Buying A Home
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Shopping Around for Rates?

We've been tracking the housing market for the past year or so and are getting to the point where we're going to start going to open houses.  We would like to find something by early next year. 

We have not gotten pre-approved yet.  We have two joint accounts now, 1 at my local bank and the other at a local credit union (we had each had our own separate accounts at two different banks and just added each other onto them - haven't decided about consolidating sometime down the road).  

 My MIL really wants me to get pre-approved at my husband's bank because they're also members and supposedly they got something in the mail offering really low rates.

I was checking rate quotes and my own bank seems to have lower rates with less closing costs (although in some cases has less points).  

Should I get pre-approved at this point?  I'd like to find rates from more than one place, although I don't want my credit report pulled too many times because that affects your credit score.  Should I just contact banks/credit unions with our information (estimated purchase price, down payment, town, credit scores, etc)?

Re: Shopping Around for Rates?

  • It doesn't matter where you get preapproved but only do it at one place.  You won't lock in any rates until you get an accepted contract on a house.  After the sellers and you agree to terms, you can get a few quotes and then go with the lowest rates/closing costs.  Also ask your realtor if it's common to ask the sellers to help pay for closing costs.
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
  •  Why only one place? I was planning on getting three differrent quotes and then going with the best one.

    Me 33. DH 32. TTC Since 6/2011. 12/2012-m/c, CP. DH: MFI. CCT/HSG/day 3 blood work-all nl. IVF#1 ER- 8/7/12, ET- 8/10. beta 8/25 neg, I did not respond as expected. AMH: 0.88. IVF#2 BCP-10/19. Micro flare Lupron-Nov: It's a bust. IVF#3 Planned for Feb '13 with a long lupron protocol ON OUR OWN!!! BFP- 1/12/13. Yay! EDD 9/18, now EDD 9/25
  • We shopped around to 3 different lenders, chose the 2 whose personalities and work styles we liked the best, and got pre-approved by both. Once we went under contract we bid both lenders against each other to see who could give us the absolute best deal (rate, points, closing costs).

    Definitely work with 2-3 lenders all the way through the process. Just because a lender promises you a sweet deal upfront, that does not mean that they will deliver on said promises in the end. Keeping your options open is always good. And when the time comes, don't be afraid to ask the very simple question, "Is that the absolute best deal that you can offer?" It's amazing what that question can do for you.

    But don't bother getting pre-approved until you are actually ready to buy. There is no sense in having your credit report and scores pulled right now. Credit pulls are grouped. Andthing that is pulled within a 30-45 day timeframe by similar requesters (banks) is grouped into a single pull, which means it won't affect your score much. But if you ask one bank to do a pull now and a few other banks do pulls when you are ready to buy, it will show up as 2 pulls, which hits your score more than 1 pull would.

  • It doesn't typically matter where you get preapproved- unless you are in a competitive market ... Sometimes realtors and sellers prefer you to be preapproved by a local bank or credit union.  A preapproval goes to the sellers when you make an offer to show that you've be preapproved for $x amount.  For you it's purely an estimate.  If you get preapproved for $200k today at 3.5% and then in 30 days you put in an offer rates may have changed and at that point you lock in your rate and give paperwork to complete the mortgage process. 
    Baby Birthday Ticker Ticker
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