Tuesday, June 3, 2008

Grants and Credit Counseling

I don't know how it works in other parts of the country, but in Philadelphia, there are multiple types of Grants for which a buyer can qualify. Most of them are income related. Some come from the City of Philadelphia, Some from the State of Pennsylvania, and some from lenders.

What a buyer must be aware of is that the ones from the State and City require credit counseling. In fact, the counseling must be done before an offer is submitted. Thus, if you are low income or moderate income and pursuing one of these grants for closing costs, you must be very proactive and get in to meet with a credit counselor. The lenders may also require credit counseling, however, that must be determined on a grant by grant basis. In Philadelphia, there are many of these groups, which provide the counseling. There are too many to list here. Some are quite good and responsive, and some are not. Either way, be pushy and get in to see the counselor so that you can get on with buying real estate.

An agent in my office recently submitted an offer without realizing the counseling had to be done. So far, they are okay. Her buyer is on top of everything and the two have been scurrying to get everything done. They called all over to get the counseling done. They finally found a counselor who would meet with them Saturday night. She had to drive her client to the appointment so she ended up in attendance.

She said the Credit Counselor was very bright, but spent a good deal of time bashing Realtors. Misrepresented what we make. In fact, doubled it (what we make). Told the buyer not to tell the Realtor if they really liked a property. Told the buyer not to use a home inspector recommended by the Realtor, because they would just pass the house in order to get the sale pushed through. Also, told the buyer not to sign a buyer broker agreement. I have so many issues with what this man said and I was not there! I will address these issues in separate entries!