Paying Off Your Credit Cards May Hurt Your Mortgage Approval

You heard it correctly, your credit card don’t have balances, yet your mortgage application can still be in jeopardy. Here’s what mortgage lenders and brokers run into when you have credit card payments…

Many consumers are responsible, they use their credit cards for various monthly purchases and then pay each credit card off in full at month’s end. At the beginning of the following month they rack up debt on the card again and the cycle continues. Sounds financially responsible right?

Well not quite,  here’s why…

When you accumulate debt on a credit card it becomes a payment liability if it’s not paid off entirely. Creditors like major banks, credit card companies report on a certain day of the month to each credit bureau. They may report all three bureaus or they may just report to one or two, varies depending on the terms of your card agreement.

The majority of consumers when they go to apply for a mortgage loan, do not know when each creditor reports to the credit reporting bureaus. As a result, when you apply for a mortgage loan, lender obtains a copy of your credit report, and debts resulting payment liabilities are identified limiting your ability to borrow by raising your debt ratio (Debt ratio is mortgage payment plus payment liabilities on your credit report divided into your monthly income).

Mortgage brokers, banks and lenders use the credit report they obtain in approving you for a mortgage loan. If the credit report shows liabilities, mortgage lender must count liabilities against your income even if the liabilities don’t exist, because they had been previously paid off prior to the creditor reporting the new balances to the bureaus.

Common Example

‘Consumer accumulates $5000 on a single card in any given month wherein if not paid off in full-would result in a payment liability of approximately $200 per month. That $200 per month shows up on the mortgage lender’s credit report in accordance with the mortgage application consumer applied for,  resulting in $200 per month less in borrowing ability.’

Doesn’t sound like a lot, but in the grand scheme of things, $200 per month can be equivalent to $30,000 in loan amount. Well what happens if the numbers in determining whether or not the loan can be approved are close and the additional wiggle room is needed for a sign off?

Loan lender and/or borrower has to reduce the debt ratio by either borrowing less, or purchasing a lower interest rate via more loan fees in the form of discount points. The other tangible solution involves lender obtaining a new credit report on behalf of the consumer with precision timing.

Fix The Credit For Loan Approval By Updating Liabilities

If the option of qualifying for lower loan amount or reducing the interest rate is not in the cards, there are series of key steps consumers can take to make sure the liabilities are updated correctly.

  1. Call each creditor (credit card lender) find out what day of the month they report to the credit bureaus
  2. Have the lender omit the liabilities for conditional loan approval
  3. Payoff the liabilities in full if not completed already
  4. Wait for the creditor to report updated zero balances
  5. Lender obtains a new credit report

An advantage to updating the credit report includes a potential increased credit score as having little or no debt looks favorably to the credit bureaus. This action also allows the consumer to attain an approval easier without having to close out  the credit cards.

In other words, the solution is closing the cards closed out in full via the loan process, thereby paying off debt to qualify.  In a refinance situation, these steps will cause the transaction to take a longer, but at the benefit of keeping the loan approval intact. In a purchase situation numbers become a little different because most contracts are under a certain time crunch such as 30 days for example. In a home-buying situation, the buyer might not have the ability to extend the contract longer and may have to close out the cards in full or increase their down payment as an alternative option.

If you are looking for a mortgage or want help in determining whether or not you can be approved for a mortgage, start today by getting a complementary mortgage rate quote with Scott Sheldon. It’s free and there’s no obligation!

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  1. […] dispute accounts to improve their credit score, clean up their credit history or to improve their credit picture in most cases. Disputing an account is a measurable action to […]



  2. […] dispute accounts to improve their credit score, clean up their credit history or to improve their credit picture in most cases. Disputing an account is a measurable action to […]



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