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Truth About VA Construction Financing

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Author - Peter Van L. BradyPeter Van Brady
Author - Peter Van L. Brady

Peter Van Brady

Founder of SoCal VA Homes

Author: Avoiding Mistakes & Crushing Your Deals Using Your VA Loan

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March 6, 2020 (last updated July 28, 2022)

In our experience there are two types of clients who consider building a home using their VA Home Loan Benefit. The first type of client typically desires more of a “rural” living experience – more land and more open space than that which is available from a typical Southern California “tract” home. We understand this desire…perhaps to recreate an environment that feels more like home, maybe where you grew up in the Midwest. If you fall into the second group, you may have started your home search and come to the conclusion that, “This is tough going - it’s a competitive game trying to buy a home using my VA.” Many VA buyers in various markets also arrive at this same conclusion. Some buyers are even driven to the thought that, “Hey, if I can’t easily buy a home on the market, why don’t I build my own? I’ll show THEM that I can get a home! Maybe I can even get a custom home built in a peaceful location…ahhhh, this will be great!” Yes…we’ve heard this many times.

You’re not alone. Many ambitious and frustrated VA buyers have walked down this path before you. We encourage your enthusiasm, so we’re going to clearly describe the challenges you face as your pursue this goal. There are solutions, but approaching your task with eyes wide open will be necessary for survival and success. When trying to borrow this money to buy a piece of land and build a home, you’ll be better prepared if you understand the lender’s point of view. This is risky business.

To chase this dream of building your home, it’s important to understand how the “VA Guaranty” on “VA Construction Financing” minimizes the risk for the lender. Let’s first define the VA Guaranty. The VA Guaranty binds The United States Department of Veterans Affairs and a lender together for the purpose of reducing the lender’s risk. Lenders are institutional, private enterprise, for-profit, non-government entities, typically a bank or mortgage company. Provided the loan package meets all the VA loan underwriting guidelines, the contract between the VA and the lender says that the VA will protect the first 25% of the loan balance against loss, should the borrower fail to repay the loan.

If the borrower defaults on the payments, the lender will foreclose on the house and may suffer a loss when the home is resold. If the risk was properly measured in underwriting, the loss will hopefully be less than 25% of the original loan balance when the home is resold. In this case, the lender will have not suffered any financial loss and the mechanism between the VA and the lender will have performed as planned. The VA Loan Guaranty is paid for from an “insurance pool” funded by the “VA Funding Fee.” This is an insurance premium or fee that is added to the loan balance, and directly paid to the VA from the lender after funding. Because it is part of the loan balance, it is paid for over the life of the loan by the borrower.

Obviously the VA Home Loan Benefit has plenty of advantages, including no down payment, more forgiving credit guidelines, and competitive interest rates. However, despite the existence of such a program, there are few (if any) lenders who will take the multiple layers of risk involved to make a construction loan, with a VA Guaranty. If you are going to be successful in your quest to build a home using VA construction financing, you’ll need to clearly understand the lender’s point of view – their RISKS.

Lenders making VA loans operate from self-interest. They are primarily motivated by earning profit. When deciding to make a loan or not, no “charitable thoughts” are part of the process. Again, VA loans are not provided directly from the government. And because lenders are not willing to undertake unreasonable risks, it is very difficult (but not impossible) to get VA construction financing or a VA construction loan. From their perspective, if they have to foreclose, what factors below will cause a loan loss to exceed the 25% VA Loan Guaranty?

Risks Associated with the Economy (During Construction)

This risk assessment by all conventional lenders and VA lenders alike definitely takes into account overall “macroeconomic” factors. How is the economy doing? Are home prices rising? Is employment improving? In a really good economy and a hot housing market, it may be more probable for a smaller mortgage company to stake out a niche in VA construction lending. It would be much less likely for a big commercial bank such as Wells Fargo, Bank of America, Chase or Citibank to attempt such an endeavor. It’s too specialized of a lending area and “outside of the box” of conventional thinking.

Risks Associated With Financing or Owning Undeveloped Land

Consider the realities of launching a significant construction project such as building a house. An owner, or lender in this case, has to make the money available to buy a piece of land and hope that the land and eventually the newly built home doesn’t depreciate in value during construction. Construction can take six to twelve months or more. The piece of real estate has ultimately achieved its optimal value only when the construction is complete. Because the VA borrower will typically want to finance 100% of that finished value, the lender takes 100% (less the 25% VA Guaranty) of the risk with the hope that the entire project gets completed according to plans. If it doesn’t get completed as planned, the lender has to foreclose on a partially constructed home whose current value would be very difficult to determine – a lender’s worst nightmare.

Risks Associated With the Quality and Integrity of the Appraised Value

With a construction loan, an appraiser needs to be hired up front, using both the appraised land value plus the architect’s final plans, to give a total value of the home when completed. All of this is done UP FRONT before the construction gets started. You would think this might be an easy task. However, the appraiser has to use recent comparable sales of “like properties” in the “neighborhood” that the subject property is located in. The big problem exists when these construction projects are conceived in less populated areas. These are communities typically with little sales activity due to a more rural location. And in these locations, the housing “density” is sparse because of larger parcels of land. In this situation properties are much further apart and they sell less frequently than in suburban areas. As a result, finding comparable sales that meet ideal, typical appraisal guidelines can be difficult. Without a high frequency of geographically concentrated recent comparable sales, the appraiser has insufficient data to arrive at a potential value of the completed home.

