What is the minimum down payment required to buy a home?
Actually, there is no limit to the size of a down payment. It can even be 0% with certain kinds of mortgages, but you have to be able to qualify for it. Another tricky part here is the Mortgage Insurance. If your down payment is lower than 20% of the purchase price (or the appraised value, whichever the lowest on the day of purchase) of the property, you will be obliged to pay private mortgage insurance (PMI) premiums until the outstanding balance of your mortgage hits the 80% of the purchase price margin. PMI is usually not cheap, so a lot of people prefer alternatives, such as a conventional second mortgage, a piggyback mortgage (80/20) or LPMI. The size of a second mortgage or a piggyback mortgage is determined by how much cash you are ready to put down, the rest can be borrowed.
If, for example, you are planning to put only 5% of the purchase price down, you can either go for a large 95% first mortgage with PMI, or borrow 80% with a first mortgage without PMI and another 15% with either a conventional second mortgage or a piggyback mortgage. The interest rate on the second mortgage will be higher than that on the first one, but still it will very likely result in lower monthly payments than PMI premiums.
There is also a slight issue of tax deductibility involved. While mortgage interest payments are unquestionably tax deductible, PMI premiums are deductible only for mortgage insurance contracts issued from Jan. 1, 2007, through Dec. 31, 2009.
