Why Both Spouses Should Be Named on Reverse Mortgages
Why Both Spouses Should Be Named on Reverse Mortgages Advocacy
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts Bennett is at risk because federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) regulations allow lenders to foreclose on homes carrying reverse mortgages after the borrower dies, even if a surviving spouse who was not named on the mortgage wants to stay in the home. Reverse mortgages ; rather, the , and it is usually repaid when the property is sold or the homeowners die. While the loans can help equity-rich, cash-poor older homeowners access their home equity, the loans are also difficult to understand.
Why Both Spouses Should Be Named on a Reverse Mortgage
Lenders can foreclose after a borrower dies even if the surviving spouse wants to stay
Greg Kahn/Grain "I just want to own this home, take care of it and live here feeling safe," says Robert Bennett. Editor's Note: On Sept. 30, 2013, a federal trial court in Washington, D.C., ruled that HUD violated federal law when it did not protect surviving spouses of holders of . Robert Bennett is facing foreclosure on a home he and his wife built more than 35 years ago and owned together in Annapolis, Md. In December 2008, the couple took out a , allowing them to convert equity in the home into cash payments. The problem? Bennett was not listed as a borrower. The listed borrower was his wife, Ophelia. She died a month later following a stroke, and the lender told Bennett that he had to pay off the outstanding loan balance or lose the house. "It feels terrible to work so hard to keep up a home and know that the lender wants to take it away from me," Bennett, 71, told the AARP Bulletin. He has lived in the house since he and Ophelia married in 1975. "I just want to own this home, take care of it and live here feeling safe."Related
— Receive access to exclusive information, benefits and discounts Bennett is at risk because federal Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) regulations allow lenders to foreclose on homes carrying reverse mortgages after the borrower dies, even if a surviving spouse who was not named on the mortgage wants to stay in the home. Reverse mortgages ; rather, the , and it is usually repaid when the property is sold or the homeowners die. While the loans can help equity-rich, cash-poor older homeowners access their home equity, the loans are also difficult to understand.