Minimum Occupancy Time For Owner Occupied Status

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I am buying a nice 2/1.5 condo, there is a real rental shortage in my area people are on waiting lists. It will rent quickly. I can get a much better interest rate if I owner occupy. How long do I need to occupy to keep the bank off of my back? How do most banks verify if you actually live there? Could I get away with offering the place up for rent saying first 3 months utilities payed for 1 year lease that way electricity and water are in my name. Bank checks and I'm in the green, just my shady mind at work. Thanks for your suggestions.

Comments(6)

  • DaveT12th March, 2004

    Owner occupancy requirement is usually one year. If you lie on your loan application to obtain an owner-occupant rate for your investment rental property, you have committed loan fraud.

    If the loan is federally insured, your maximum penalty is a $250,000 fine and/or up to two years in a federal penitentiary. A one-eighth point reduction on a $100K loan will only reduce your monthly mortgage payment by $7.62. My cost benefit analysis tells me that the penalty for loan fraud is not worth the reduction in my monthly mortgage payment.

  • ELOCK12th March, 2004

    Never done it never will I second Dave.

    ED

  • aandrese17th March, 2004

    Hi, I just found this forum. I am new, but here is my opinon(I own a couple of rentals)...

    My advice would be to either:
    a) move into the unit and actually live there for a reasonable time.
    Or b) Get an investor loan and sleep better at night not worrying about being caught.

    Pretending to live in a unit that you are actually renting out would not be worth it to me.
    [ Edited by DaveT on Date 03/17/2004 ]

  • jenkie0121st March, 2004

    I just gpt 3 props in last 6 months and paid 6.5% over 15 because I do not live there.
    I the chances of getting caught are 1 in 2000000, I would be the lucky guy...plus I can sleep better at night and I can go back to the same bank and look the VP right in the eye when I do decide to do a live-in fix up deal.

    my 2 cents

  • quickspic21st March, 2004

    My case is different than most, I am in the Army and I move when they tell me too. I have already been at my current location for 4 years and I know a move is immanent even though I have not received orders. I simply don't want to move into a place for a couple of months then move and they check and try to screw me that is all.

  • Stockpro9921st March, 2004

    I think that intent is the key, If you have an intent to owner occupy then your job changes or you move in the army then I would go for it. In fact, knowing that a change was imminent I would do it.
    I bought my first property this way as an E-4 20 years ago rolleyes
    Make the system work for you

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