
Buying a home and keeping your present home
Failed to add items
Add to Cart failed.
Add to Wish List failed.
Remove from wishlist failed.
Adding to library failed
Follow podcast failed
Unfollow podcast failed
-
Narrated by:
-
By:
About this listen
Buying a new home while keeping your current one can be a smart investment strategy—but it does come with financial challenges, especially when it comes to managing debt. Here are ways you can offset or manage the debt to make this dual-home scenario work:
🔑 1. Rent Out Your Current Home
Offset: Use rental income to cover the mortgage on your existing home.
Pros: Helps cover the mortgage or even generate cash flow.
Note: Lenders often count a portion of projected rental income toward your debt-to-income (DTI) ratio.
💰 2. Use Equity from Your Current Home
Offset: Take out a cash-out refinance, HELOC, or home equity loan to fund the down payment or reduce new home debt.
Pro: Lower the mortgage balance on the new home or avoid PMI.
Con: Increases debt on the existing property and monthly obligations.
📉 3. Refinance to Lower Monthly Payments
Offset: Refinance either or both homes to reduce interest rates and monthly payments.
Goal: Free up cash to manage both mortgages more easily.
💼 4. Increase Your Income or Reduce Expenses
Offset: Boost your DTI ratio eligibility or free up monthly cash.
Ways to Increase Income: Side gig, bonuses, rental income, etc.
Ways to Cut Costs: Pay down other debts, reduce discretionary spending.
🏘️ 5. House Hack
Offset: Live in part of one home (e.g., basement, ADU) and rent the other part out.
Useful If: You’re open to creative living arrangements to reduce out-of-pocket costs.
🧾 6. Tax Deductions
Offset: If one home is rented, you can deduct expenses like mortgage interest, taxes, repairs, and depreciation.
Talk to a CPA to maximize tax benefits.
📊 7. Consider a Bridge Loan (Temporary Fix)
Offset: Use a bridge loan to cover the gap between buying a new home and selling (or refinancing) the old one later.
Note: Short-term, higher-interest debt—use with a clear exit strategy.
Example Scenario:
You keep your current home and rent it out for $2,000/month. Your mortgage on that property is $1,500/month. The $500/month profit helps cover your new home's mortgage, easing your debt load and possibly helping with mortgage approval.
tune in and learn at https://www.ddamortgage.com/blog
Didier Malagies nmls#212566
dda mortgage nmls#324329
Support the show