Tag Archives: car
Purchasing a Car With a Home Equity Loan?
It may sound strange, but it is possible to purchase a car by using the money obtained from a home equity loan and you may end up saving a lot of money in the long run by doing so. Home equity loans compared to car loans are inexpensive sources of finance and also, they are a lot easier to qualify for. Thus, if you have equity left on your home and you are planning on buying a car, keep on reading.
A home equity loan has no specific purpose and thus can be used for purchasing anything you want or need. In this case, you can use the money to buy a new or used car and by doing so, youd be reducing the interest rate you will pay for the money borrowed. Though car loan and home equity loan are both secured loans, the loan conditions of home equity loans are more advantageous.
Benefits Of Equity
Equity can provide a lot of benefits when you need to borrow money. Home equity constitutes better collateral than a car and thus the financial transaction backed up with home equity implies less risks for the lender. Thus, you will be able to obtain better interest rates and better loan terms like higher loan amounts, longer repayment programs and lower monthly payments while saving money in terms of interests at the same time.
Also, equity as collateral has less possibilities of destruction or damage compared to a car. Thus, the costs on insurance will be significantly lower. Anything that reduces the risk in the financial transaction pushes the interest rate down because the rate is the way the lender compensates for the risk that lending money entails.
Moreover, for the same reasons expressed above (the risk reduction on the loan transaction) the requirements for approval will be lessened. When it comes to credit requirements, truth is that as opposed to car loans, if you have equity left on your home you can obtain financing even if you have extremely bad credit, no credit at all or a bankruptcy on your credit history.
Disadvantages Of Using Home Equity Loans
The main problem of using your home equity for purchasing a car, is that the means are way above the purpose. It is just like using a bazooka to kill an ant. Thus, if you ever need to resort to this form of financing for other purposes like making home improvements or consolidating debt, you may find difficulties because you have already obtained a home equity loan for purchasing a car.
The other problem, maybe the most serious one, is that since home equity loans use the equity that is left on your home as collateral for the loan, you are risking repossession of the property if you even fail to repay it. It works just like mortgage loans. In the event of defaulting on the loan, the lender has the legal right to seize the property and sell it in a public auction in order to claim the money lent. Thus, you should make sure that you will be able to afford the monthly payments.
My Loan Co-Signer has Died – Will I lose my car to the estate?
In order to be approved for credit, about 10% of borrowers in Canada need to give the lending company (usually a bank) assurance in the form of a co-signer. A co-signer is someone who has a good and established credit rating already, and who agrees to assume the debt in the event that the person in whose name the money is lent is unable to pay.
In many cases, the co-signer of a loan is a member of the borrowers family; most other people will not assume the risk, although it could be a close personal friend with a good credit record. In some cases, there is a risk that a co-signer may die before the loan is fully paid back, in which case the borrower may wonder what will happen to the assets purchased with the loan. In this scenario, we will use the example of a car in order to see how the situation will play out.
First of all, it is very important to note one thing; the co-signer of your loan does not, in fact, own the car that you needed to obtain the loan to buy. They are simply a guarantee to the lending company that someone will be able to pay for the car. Ownership will only revert to them if you have defaulted on the loan on your own, and they have had to make the payments themselves. In this case, the paper work will already have been changed to reflect the co-signer as the owner. In this case, you car will be part of the co-signers estate, but otherwise it is your own property.
Of course, the death of the co-signer does lead to other issues, even though the car will still be yours. Probably most significantly, you may have to report to the lending company that you no longer have a co-signer to cover you in case of default. Now, the odds are that if you are a responsible enough person to do this in the first place, you have been sure to make your payments. In that case you should have no problems; heres why.
Remember that the reason you had to have a co-signer in the first place was due to bad or no credit (probably no credit record). Once you have been making payments on a loan, however, you have established a credit record. Lending companies now have a basis on which to approve you for a loan, so you will probably be able to secure the loan without the need of a co-signer.
Of course, most people will probably not even think of informing the lending company should a co-signer die; as long as you continue to make your payments, this will not be an issue. If you do default, though, and the co-signer is responsible, your car will become part of the estate.