There
are many financing options available to homebuyers. Here
are some of the most common:
Fixed
Rate Mortgage
The
interest rate on a fixed rate mortgage stays the same throughout
the term of the loan, usually 15 or 30 years. This means
the principal interest portion of your payment remains the
same. Payments are stable but initial rates tend to be higher
than adjustable rate loans and often cannot be assumed by a
subsequent buyer.
Balloon
Mortgage
A
balloon mortgage is a loan that must be paid off after a certain
period. The advantage they offer is an interest rate that is
lower than a mortgage that is made for 30 years.
Adjustable-Rate
Mortgage (ARM)
This
interest rate is linked to a financial index, such as a Treasury
security or a cost of funds, so your monthly payments can vary
up or down over the life of the loan, usually 25 to 30 years.
Interest rates can change monthly, annually, or every 3 or
5 years. Some ARM's have a cap on the interest rate increase,
to protect the borrower.

Other
terms relating to adjustable-rate mortgages:
Adjustment
period: The length of time between interest rate changes. An
example would be one year ARM-interest changes annually.
Cap: The limit on how much an interest rate or monthly payment can
change at each adjustment or over the life of the loan.
Conversion
clause: A provision in some loans that enables you to change
an ARM to a fixed rate loan, usually after the first adjustment
period. This may require additional fees.
Index: A measure of interest rate changes used to determine changes
in the loan's interest rate over the term of the loan.
Margin: The number of percentage points a lender adds to the index
rate to calculate the ARM's interest rate at each adjustment.

VA
Loan
The
VA does not lend money; it guarantees a portion of the loan
so that lenders who originate the loan feel comfortable with
their risk. Qualified veterans can obtain loans up to $203,000
with no down payment. VA-guaranteed loans can be combined with
second mortgages and are assumable upon qualifying by any future
buyer.
FHA
Loan
FHA
does not lend money or make a loan; rather, it insures loans.
The down payment can be as low as 2.25%. Either buyer or seller
may pay discount points. FHA charges a 2.25% up front Mortgage
Insurance Premium (or as little as 2% for a first time home
buyer) that can be financed in the mortgage amount or paid
in cash (no premium is required for condominiums). The borrower
must also pay an annual Mortgage Insurance Premium or .5%,
which is collected monthly.
Seller
Assisted Second Mortgage
The
seller of the house lends the buyer enough to make up the difference
between the purchase price and the down payment plus first-mortgage
balance (a commercial lender may also make this kind of loan).
The terms including the interest rate are based on buyer/seller
agreement. It is often a short-term (5 to 15 year) loan; sometimes "interest
only" payments until the term date when the balance is
due in full. A buyer can then refinance the home.
Assumable
Mortgage
Buyer "takes
over" or assumes the mortgage obligation of the seller
(with concurrence of the lender). The interest rate doesn't
change and is sometimes lower than current rates. Often the
loan fees are less as well.