Here’s the trick to buying a new house while selling the old one
Some good planning and the right strategies can help you get the timing right on the sale and the purchase
Selling your house and buying another home at the same time is the ultimate feat in multitasking, and it comes with a tricky timing challenge.
If you have a mortgage on your current home and you buy a house before selling, you could get stuck with loan payments and the cost of upkeep on both properties. If you sell your house before buying, you might have nowhere to go after the sale closes.
But with planning, the right financing and strategic pricing and negotiating, you can time the sale and the new purchase in a way that works for you.
Here are some strategies to make it come together.
Laying the groundwork for buying and selling
There’s lots of prep work for buying and selling, so start getting ready for both as soon as you can.
“The more you plan, the more it will save you from making big mistakes,” says Brian G. Smith, vice president of national business development at Union Home Mortgage in Ohio.
Get ready to sell
A good listing agent can provide guidance on how to prepare your home for the market.
That will include making any necessary repairs to remove red flags for buyers, as well as decluttering and cleaning, says Joey Sheehan, an agent with Berkshire Hathaway HomeServices Fox & Roach, Realtors in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania.
“Almost every house is too cluttered from the point of view of selling because selling a home is an entirely different activity from living in it,” Sheehan says.
After cleaning and decluttering, get photographs and videos of the home completed so those materials are set to go when you’re ready to list the property, recommends Christian Ross, managing broker for Engel & Völkers in Atlanta.
Get ready to buy
“Number one is to make sure your finances are in order. A lot of people say, ‘Oh, I know, I have great credit. I know I can get approved,’” Ross says. “But lending guidelines are changing every day.”
To get an offer accepted in today’s hot housing market, you’ll either need to have cash to buy it outright or be fully preapproved for a mortgage to finance the home, without any conditions from a lender that your existing home must sell first.
“The preapproval process for all borrowers should really start before they jump in and begin house hunting,” says Brian Blonder, senior vice president for mortgage sales at Capital Bank in Maryland.
How to make the money work
When selling your home, you likely will use the proceeds to pay off the mortgage and then apply any remaining money toward the next property.
But until that sale closes, you’ll need to come up with money for a down payment and have financing set up to buy the next home.
Some homeowners tap into savings accounts for the down payment on the next house. But not everyone has a hefty enough balance to make that work. Here are some other options.
Home equity line of credit
You could use a home equity line of credit, or HELOC, on your current home to draw cash for the down payment. But you’ll need to have the HELOC already in place; a lender won’t approve the credit line after you’ve put your house on the market, Blonder says.
Don’t wait until the last minute to apply if you think you might use a HELOC someday to finance the next purchase. Smith says sometimes a line of credit can take longer for approval than a first mortgage.
Bridge loan
With a bridge loan you can borrow up to 80% of your home’s value to pay off the old mortgage and put any remaining money toward a down payment on another home. Or you can use a bridge loan as a second mortgage to borrow a portion of your home equity for a down payment.
You make interest-only payments on the loan, and the maximum term is typically a year. But usually, bridge loans are paid off much more quickly because they’re designed to fill that short gap between the old-house sale and new-house purchase.
Because the term is short, interest rates are a couple of percentage points higher on a bridge loan than for a regular mortgage.
Some applicants who get approved for bridge loans don’t even need to use them because the sale ends up closing before the purchase after all.
401(k) or other investment account loan
You can borrow against a retirement or other investment account to get money for a down payment. A 401(k) loan, for instance, lets you borrow up to half the balance or up to $50,000, whichever is less, at reasonable interest rates.
The upside to borrowing against an investment account is that lenders don’t count that loan as debt when calculating your debt-to-income ratio for a mortgage preapproval, Blonder says. Ideally, you’ll repay the loan against your investment account as soon as your home sells.
Just make sure you stick with your plan to repay the loan after the old house sells and resist the temptation to use the money for other things. Defaulting on a loan from a 401(k) account can trigger taxes and penalties.
Low-down-payment mortgage
One option is to get a low-down-payment conventional mortgage to purchase your next home. Then when the sale of the old house closes, apply the proceeds toward your new home and get your mortgage recast.
When recasting the loan, the lender applies the lump-sum payment toward the principal and redoes the amortization schedule, which shows how much of each payment goes toward interest and how much goes toward reducing the debt. Recasting the mortgage will lower your monthly payment, and it’s a less costly and simpler process than refinancing a mortgage, Smith says.
But plan ahead. Not all lenders offer mortgage recasting. And this service is not available for government-backed loans, such as FHA, USDA or VA loans.
A new way to buy and sell
A variety of newer companies, such as Homeward, Knock, Opendoor, Orchard, Ribbon and others are remaking the way homes are bought and sold. Their services vary, but generally they provide financing so you can make a cash offer on your next home before closing the sale on your existing home — and avoid paying for two mortgages at once.
For example, with Homeward, you get approved for a mortgage and work with the company to make a cash offer on a new home. You can use your own lender or the company’s lending affiliate, Homeward Mortgage. If your offer is accepted, you move into the home after the purchase closes and list and sell your old home. While you’re waiting for your old home to sell, you rent your new home from Homeward for up to six months. If your old home doesn’t sell in six months, Homeward says it will buy it from you. Once your former home is sold, you close on the new home.
These companies comprise a sliver of the real-estate market today and operate only in certain markets. So you’ll need to check whether their services are available in your area, see if you and your property qualify, and then compare the costs versus going the traditional route.