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Documenting
Your Assets – Verifying Your Down Payment
Personal
Property - Cars, Antiques, etc.
Personal property
includes automobiles, vehicles, boats, furniture, collections,
heirlooms, antiques, art, clothing, and practically everything
you own except for real estate. The mortgage application
asks you to estimate the value for these items.
The
larger the loan amount, the more important it is for you
to provide
details on your personal property. This is because larger
loans usually indicate larger incomes, and lenders check
to see if your personal property matches your income. If
it does not, this sends a "red flag" to the underwriter
and they take a closer look at your application.
You are not required
to document the value of personal property unless you intend
to sell them to come up with your down payment.
Selling
Personal Property
For those homebuyers
who do sell personal property in order to come up with their
down payment, the verification process can be arduous. Lenders
are much stricter about documenting this method of coming
up with your source of funds.
Selling
a car is perhaps the easiest to document. First, you need
to photocopy
the registration that shows you actually own the vehicle.
You will have to provide a copy of the page in the "Blue
Book" that shows your model and its value. Then you
need to photocopy the bill of sale showing the transfer to
another individual and a copy of the check used to purchase
the vehicle. Do not get paid in cash because that makes it
impossible to show you actually received the funds. Make
a copy of the receipt when you deposit the funds into the
bank.
Other types of
personal property are more difficult because you have to
show that you actually own the property and that it actually
has the value that you sold it for. This is a little harder
to do for most assets than it is for automobiles.
If you have records
to show you purchased the property, that would be helpful.
You could also provide an old inventory that documents ownership.
To determine value, you may have to contract with an independent
appraiser or a specialist who has the knowledge for that
particular type of property.
If you cannot
document the item’s value, the lender will not view the sale
as an acceptable source of funds. Just like selling a car,
you have to prove you own the item, make a copy of the bill
of sale, copy the check used to purchase the item, and make
a copy of your receipt when you deposit the funds into your
bank.
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