2-1 buydown
Issue 109 - November 11th, 2022
In the residential real estate world, the HOT term of the quarter is “2-1 buydown”.
This will be a strategy and tactic you see being very commonplace in the residential real estate market over the next few quarters as agents and lenders find creative ways to get sellers and buyers to make deals happen in a slowing and evolving housing market across the country.
What is a 2-1 buydown?
A 2-1 buydown program is a type of financing offer by banks and mortgage lenders to reduce your interest rates for the first two years of a mortgage. If you opt for a 2-1 buydown, that means as a buyer, your interest rate is reduced by 2% the first year and 1% the second year.
By the third year of the mortgage term, the interest rate goes back to the original interest rate on the loan. But with a 2-1 buydown, buyers have reduced payments for the first two years.
How does this work? Who pays for the concession?
The builder or seller will fund a temporary rate buydown, but it needs to be included as an agreement in the purchase contract, and the real estate agents negotiate it during the offer process. The prepaid sum is paid during closing into an escrow account.
The lump sum is held in a custodial escrow account and is applied to the buyer’s payment. The buyer will have a reduced monthly payment, and the difference in interest rates comes out of the escrow account.
The first year, the interest rate is lowered by 2 percentage points and 1 percentage point the following year.
SHOW ME AN EXAMPLE!
Let’s say you’re buying a $450,000 house with a 20% down payment for a mortgage loan of $360,000 and an interest rate of 7% and APR of 7.094%. A monthly principal and interest (P&I) payment would be about $2,395.
With a 2-1 buydown, your interest rate would decrease by 2% from the original rate for the first year. So, with a 5% interest rate, your monthly P&I amount would be $1,932.
The following year, your interest rate would go down by one percentage point from the original rate, taking it to 6%. The monthly P&I amount you’d be paying would be $2,158.
Your payment would then be at the original 7% interest rate from the third year onwards, taking your monthly P&I back to $2,395.
Bear in mind that this scenario doesn’t factor in taxes and insurance, so your actual monthly payment amount will vary, but you can see the difference between years 1 and 2 versus year 3 and after.
Running these different scenarios can help you better forecast what you’ll be paying for the first 2 years versus the third year onwards to understand if it’s the right decision for you.
What is the catch?
The first thing to point out with a temporary buydown is just that, it’s temporary. Initially, it can be a positive thing that you’re paying lowered mortgage payments the first two years. However, if your income doesn’t match the payment amount in the third year of the loan, it can become a serious problem.
It is essential to consider the impact of the monthly payments once they resume at the original interest rate from the third year onwards.
A temporary buydown can benefit both sellers and buyers, but it’s more likely to occur in a buyers' market where there are many properties available but not enough buyers.
For buyers, this is a bridge for a market with high rates and gives them an opportunity to buy now, when interest rates are high, with the ability to refi later if rates go down. If they don’t go down and continue to go up, then at least they’ve locked in a lower rate right now.
For sellers, it enables them to move properties faster and keeps them from staying on the market too long.
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