- You both must be at least 62. If the house is co-owned, the age of the youngest owner determines eligibility.
- The home must be your primary residence. You can't do a reverse mortgage on a vacation house.
- You typically can't have both a standard mortgage and a reverse. If you're still paying off your original mortgage, you can get a reverse, but the money must first be used to pay off the primary loan.
- The amount owed to the bank will never exceed the value of the home. Don't worry, your children aren't going to have to take money out of their own pockets to pay back the lender.
- Reverse mortgages aren't cheap. The vast majority of reverse mortgages are guaranteed by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). And HUD-backed reverse mortgages carry steep fees. You also have to pay for HUD to insure your mortgage (an initial charge of 2 percent of the home's value plus 0.5 percent annually).
Learn more by visiting www.hud.gov and typing "reverse mortgage" into the search field. The American Association of Retired Persons (aarp.org/money/revmort) also has extensive information on the subject.
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