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For most people, changing
employers will not really affect your ability to qualify for a mortgage
loan, especially if you are going to be earning more money. For some
homebuyers, however, the effects of changing jobs can be disastrous to your
loan application.
How Changing Jobs Affects
Buying a Home
For most people, changing
employers will not really affect your ability to qualify for a mortgage
loan. For some homebuyers, however, the effects of changing jobs can be
disastrous to your loan application.
Salaried Employees
If you are a salaried
employee who does not earn additional income from commissions, bonuses,
or over-time, switching employers should not create a problem. Just make
sure to remain in the same line of work. Hopefully, you will be earning
a higher salary, which will help you better qualify for a mortgage.
Hourly Employees
If your income is based
on hourly wages and you work a straight forty hours a week without over-time,
changing jobs should not create any problems.
Commissioned Employees
If a substantial portion
of your income is derived from commissions, you should not change jobs before
buying a home. This has to do with how mortgage lenders calculate your income.
They average your commissions over the last two years.
Changing employers creates
an uncertainty about your future earnings from commissions. There is no
track record from which to produce an average. Even if you are selling the
same type of product with essentially the same commission structure, the
underwriter cannot be certain that past earnings will accurately reflect
future earnings.
Changing jobs would
negatively impact your ability to buy a home.
Bonuses
If a substantial portion
of your income on the new job will come from bonuses, you may want to consider
delaying an employment change. Mortgage lenders will rarely consider future
bonuses as income unless you have been on the same job for two years and
have a track record of receiving those bonuses. Then they will average your
bonuses over the last two years in calculating your income.
Changing employers means
that you do not have the two-year track record necessary to count bonuses
as income.
Part-Time Employees
If you earn an hourly
income but rarely work forty hours a week, you should not change jobs. There
would be no way to tell how many hours you will work each week on the new
job, so no way to accurately calculate your income. If you remain on the
old job, the lender can just average your earnings.
Over-Time
Since all employers
award overtime hours differently, your overtime income cannot be determined
if you change jobs. If you stay on your present job, your lender will give
you credit for overtime income. They will determine your overtime earnings
over the last two years, then calculate a monthly
average.
Self-Employment
If you are considering
a change to self-employment before buying a new home, don’t do it.
Buy the home first.
Lenders like to see
a two-year track record of self-employment income when approving a loan.
Plus, self-employed individuals tend to include a lot of expenses on the
Schedule C of their tax returns, especially in the early years of self-employment.
While this minimizes your tax obligation to the IRS, it also minimizes your
income to qualify for a home loan.
If you are considering
changing your business from a sole proprietorship to a partnership or corporation,
you should also delay that until you purchase your new home.
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