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Federal Housing Administration greenlights 40-year mortgages

'If it helps people get into a house, it's a good thing,' Sonsire Gonzalez, a real estate agent in Port St Lucie, says
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PORT ST. LUCIE, Fla. — This week the Federal Housing Administration gave the OK to 40-year mortgages. It's a move designed to try and make it easier for first-time home buyers.

"If it helps people get into a house, it's a good thing," Sonsire Gonzalez, a real estate agent in Port St Lucie, said.

The idea is to reduce monthly mortgage payments, which have been rising as mortgage rates go up.

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Sonsire Gonzalez offers her thoughts on the new 40-year mortgages that were recently approved.
Sonsire Gonzalez offers her thoughts on the new 40-year mortgages that were recently approved.

Redfin.com reports over the last year, the average mortgage payment has risen 30% to a record $2,563 a month.

"Forty-year mortgage stretches out that payment over a longer period of time, so it makes for a lower payment, which is what a lot of buyers need right now," Gonzalez said.

Bankrate.com recently compared 30- and 40-year mortgages and found on a $312,000 loan at 6.85% interest, the monthly payments were $2,044 for 30 years and $1,904 for 40 years.

Bankrate.com recently did a comparison of 30- and 40-year mortgages and estimated what homebuyers could pay.
Bankrate.com recently did a comparison of 30- and 40-year mortgages and estimated what homebuyers could pay.

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The extra 10 years also added more interest, close to $170,000 more, but in the short term, experts said it can make a difference, especially since many homeowners hardly stay in one house for 30 or 40 years.

"It's going to attract buyers struggling to put their money together for getting into a house, like a first-time home buyer, and it's great because it saves them from wasting money on rent," Gonzalez said.