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Before Signing on the Dotted Line:
A Checklist for Consumers
A committee that studied predatory lending practices in the Evansville
area advises consumers to meet with an independent loan counselor or at least question their lender if they can check more than three of the following items.
1. Is the deal you've been
offered too good to be true?
- Marketer guarantees the loan will
be approved despite your credit problems.
- Marketer
offers to refinance mortgage for much more value than recent
purchase price.
- Marketer insists you can borrow more
than 100 percent of the value of your home.
- Marketer
uses statements such as "Trust me--this is
legal."
- Less than one year has passed since you
purchased or refinanced.
2. Are processing tactics
questionable?
- A 1-900 number is used to start the
process, resulting in phone charges that you must
pay.
- Telemarketer asks you for credit card or bank
account number.
- You are required to sign a broker's
agreement with large penalties for terminating the loan process.
- Marketer offers "to
pay for anything at no expense to you."
- You are
told that "no down payment" is not a problem
for a home purchase.
- Marketer does not discuss the
length of loan, interest rate, type of loan (fixed,
balloon, variable).
- Marketer does not discuss the Good
Faith Estimate of closing costs at application.
- You are not given a copy of the Good
Faith Estimate and/or Truth In Lending statement.
3. Are fees too high? (Check your
Good Faith Estimate and Truth in Lending form.)
- Origination fee is more than 1
percent of loan.
- Application fees are not credited to
closing costs.
- Total cost of borrowing (closing cost)
exceeds 5 percent of money you borrowed.
4. Are loan terms unreasonable for
you? (Check your Truth in Lending form.)
- The loan has a balloon payment.
(Most of original loan is due on the last payment.)
- The
interest rate isn't fixed, but changes at a later
date.
- The interest rate is more than 10
percent.
- Your loan requires a co-signer.
- Your
total monthly debt (house, car, etc.) exceeds 50 percent of your
income.
- The loan has prepayment penalties.
- The
monthly payment does not include property taxes and
insurance.
- You can't afford this
payment.

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