarantees also make it
easier to get reasonable interest rates on a home loan, as the
loan rate is typically, and should be, based on the guarantee
status of the loan.
Many of the other factors involved in
assessing your personal situation with regard to bankruptcy and
attaining a home loan are difficult to go over here, but there
are two main factors that can make a difference.
1. Since you have none of the old bankruptcy
debt, a creditor that sees you are no longer subject to
repayment of old debts and are free to collect new debt. This
can help with particular creditors.
2. Credit history still plays a role. Even though bankruptcy may have adversely affected your
credit rating, if your overall credit history before the
bankruptcy was good, this can also play a large role in how new
creditors see you.
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