March 1, 2018

HUD: FHA Extends Foreclosure Moratorium for Hurricane Maria Victims

Additional 60-day relief to help struggling FHA-insured families in Puerto Rico & U.S. Virgin Islands

WASHINGTON – For the second time since Hurricane Maria devastated Puerto Rico and the U.S. Virgin Islands, the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) today announced that the agency is extending its 180-day foreclosure moratorium for FHA-insured homeowners for an additional 60 days due to the extensive damage and continuing needs in these hard-hit territories. Under the expanded moratorium, FHA is instructing lenders and servicers to suspend all foreclosure actions against insured borrowers in these Presidentially Declared Major Disaster Areas until May 18, 2018. Read FHA’s letter to lenders, servicers and counseling agencies.

FHA-insured homeowners may qualify for this relief under the following conditions:

In addition to today’s announcement, FHA last week introduced a new option to help struggling borrowers impacted by Hurricane Maria and other 2017 disasters to resume their pre-disaster mortgage payments without payment shock. FHA’s new “Disaster Standalone Partial Claim” covers up to 12-months of missed mortgage payments via an interest-free second loan on the mortgage, payable only when the borrower sells the home or refinances their mortgage. In addition, this new option requires no trial period or balloon payment and allows borrowers to keep their existing low interest rate and loan term as well as their existing monthly mortgage payment. FHA’s expanded loss mitigation will also streamline income documentation and other requirements to expedite relief to homeowners struggling to pay their mortgage while recovering from last year’s disasters. FHA also has several other options to help disaster victims recover, including:

Read about these and other HUD programs designed to assist disaster victims.

This post was originally published here.