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There is no limit to the number of times you can refinance. However, you must qualify every time you apply and there will be costs associated with closing the loan each time.
Yes! There are a number of bond programs that offer low or no down payment financing options.
The key to choosing the right mortgage is to understand the range of options and features available to you, as well as your budget, circumstances, and goals. Our licensed mortgage professionals are here to help you navigate that process. The more you know, the more comfortable and confident you will be choosing the best option for you and your family.
The Truth in Lending Act (TILA) does not permit a lender to close a loan until at least seven (7) business days have passed from the date your application was received. A typical home loan takes 30 days, as a number of third-party services such as appraisals, title work, and credit are required in conjunction with the mortgage process. Once you familiarize your Loan Officer with the details of your specific loan scenario, they will be able to provide you with a more specific timeline.
The only way to find out is to speak with a qualified mortgage professional. Our Loan Officers have helped numerous clients who didn’t know if they could qualify to become home owners. We take the time to understand your financial situation and long-term financial goals, and then match you with the loan program that best fits your needs. Your approval for a loan may also largely depend on the price of the home you are financing. Getting pre-qualified prior to beginning your home search can give you an idea of what you may be able to afford.
Homeowners typically refinance to save money, either by obtaining a lower interest rate or by reducing the term of their loan. Refinancing is also a way to convert an adjustable loan to a fixed loan or to consolidate debts.
This question does not have a simple, one-size-fits-all answer. The exact amount will depend on the price of the home you buy as well the type of mortgage financing you choose. Depending on your loan program, your down payment could be as much as 20% of the home’s price or as little as 3%, while some loans require no down payment at all.
You may still qualify for a home loan even if you have experienced a bankruptcy. The best way to find out if you qualify is to talk with a Loan Officer to discuss your options. Be sure to bring all paperwork regarding your bankruptcy so your Loan Officer can find the program that best fits your situation.
Interest rates fluctuate all day, every day. If an interest rate is good, it may be in your best interest to lock now. If you wait, you run the risk of an increase in rates later. If you are concerned that rates may go down after you lock, contact your Loan Officer to discuss your options. Some programs allow you to lock for an extended period and choose to lower your rate should a better one become available.

Why the War With Iran Is Affecting Your Mortgage Rate and What Buyers Need to Understand
The Wildcard That Upended the Rate Outlook
Just weeks ago mortgage rates briefly dipped below six percent for the first time in over three years. For buyers who had been patient and hopeful the moment felt like a turning point. Then the conflict with Iran escalated and rates moved back up quickly, erasing much of what had looked like meaningful progress toward a more affordable rate environment.
For buyers trying to make sense of what happened and what it means for their plans the situation is genuinely confusing. The connection between a military conflict thousands of miles away and the interest rate on a home purchase is not intuitive. But the mechanism that links geopolitical events to mortgage costs is real, it operates quickly, and understanding it helps buyers make informed decisions rather than reactive ones.
The Chain Reaction That Runs From Oil to Your Payment
The sequence starts with oil. The conflict with Iran has pushed oil costs higher as markets priced in the risk of supply disruption from a region that plays an outsized role in global energy production and distribution. When oil prices rise the cost increase does not stay contained to energy itself. It spreads through the entire economy because energy is embedded in the production, transportation, and delivery of virtually everything consumers buy.
Higher energy costs across the supply chain translate into broader inflation. Goods cost more to produce. Services cost more to deliver. The consumer and producer price indexes that measure inflation begin to reflect those elevated costs in their readings.
Inflation is precisely what prevents the Federal Reserve from cutting interest rates. The Fed has been holding rates steady rather than cutting as many market participants had anticipated because the inflation picture has not cooperated sufficiently with rate reduction. The surge in oil prices resulting from the Iranian conflict has made that inflation picture meaningfully worse and has given the Fed every reason to maintain its cautious stance on rate cuts.
Mortgage rates respond to all of this through the bond market. When inflation expectations rise investors demand higher yields on bonds to compensate for the reduced purchasing power that inflation creates over the life of a fixed income investment. Higher bond yields translate directly into higher mortgage rates for borrowers. The brief dip below six percent that occurred before the conflict escalated reflected a moment when inflation expectations had eased enough to allow yields to fall. The escalation reversed that dynamic quickly.
Why Borrowers Rarely See This Coming
As John Cobain explains most borrowers simply do not have reason to monitor the connection between geopolitical events and their housing payment in their daily lives. The chain runs through oil prices, inflation data, Federal Reserve communications, bond market sentiment, and mortgage-backed security pricing before it arrives at the number a borrower sees on their loan estimate. Each step in that chain involves market dynamics that are unfamiliar to most people outside of finance and economics.
That gap between what is driving rates and what borrowers understand about rates is exactly where a knowledgeable loan officer creates real value. Not by predicting what will happen next, which nobody can do reliably, but by explaining what is actually happening now and why so that clients can make decisions based on accurate information rather than confusion or misplaced expectations.
A borrower who understands that rates jumped because oil prices surged due to geopolitical conflict and that the duration and outcome of that conflict is genuinely uncertain is in a much better position to think clearly about their timing and their strategy than one who simply sees that rates moved and does not understand why.
What This Means for Buyers Right Now
The practical implications of the current rate environment depend on where a buyer is in the process. For buyers who are under contract or actively shopping the uncertainty around how long the current geopolitical situation will persist makes rate volatility a real and near-term consideration. Rates could ease if the conflict resolves and oil prices retreat. They could move higher if the situation escalates further or if inflation readings respond more aggressively than the market currently expects.
That genuine uncertainty in both directions is one of the reasons that locking in a rate as soon as the timing makes sense in the transaction process is worth considering seriously. A locked rate removes the geopolitical variable from the equation for that buyer and allows the rest of the transaction to proceed on known terms rather than terms that are subject to movements nobody can reliably predict.
For buyers who are still in the preparation phase the current environment reinforces the value of being ready to act when conditions align rather than waiting for a rate level that may or may not arrive on a predictable timeline. The brief window below six percent that recently closed is a clear example of how quickly favorable conditions can appear and disappear.
Clarity Is What Actually Helps Buyers Move Forward
When borrowers understand what is driving the rate environment they are navigating they can make better decisions about timing, about locking, and about how to structure their purchase to work within current conditions rather than being paralyzed by uncertainty or making choices based on incomplete information.
John Cobain works with buyers to explain the forces that are actually moving rates right now, provide context for what the current environment means for their specific situation, and build a strategy that makes sense given the uncertainty that geopolitical developments have introduced. Reach out to John Cobain to get clarity on what is happening in the rate market and what it means for your path to homeownership right now.
Sources
CNBC.com RealEstateNews.com FederalReserve.gov MortgageNewsDaily.com EnergyInformationAdministration.gov
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