Monday, April 4, 2011

Convert A Construction Loan To A Permanent Loan

Construction loans are temporary loans in that they are set up to be drawn on in stages of completed construction. When construction is complete, you would then have to take steps to end the construction stage of lending and somehow end up with a permanent loan. If you took out a "Construction to Perm" loan, this is easy. If you didn't, you will have to reapply for a permanent loan. The following information will help you to walk through "converting" a construction loan to a permanent loan.


Instructions


"Converting" the Construction Loan


1. If you took out a Construction to Perm loan, good news! You do not have to close again. The Construction to Perm loan allows you to modify your construction loan to the permanent stage, which can be any term that you chose when the Construction to Perm lender offered it to you at the beginning of the construction stage. You normally do not have to requalify for the permanent loan. About 30 days from construction completion, your lender will begin asking when to expect the Certificate of Occupancy from your county, appraisers final inspection and will began getting the file ready to effect modification. Some lenders have you go to your closer (Attorney or Title Company), and have them administer the modification package. Some lenders simply send out the package to you with instructions of where to sign, and which documents need to be notarized. Once this is completed, send the file back, and congratulations, you are done.


2. If you have to refinance into a new permanent loan, gather up all of your documents that you used when you applied for the construction loan, updating the income and asset documents, and make an appointment with a lender. It may take three to four weeks to process the file, so check you dates with the construction lender. They have a daily interest charge on the balance of your construction loan, so it makes sense to start this process at least thirty days before your project is completed.


3. Stay in touch with the new lender to help speed the new loan along, providing missing documents as requested. Stay in touch with the builder as to timing down the ending details of the project. Make visits to the property for visuals on progress. Make a list of what you feel still needs doing. This "punch out" list should be completed before closing. In the event some items cannot be completed before closing, get an agreement in writing with your builder that the "punch out" list will be completed after closing, and have a completion by date. (Try to avoid the situation of outstanding tasks with the builder, but sometimes weather, material delivery delays, etc. can cause delays).


4. Contact the closer (Attorney or Title Company) that you used to close your construction loan if possible. They already have the initial closing and can pull up the file and continue with the new closing of your new permanent loan. If this is not possible, ask your new lender to suggest a preferred closer. Their suggestion will always be one where customer service is always superb.


5. Your new lender will order the appraiser to do a final inspection. You may want to be there when he comes out and walk through the home with him. If you have done your own visual prior to the appraiser's visit, and made notes, bring them and go over them with the appraiser. He is not only going to recertify that the value is still what he initially appraised it at, but he is going to state that the home is now complete per plan.







Tags: construction loan, Construction Perm, Construction Perm loan, Perm loan, permanent loan