Questions

What does PMI do if you default?

What does PMI do if you default?

Private mortgage insurance (PMI) is a type of insurance that may be required by your mortgage lender if your down payment is less than 20 percent of your home’s purchase price. PMI protects the lender against losses if you default on your mortgage.

Under what condition will a lender require PMI?

PMI is usually required when you have a conventional loan and make a down payment of less than 20 percent of the home’s purchase price. If you’re refinancing with a conventional loan and your equity is less than 20 percent of the value of your home, PMI is also usually required.

At what point must a creditor automatically terminate private mortgage insurance on a conventional loan?

PMI will automatically terminate when the loan balance is first scheduled to reach 78\% of the original value of the mortgaged property regardless of the outstanding balance of the mortgage and the loan is current.

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Are there any products available to protect banks from the risk that borrowers will default?

Mortgage protection insurance covers fewer events and offers fewer additional features than income protection.

Does mortgage insurance go towards principal?

Private mortgage insurance does nothing for you This is a premium designed to protect the lender of the home loan, not you as a homeowner. Unlike the principal of your loan, your PMI payment doesn’t go into building equity in your home.

Does PMI go away automatically?

The lender or servicer must automatically terminate PMI when your mortgage balance reaches 78 percent of the original purchase price — in other words, when your loan-to-value (LTV) ratio drops to 78 percent. This is provided you are in good standing and haven’t missed any mortgage payments.

Is PMI removed automatically?

Automatic PMI termination Even if you don’t ask your servicer to cancel PMI, your servicer still must automatically terminate PMI on the date when your principal balance is scheduled to reach 78 percent of the original value of your home.