Mortgage Advice: APR
What is an Annual Percentage Rate
(APR)?
The annual
percentage rate (APR) is an interest rate that is different from the note rate. It is
commonly used to compare loan programs from different lenders. The Federal Truth in
Lending law requires mortgage companies to disclose the APR when they advertise a rate.
Typically the APR is found next to the rate.
The APR does NOT
affect your monthly payments. Your monthly payments are a function of the interest rate
and the length of the loan. The APR is a very confusing number! Even mortgage bankers and
brokers admit it is confusing. The APR is designed to measure the "true cost of a
loan." It creates a level playing field for lenders. It prevents lenders from
advertising a low rate and hiding fees.
If life were easy,
all you would have to do is compare APRs from the lenders/brokers you are working with,
then pick the easiest one and you would have the right loan. Right? Wrong!
Unfortunately,
different lenders calculate APRs differently! So a loan with a lower APR is not
necessarily a better rate. The best way to compare loans in the author's opinion is to ask
lenders to provide you with a good-faith estimate of their costs on the same type of
program (e.g. 30-year fixed) at the same interest rate. Then delete all fees that are
independent of the loan such as homeowners insurance, title fees, escrow fees, attorney
fees, etc. Now add up all the loan fees. The lender that has lower loan fees has a cheaper
loan than the lender with higher loan fees.
The reason why APRs
are confusing is because the rules to compute APRs are not clearly defined.
What fees are
included in the APR?
The following
fees ARE generally included in the APR:
Points - both
discount points and origination points
Pre-paid interest.
The interest paid from the date the loan closes to the end of the month. Most mortgage
companies assume 15 days of interest in their calculations. However, companies may use any
number between 1 and 30!
Loan-processing
fee
Underwriting fee
Document-preparation
fee
Private
mortgage-insurance
Appraisal fee
Credit-report fee
The following
fees are SOMETIMES included in the APR:
The following
fees are normally NOT included in the APR:
An APR does not tell
you how long your rate is locked for. A lender who offers you a 10-day rate lock may have
a lower APR than a lender who offers you a 60-day rate lock!
Calculating APRs on
adjustable and balloon loans is even more complex because future rates are unknown. The
result is even more confusion about how lenders calculate APRs.
Do not attempt to
compare a 30-year loan with a 15-year loan using their respective APRs. A 15-year loan may
have a lower interest rate, but could have a higher APR, since the loan fees are amortized
over a shorter period of time.
Finally, many
lenders do not even know what they include in their APR because they use software programs
to compute their APRs. It is quite possible that the same lender with the same fees using
two different software programs may arrive at two different APRs!
Conclusion:
Use the APR as a
starting point to compare loans. The APR is a result of a complex calculation and not
clearly defined. There is no substitute to getting a good-faith estimate from each lender
to compare costs. Remember to exclude those costs that are independent of the loan. |