Glossary of Terms
Quick Jump: A-F G-L M-R S-Z
- 203-b Limit
- The dollar limit in each county for how much of a home's value
can be used to determine the amount of money you can get from a federally
insured HECM reverse mortgage. The name comes from Section 203-b of the
National Housing Act
- AARP Model Specifications
- Rules recommended by AARP for analyzing and comparing reverse
mortgages
- Acceleration Clause
- The part of a contract that says when a loan may be declared
due and payable
- Adjustable Rate
- An interest rate that changes, based on changes in a published
market-rate index
- Annuity
- A monthly cash payment you get from an insurance company for
the rest of your life
- Appraisal
- An estimate of much a house would sell for if it were sold;
also called its market value
- Appreciation
- An increase in a home's value
- Area Agency on Aging (AAA)
- A local or regional nonprofit organization that provides information
on services and programs for older adults
- Cap
- A limit on the amount an adjustable interest rate may go up
or down during a specified time period
- Closing
- A meeting where documents are signed to "close the deal" on
a mortgage; the time a mortgage begins
- Condemnation
- A court action saying a property is unfit for use: also, the
government taking private property to use for the public by the right of
eminent domain
- Credit Line
- A credit account that lets a borrower decide when to take money
out and also how much to take out; also known as a "line-of-credit" or "credit
line"
- Current Interest Rate
- In the HECM program, the interest rate currently being charged
on a loan; it equals the one-year rate for U.S. Treasury Securities, plus
a margin (see below)
- Deferred Payment Loans (DPLs)
- Reverse Mortgages that give you a lump sum of cash to repair
or improve a home; usually offered by state or local governments
- Depreciation
- A decrease in the value of a home
- Eminent Domain
- The right of a government to take private property for public
use; for example, taking private land to build a highway
- Expected Interest Rate
- In the HECM program, the interest rate used to determine a borrower's
loan advance amounts; it equals the 10-year rate for U.S. Treasury Securities,
plus a margin (see below)
- Fannie Mae
- A private company that buys and sells mortgages; a government-sponsored
business that is watched over by the federal government
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA)
- The part of the U. S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
(HUD) that insures HECM loans
- Federally Insured Reverse Mortgage
- A reverse mortgage guaranteed by the federal government so you
will always get what the loan promises; also, a Home Equity Conversion
Mortgage (HECM)
- Fixed Monthly Loan Advances
- Payments of the same amount that are made to a borrower each
month
- Home Equity
- The value of a home, subtracting any money owed on it
- Home Equity Conversion
- Turning home equity into cash without having to leave your home
or make regular loan repayments
- Home Equity Conversion Mortgage (HECM)
- The only reverse mortgage program insured by the Federal Housing
Administration, a federal government agency
- Initial Interest Rate
- In the HECM program, the interest rate that is first charged
on the loan beginning at closing; it equals the one-year rate for U.S.
Treasury Securities, plus a margin
- Leftover Equity
- The sale price of the home minus the total amount owed on it
and the cost of selling it; the amount the homeowner or heirs get when
the house is sold
- Loan Advances
- Payments made to a borrower, or to another party on behalf of
a borrower
- Loan Balance
- The amount owed, including principal and interest; capped in
a reverse mortgage by the value of the home when the loan is repaid
- Lump Sum
- A single loan advance at closing
- Margin
- In the HECM program, the amount added to the one-year Treasury
rate to determine the initial and current interest rates, and to the 10-year
Treasury rate to determine the expected interest rate
- Maturity
- When a loan must be repaid; when it becomes "due and payable"
- Mortgage
- A legal document making a home available to a lender to repay
a debt
- Non-recourse Mortgage
- A home loan in which the borrower can never owe more than the
home's value at the time the loan is repaid
- Origination
- The process of setting up a mortgage, including preparing documents
- Property Tax Deferral (PTD)
- Reverse mortgages that pay annual property taxes; usually offered
by state or local governments
- Proprietary Reverse Mortgage
- A reverse mortgage product owned by a private company
- Reverse Annuity Mortgage
- A reverse mortgage in which a lump sum is used to purchase an
annuity that gives the borrower a monthly income for life
- Reverse Mortgage
- A home loan that gives cash advances to a homeowner, requires
no repayment until a future time, and is capped by the value of the home
when the loan is repaid
- Right of Recession
- A borrower's right to cancel a home loan within three business
days of the closing
- Servicing
- Administering a loan after closing, such as maintaining loan
records and sending statements
- Shared Equity
- An itemized loan cost based on a percent of a home's value at
loan maturity; for example, a 5% shared equity fee on a home worth $200,000
at maturity would be $10,000
- Supplemental Security Income (SSI)
- A federal monthly income program for low-income persons who
are aged 65+, blind, or disabled
- Tenure Advances
- Fixed monthly loan advances for as long as a borrower lives
in a home
- Term Advances
- Fixed monthly loan advances for a specific period of time
- Total Annual Loan Cost (TALC) rate
- The projected annual average cost of a reverse mortgage including
all itemized costs
- T-rate
- The rate for U.S. Treasury Securities; used to determine the
initial, expected, and current interest rates for the HECM program
- Uninsured Reverse Mortgage
- A reverse mortgage that becomes due and payable on a specific
date