Finding the right lender
Fair or unfair to manufactured home borrowers, most lenders view manufactured homes with derision. We’ve all heard the term —trailer trash—well that’s how most lenders continue to characterize the manufactured home loan. Without owning the land, the manufactured home is pigeon-holed into a high percentage rate personal property loan. Even when the home sits on real property, the stigma persists in the minds of lenders that a homeowner will pull up his 5th wheel, hitch up the home, pull up stakes, and disappear down the road in the middle of the night – leaving the investor, high and dry. Although the portrait being portrayed treads on the side of ridiculous, the real concern for the lender is not only dismissing the above stigma, but how a simple classification of titling can significantly alter an investor’s mentality from “trailer” to legitimate dwelling.
Fortunately, FHA-insured loans are improving their visibility with many mortgage brokers. In many respects, they seem to rank among the only safe-havens for the manufactured home purchaser or borrower. Furthermore, HUD has created a model that both the lender and transaction coordinator can follow. The need for this type of application stems from the confusion over the fact that manufactured homes are the only type of housing that can be classified either as personal property or real property; and worse, there has been no national consistency for neither titling nor set-up requirements. In some states, manufactured homes were overseen by a transportation agency. Yet in other states – such as California – there exists has always been an authoritative MH housing agency, where others maintain little to no oversight. While HUD has jumped into the picture and requires a national standard for new home installation since January 1, 2009, existing homes are currently in “no-man’s land.”
A primary priority to a lender is that the titling of the manufactured as real property (meaning that the home and land are conjoined as one). This provides the lender – or investor – with security interest on the home. In some states (like California), the classification for a manufactured home as real property requires that the home be installed on a permanent foundation. In other states (like Arizona), the change of titling procedure is a paper-only transaction so there is no requirement for a permanent foundation. Where this becomes a problem is when a borrower needs an FHA-insured loan because HUD requires that the home be set on a permanent foundation. Thus, a licensed engineer must certify the foundation is in compliance with FHA guidelines, or what is commonly referred to as the HUD Handbook. So this begs the question why? The borrower typically proclaims, “When I bought my home, it was approved by the building department and everything has been signed off. Of course, my home will pass otherwise the building department wouldn’t have approved it!” However, building regulations vary from city-to-city and county-to-county, so underwriters, investors and government agencies need a national standard. The approval of a licensed engineer that the home meets the standards detailed in the PERMANENT FOUNDATION GUIDE TO MANUFACTURED HOMES seems to fit the bill.
These are the basics for your home to qualify:
- The manufactured must be a HUD home, which means it must be manufactured after June 15, 1976. If there are metal plates at the rear of the home that begin with a three Alpha letters like CAL, ARZ, ORE, that’s usually a good sign. If the HUD label is missing, usually a label verification letter from the Institute for Building Technology and Safety (IBTS) www.ibts.org giving the provenance of the home will suffice.
- The foundation system must meet the guidelines published in the Permanent Foundations Guide for Manufactured Housing, dated September 1996. A certification attesting to compliance must be obtained from a licensed professional engineer.
- The manufactured home must be classified and taxed as real estate. A long-term lease may also be acceptable in certain instances. States vary on how the real estate classification is accomplished so this is another important aspect to understand.
- The axles and tongues must be removed from the chassis.
- The manufactured home must have an adequate perimeter enclosure with appropriate ventilation.
- The manufactured home must not have been installed or occupied previously at any other site or location.
- Must have a floor area of not less than 400 square feet.
- Built and remains on a permanent chassis.
- The finished grade elevation beneath the manufactured home shall be at or above the 100-year return frequency flood elevation.
If you are in the market for a manufactured home loan and you own your land, it is in your best interest to work with a loan officer that specializes only in the manufactured home loan product. And if you need a professional engineer to evaluate the foundation, you’ll need one that specializes in manufactured homes as well because the HUD Handbook consists of over 400 pages of inconsistency.
If you want a lender that specializes in manufactured homes. www.mh-lending.com
If you want a professional engineer that specializes in manufactured homes www.onthelevelcontractors.com









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