Owing more
Even though many reverse mortgages don’t have to be paid off until the house is sold, those higher rates also mean the amount that’s owed will rise more quickly. Almost all reverse mortgages are adjustable, not fixed, and interest rate increases catch up to them within a few months, according to the National Foundation for Credit Counseling, or NFCC — burning through the principal.
“It might accelerate the growth of the balance and reduce potentially the equity when your heirs go to sell the home, because your balance is going to grow faster,” says Stephanie Moulton, professor and associate dean for faculty and research at The Ohio State University’s John Glenn College of Public Affairs.
“If house values drop, the heirs won’t go upside-down, but if there was going to be a leftover $20,000, that may not be left over anymore.”
On the upside, people who still owe some money on their forward mortgages can use a reverse mortgages to pay off what’s left, ending monthly mortgage payments.
Homeowners with reverse mortgages also can set up lines of credit to be used when needed. Interest is accrued only on the money that’s withdrawn.
Reverse-mortgage holders also can opt for scheduled disbursements — called “term monthly payments” — to cover other expenses.
“The biggest challenge in retirement is cash flow,” Simmons says. And a reverse mortgage can provide one.
Look at alternatives
As long as the line of credit is untouched, it actually grows at the same rate as the interest on the loan plus half of 1 percent — the amount of the mortgage insurance premium. For people who take that route, rising interest rates are good news.
“If you don’t touch it, each year the amount that you leave in that line of credit goes up a little bit,” Moulton says.
Regardless of the interest rate, reverse mortgages carry significant closing costs, including origination fees, required consumer counseling, a home appraisal and that mortgage insurance premium, though these can all be rolled into the loan.
People who need money for such things as home improvements, and who can afford to make monthly payments, may save money on fees by taking out home-equity loans instead, says Bruce McClary, senior vice president at the NFCC.
“It’s safe to say reverse mortgages have a reputation of being sometimes very fee laden,” McClary says.