Risks Associated with the Blend of Land Value vs. the Newly Constructed Dwelling’s Value

Concerns also exist regarding the land value vs. the “improvements.” The improvements are all the dwellings and amenities built on or into the land. Too much land skews the relationship of land value vs. the dwelling value on the total appraisal value. It’s very difficult for a lender to get comfortable with an appraisal that has those characteristics. As an example, a property with a 1000 square foot home built on a 20 acre parcel is not going to be easily financed. Whereas a 2500 square foot home built on less than five acres is going to have a better chance at getting a loan. Land-only prices and values tend to be more volatile over time. Recognizing this, lenders don’t like homes with lots of acreage and small dwellings. They prefer the opposite - big dwellings and less land equal less risk.

In our market in Southern California, there is tremendous housing density. Yet, on a home just outside of densely populated areas such as in East San Diego County, appraisals can be difficult for these reasons mentioned. This is a point of frustration for VA borrowers who are abundant in San Diego. Many want to build in a more rural setting. Don’t give up on your dreams, sometimes it can be done!

Risks Associated With the Contractor Responsible for Completion of Construction

A lender doing any volume in VA construction loans would have to create systems to manage a whole list of separate risks, including qualifying the contractor who will be hired for construction. In a typical conventional construction loan where a large down payment is required to either buy the land or obtain construction financing or both, tons of documentation is necessary from the contractor. Underwriters want resumes, referrals from previous projects, licenses, insurance, bonding, etc. There is a very serious vetting process that takes place as part of the construction loan underwriting process. Let’s discuss the execution of the construction project. The contractor has to complete the house in the prescribed time frame (9-12 months) and in the manner in which the plans describe. Do you know anyone who has ever had a problem with a contractor? It’s a given if you do enough construction and renovation business.

Risks Associated with the Borrower’s Changing Qualifications

There are potential risks to consider regarding the borrower. Will the borrower maintain their credit and income qualifications over the 9-12 months that it takes to complete the project? What if the borrower loses their job and their income? Or what if a borrower has serious health issues and their finances and credit suffer? A lot can happen in people’s lives during this time frame. What if the active military member or Veteran is barely qualified, having JUST enough income to qualify? And what if rates go up rapidly during the year that it takes to build the house and that disqualifies the borrower? We’ve witnessed rates rise by 1.50% in just five weeks! You typically don’t lock in a rate in for a year, but you can at great expense. If a sudden big hiccup occurs in any way with the would-be homeowner, the borrower would not qualify for the financing.

Reducing Risks with Two Step Construction Loans

In conventional construction financing, there are typically two types of construction loans or processes. The first and much more common construction loan process is a two-step process. The first step is the construction financing. This loan is wholly and separately underwritten for its own merits based on lender profitability and its associated risks of loss. When the construction of the home is complete, the second step or “permanent financing” is applied for separately. It is underwritten, funded and closed in the same way all other conventional loans are performed. This two-step closing process breaks the risk associated with the entire project into two separate pieces.

The second type of conventional construction loan in the marketplace is a single step or “single-close” loan called a “construction-to-permanent” loan. As of the second edition of this book in 2016, one source, and only one source that we are aware of, is attempting to fund “VA construction-to-permanent” single-close loans. Much of the same risks outlined above need to be addressed by the lender to make a success of this channel of business. It’s difficult, but it is possible.

All Risks Accounted for…How to Get What You Want Using Your VA Home Loan Benefit

Unfortunately, there is a lot of misleading information online regarding the subject of VA construction loans and VA construction financing. With the limited information from the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs available on the va.gov site, you might be led to believe that these loans readily exist. When you search for information online, it’s not uncommon for lenders to “bait” you with advertisements, where they dangle a carrot of the possibility of a VA construction loan to get your attention. Once they have your attention and get your hopes up, they glaze over the reality or try to “switch” your attention to applying for a typical VA loan. I guess they hope you change your mind about your dreams of building a home, and you return to them to discuss a typical VA loan.

It is important that you get this information now, and that you know the challenges right from the start. Again, VA construction financing or a VA construction loan is a rare breed indeed. The reality is about reducing risk for the lender. It can be done under the right circumstances. So what does all this mean for you?

SoCal VA Homes was created especially to address the limitations of the VA loan. Our innovations have created possibilities for active military and Veteran home buyers that didn’t previously exists. Two possibilities exist for you in your quest to utilize your VA Home Loan Benefit to achieve a custom constructed home. Utilize our single-close construction-to-permanent VA loan. Again, this will mean that all the right circumstances exist to minimize the lender’s risk.

Your second option is to take advantage of our SoCal VA Homes Dreamweaver Home Purchase Process™. With this process, you tell us where you want to live and the ideal elements and amenities you want your home to have. SoCal VA Homes can then purchase the lot and build the home you want with our cash. You can literally build your dream house for zero down and zero closing. When the construction is fully completed, the home is transferred (sold) to you by using your VA financing to conclude the purchase. It’s a TALL order, and it may sound too good to be true, but if you view the video testimonials on our website, you’ll see the results we’ve delivered for our clients.

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