I’m really baffled that people are so tempted to just walk away from their house simply because it’s “worth” less than they owe on it. I put the worth in quotation marks, because what a house is worth is all relative. A house is worth what someone is willing to pay for it. Sure, you can base it on comparable sales in the neighborhood, but that gets very skewed when you are dealing with one of the biggest real estate corrections in the history of the United States. Just because a real estate agent or Zillow.com tells you that your house is worth $100,000 and you owe $150,000 doesn’t mean it’s going to be like that forever. It would only take a solid year of real estate recovery and lessening foreclosures/short sales in order for your property to start recovering in market value. Here’s a question we recently received from a concerned friend: A friend of mine is upside-down on her mortgage…she has this brilliant idea to buy a new home, and then foreclose on her old one after she’s already in the new home. I know this is a bad idea, but I don’t know how to tell her WHY its a bad idea….can you help? Here’s 5 Reasons: It’s going to ruin your friend’s credit. If she ever needs a car loan or tries to buy another house in the next 10 years, she’s going to have a hard time, because a foreclosure on your credit report is like dropping an atom bomb on it. It takes a long time to go away, and lenders will treat you like you have The Plague when they see your credit report. I hope she makes a lot of money. If she’s planning on buying another house before she sells the old house, she’ll have to disclose that she is carrying another mortgage, and that will take a signficant hit on her showing the other mortgage company that she can afford two mortgages. I’m assuming she would tell the mortgage lender about her little plan to duck out on other other loan, because I doubt any lender would give her another mortgage if they knew that. Probably the most important reason NOT to follow through on her “great” idea is because the mortgage lender could go after her for the difference of the loan after they sell the house. If she owes

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Help A Reader: What To Do When You’re Upside Down On Your Mortgage?
