fromthecabbagepatch asked:


With no money down? This is our first home and we’ve owned it for 4 years and looking to refinance.

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7 Responses to “Is it possible to refinance your home and include your car loans and credit card debt in the refinance?”

  1. Caffeinated Content for WordPress on June 4th, 2008 2:11 pm

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    yes, if you have enough equity in the home and if you do this be sure to get rid of the credit cards and start paying with cash you wil be better off in the long run

  2. Caffeinated Content - Members-Only Content for WordPress on June 7th, 2008 8:33 pm

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    You would have to have enough equity built up to cover the extra loan amount.

  3. Caffeinated Content on June 11th, 2008 4:17 am

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    You can in a way if you have enough equity. You can refinance your house and take out the extra cash if you have 20% equity in the home. Otherwise, you could get a first and second mortgage with the second mortgage being a home equity line and take the cash from that to pay down the debt. This will be very hard to do since you just bought the home 4 years ago unless home values have skyrocketed in your area or you had a substantial down payment. However, if you can do it then it is good because the home equity interest becomes tax deductible.

  4. Caffeinated Content on June 12th, 2008 9:16 am

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    You can refinance to take money out of your equity (and pay off the other loans), but you can’t literally wrap the three into one new loan.

  5. Caffeinated Content on June 12th, 2008 6:58 pm

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    Very bad idea. You take unsecured credit card debt and a car loan and put that all into your mortgage and you’ll be paying on it for the next 30 years. Stringing it out means you’ll pay a lot more interest.

    Many people do this but turn around and run the credit cards right back up. And of course, you will need to buy a new car long before that mortgage is paid off. Now you have that bigger mortgage and all theother debt. If you can’t keep up, you could lose your home.

    If you refinance, do it to lower your interest rate. That will lower your payment and free up cash to throw at that credit card debt.

  6. Caffeinated Content on June 15th, 2008 7:41 am

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    No.

    Why don’t you sell your car to pay for your credit cards?

  7. Create a video blog...instantly. on June 16th, 2008 11:02 pm

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    bdancer2 always seems to beat me to the punch but she is 200% right.

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