Lenders
A contractor calls or knocks on your door and offers to
install a new roof or remodel your kitchen at a price that
sounds reasonable. You tell him you’re interested,
but can’t afford it. He tells you it’s no problem — he
can arrange financing through a lender he knows. You agree
to the project, and the contractor begins work. At some
point after the contractor begins, you are asked to sign
a lot of papers. The papers may be blank or the lender
may rush you to sign before you have time to read what
you’ve been given to sign. You sign the papers. Later,
you realize that the papers you signed are a home equity
loan. The interest rate, points and fees seem very high.
To make matters worse, the work on your home isn’t
done right or hasn’t been completed, and the contractor,
who may have been paid by the lender, has little interest
in completing the work to your satisfaction.
You can protect yourself from inappropriate lending practices
by not:
-
Agreeing to a home equity loan if
you don’t have
enough money to make the monthly payments.
-
Signing any document you haven’t
read or any document that has blank spaces to be filled
in after you sign.
-
Letting anyone pressure you into signing any document.
-
Deeding your property to anyone. First consult an attorney,
a knowledgeable family member, or someone else you trust.
-
Agreeing to financing through your contractor without
shopping around and comparing loan terms.
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