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What is an FHA Loan
Home ownership rates in America continue to increase at a steady rate
due in a large part to the implementation of FHA home loans more than
seventy years ago. Over the years, FHA has helped Americans gain the
financial independence that comes with owning a home. By creating jobs
and reasonable mortgage rates for the middle class, financing military
housing, and producing housing for the low income and the elderly, FHA
has helped Americans become some of the best housed people in the world
with over 73 million Americans currently owning their own homes.
Statistics show that by 2005, home ownership rates in the US have
climbed to 69 percent.
HOW
IT WORKS By serving as an umbrella under which lenders have
the confidence to extend loans to those who may not meet conventional
loan requirements, FHA's mortgage insurance allows individuals to
qualify who may have been previously denied for a home loan by
conventional underwriting guidelines.
FHA
loans benefit those who would like to purchase a home but haven't been
able to put money away for the purchase, like recent college graduates,
newlyweds, or people who are still trying to complete their education.
It also allows individuals to qualify for a FHA loan whose credit has
been marred by bankruptcy or foreclosure.
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