I'm living in a house with a 5 yr lease option contract. We put $8700 down for the option and $200 per month of our rent goes towards the downpayment in addition to the $8700 if we buy the home within the 5 years. We've been living here for a year, my credit is up to 695 now and I've been in my current job for a year and a half, similar job before that.
So I've started to apply for mortgages. Quicken loans was the first I've tried - they turned me down because I have a collection account for 7K for a vehicle that got impounded by my ex husband while I was living in a domestic violence shelter. My divorce states that it is HIS responsibility and his only to pay that. It will drop off my credit in December.
The next I tried was what Zillow recommended - Liberty Home Funding. Their loan just seems like a bad deal 4.5% fixed rate but they are charging almost 6k in closing costs (that includes 1800 property tax) - 1.5 points to the lender $1,175, $750 underwriting fee, $395 appraisal, $24 credit report, $9 flood certification, $946 upfront mortgage insurance, $700 attorney fee, $509 title insurance, $97 abstract/title search fee, $741 underneath that - not specified what it is for, $50 hazard insurance reserves, $1800 for 12 months county property tax reserves, $143.71 daily interest charges ($9.58 x 15 days), and $600 hazard insurance premium ($50 x 12 months). This seems like a bad deal - so many high fees! Is this normal?
My next option is a local credit union that was referred to me by a friend. If I deposit $1800 over the next 10 months, they will add in $7500 for my downpayment as matching funds. Only trouble is, I plan on changing jobs to working part time and volunteering part time to help start up a nonprofit. So I feel that I should apply for the mortgage now since later I may not qualify.
I can't apply at my bank because they require a 720 score to even look at you.
What should I do?
Re: Is this a bad deal?