FHA Guidelines On Medical Collections
Non-medical collection accounts typically have a greater financial impact. FHA guidelines do not count medical collection accounts against you, but non-medical debts can affect your debt-to-income ratio and are more likely to cause issues.
How Do Mortgage Underwriters View Medical Collections
FHA underwriters are instructed to place less emphasis on medical collection accounts and do not require them to be paid. Medical collection debts are also excluded from the mandatory 5% hypothetical payment calculation used for other collection accounts above certain thresholds.
Collections In Foreclosure: FHA Guidelines on Medicals Vs. Other type of collection accounts
- Medical collections are exempt from the level of documentation and analysis of payment capacity required for non-medical collections.
- Although medical collection accounts are subject to review for indications of financial instability, having a collection account should not, in and of itself, result in a denial.
FHA Guidelines On Non-Medical Accounts
Non-medical collection accounts include credit cards that were not paid,, unpaid personal loans, auto loan deficiencies, unpaid cell phone bills, and other consumer debts. If non-medical collection accounts are over $2,000, HUD requires lenders us 5% of the outstanding collection account balance to be used as a hypothetical monthly expense. The 5% hypothetical debt is used by the mortgage underwriter in calculation of the borrower’s debt-to=income ratios. However, if the 5% of the outstanding collection account triggers a higher debt-to-income ratio, the borrower can enter into a written payment agreement with the creditor. The agreed upon payment agreement is used in the debt-to-income calculation than the 5% of the outstanding collection account balance.
FHA Guidelines On Medical Collections & how it affects eligibility on FHA loans
Impact on Debt-to-Income Ratios
Usually, medical collections is exempt from the 5% of the outstanding collection account balance being used as a hypothetical debt in your DTI calculation.
how Mortgage Underwriters View Non-Medical Collections and Charged-Off Accounts
- Either consider 5% of the outstanding balance a hypotheticall payment for the DTI calculation, or
- have a written payment agreement with the credit for a mutually agreed monthly payment.
- The agreed upon monthly payment on the payment agreement is used vs the 5% of the outstanding collection account balance.
- Charged-off accounts do not have to be paid and the 5% hypothetical amount of the outstanding balance or charged-off account balance does not apply.
- Credit disputes are not allowed on charged-off accounts.
Most Important FHA Requirements
- Medical collections do not alter the maximum front-end and back-end debt-to-income ratio guidelines.
- To qualify for a 3.5% down payment FHA loan, borrowers need a 580 credit score or higher.
- Borrowers with credit scores under 580 and down to 500 FICO are eligible for FHA loans with a 10% down payment.
- There are standard FHA loans limits and High-balance FHA loan limits in high-cost areas.
Below are all the links to the referenced HUD applications:
- Acceptable credit history includes the borrower meeting the lender’s minimum credit score requirements and the automated underwriting system (AUS) findings.
- Satisfactory and stable income and employment for two years, with a reasonable expectation of continuance for the next three years.
- Acceptable DTI ratios.
- However, HUD guidelines allow higher DTI ratios when combined with a strong AUS approval and compensating factors.
- Medical collections are generally not considered deal-breakers.
- However, if underwriters observe large or recent medical debts or negative non-medical debts, they may request letters of explanation or additional documentation.
- FHA Guidelines on medical collections are generally broad, but medical collections can still come up for discussion in these situations:
- Multiple medical collections combined with other negative credit items, such as late payments or non-medical collections, may be viewed as a sign of financial strain or financial irresponsibility.
- The underwriter may consider reviewing reserves, employment stability, and overall affordability if creditors actively pursue large, uncovered medical collections.
Overview On HUD Guidelines on Non-Medical Collections
Limits and Capacity Assessment
Some common practices with the FHA include the following.
- Sum all non-medical collections, assess the total Lenders’ sum, and compare the total unpaid amount to an established threshold, such as $2,000 aggregate balance.
- If the outstanding non-medical collections exceeds $2,000, a 5% of the outstanding collection balance is used as a hypothetical monthly debt and is used towards DTI.
- If you have a repayment agreement and a good payment history, the actual payment amount from your agreement may be used instead of the hypothetical 5% debt..
- Any judgments are evaluated separately, as HUD requires them to be settled or put on a documented, well-seasoned payment plan 90 days prior to closing.
Payoff vs. Payment Plans:
There is no seasoning requirements. The day the payment agreement is executed is the day the written payment agreement amount takes effect. Lenders must assess how these debts affect your ability to pay.
HUD Guidelines on credit Disputes on Collections
Medical collection disputes:
- HUD generally allows disputes on medical collection accounts and does not require them to be withdrawn or downgraded, unlike with disputed non-medical collection accounts.
- Because medical collection accounts are not included in capacity analysis, disputed medical debts typically do not trigger a shift from automated to manual underwriting. documentation
- Disputed collection accounts that are NOT medical:
- FHA claims that disputes to collection accounts that are NOT medical and that fall above certain thresholds must be resolved, written off, or downgraded, which can result in a manual underwriting requirement.
- A manual review may require a lower debt-to-income ratio and a more detailed evaluation of your credit history and positive financial factors.
Tips for Applying with Medical Collection Accounts
- Current credit: Focus on maintaining positive current credit behavior.
- Paying all current accounts, such as credit cards, auto loans, student loans, and personal loans, on time is more important than addressing older medical collection accounts.
- Non-medical accounts: Ensure your loan officer accurately distinguishes between medical and non-medical collection accounts so that the more lenient FHA policies for medical debt are applied.
- Prepare your documentation. Copies of medical bills cannot be asked by underwriters but if you submit them, underwriters cannot unsee what they saw.
- Letter of explainations with strong and supporting documents.
