Federal Housing Administration
What is the Federal Housing
Administration?
The Federal Housing Administration, generally known
as "FHA", provides mortgage insurance on loans made by
FHA-approved lenders throughout the United States and its
territories. FHA insures mortgages on single family and
multifamily homes including manufactured homes and hospitals. It
is the largest insurer of mortgages in the world, insuring nearly
33 million properties since its inception in
1934.
What is FHA Mortgage
Insurance?
FHA mortgage insurance provides lenders with protection
against losses as the result of homeowners defaulting on their
mortgage loans. The lenders bear less risk because FHA will pay a
claim to the lender in the event of a homeowner's default.
Loans must meet certain requirements established by FHA to
qualify for insurance.
Why does FHA Mortgage
Insurance exist?
Unlike conventional loans that adhere to strict
underwriting guidelines, FHA-insured loans require very little
cash investment to close a loan. There is more flexibility in
calculating household income and payment ratios. The cost of the
mortgage insurance is passed along to the homeowner and typically
is included in the monthly payment. In most cases, the insurance
cost to the homeowner will drop off after five years or when the
remaining balance on the loan is 78 percent of the value of the
property -whichever is longer.
How is FHA
funded?
FHA is the only government agency that operates entirely
from its self-generated income and costs the taxpayers nothing.
The proceeds from the mortgage insurance paid by the homeowners
are captured in an account that is used to operate the program
entirely. FHA provides a huge economic stimulation to the country
in the form of home and community development, which trickles
down to local communities in the form of jobs, building
suppliers, tax bases, schools, and other forms of
revenue.
The History of
FHA
Congress created the Federal Housing Administration
(FHA) in 1934. The FHA became a part of the Department of Housing
and Urban Development's (HUD) Office of Housing in
1965.
When the FHA was created, the housing industry was flat
on its back:
- Two million construction workers had lost their
jobs.
- Terms were difficult to meet for home buyers seeking
mortgages.
- Mortgage loan terms were limited to 50 percent of the
property's market value, with a repayment schedule spread
over three to five years and ending with a balloon payment.
- America was primarily a nation of renters. Only four in
10 households owned homes.
During the 1940s, FHA programs helped finance military
housing and homes for returning veterans and their families after
the war.
In the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s, the FHA helped to spark
the production of millions of units of privately-owned apartments
for elderly, handicapped and lower income Americans. When soaring
inflation and energy costs threatened the survival of thousands
of private apartment buildings in the 1970s, FHA's emergency
financing kept cash-strapped properties afloat.
The FHA moved in to steady falling home prices and made
it possible for potential home buyers to get the financing they
needed when recession prompted private mortgage insurers to pull
out of oil producing states in the 1980s.
By 2001, the nation's home ownership rate had soared
to an all time high of 68.1 percent as of the third quarter that
year.
The FHA and HUD have insured almost 30 million home
mortgages and 38,000 multifamily project mortgages representing
4.1 million apartments, since 1934.
In the more than 60 years since the FHA was created,
much has changed and Americans are now arguably the best housed
people in the world. HUD has helped greatly with that
success.
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