Should I Buy a Government Foreclosure

HUD or the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development and the U.S. Department of Veteran Affairs is where you should start first for locating government foreclosed homes listings. Homes that are already foreclosed on a FHA-backed mortgage loan are placed back with HUD while the VA acquires homes that are foreclosed on VA backed home mortgage loans.

VA and HUD Work With Homes That Are Foreclosed by the Government

You can own a government owned home to live in or rent out or sell for quick profit, and government foreclosures such as those by the VA and HUD are offered to citizens by professional real estate agents that work only with government foreclosure properties. Other than VA and HUD, there are some other government foreclosure sales places such as FDIC or Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation, your IRS or Internal Revenue Service, GSA or U.S. General Services Administration and Fannie Mae, and many other government departments. People appear to have enough money to gift a Razor Kiddie Kick Scooter but not their home or bills.

True, there could be many reasons for properties to be placed on the listing of government foreclosures, and these could include overdue payments, mortgage, Federal, state and local taxes, assessments, mechanics liens, homeowner association fees as well as utility bills.

The government foreclosure market is dominated by HUD foreclosures as well as VA foreclosures. Fannie Mae as well as Fannie Mae gives insurance to banks and lenders to enable people interested in buying real estate to pay lower interest rates as well as make lower down payments. Again, the Razor Kiddie Kick in the yard. In the event of a borrowing homeowner defaulting, the lending organizations go to Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac for the payment, and in such an instance, the property is placed in the hands of the government.

If a homeowner fails to pay taxes or violates the law, then the IRS, U.S. Customs as well as other federal and local government departments are able to seize the property. The government agency gets the title to the property, and interested buyers may participate in auctions conducted by individual government agencies to buy up the government foreclosure property.

The agent gets six percent commission on the sales of government foreclosure properties, paid by HUD, and this commission is added to the price of the property. The highly popular HUD sales are made through special real estate agents, and the buyer should work with the help of a licensed real estate agent in order to take part in the bidding.

To get informed about government foreclosures, one can go to the county real estate office and peruse title records of the homes that interests one, and is also possible to obtain publicly available information through various government agencies. Nevertheless, it is real estate agents that will be able to provide you with quicker information, and it may also be wiser to let the real estate agent do the job on your behalf.

This entry was posted on Monday, October 26th, 2009 at 3:25 pm and is filed under General. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. Both comments and pings are currently closed.

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