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7 myths about reverse mortgages that seniors still believe

7 myths about reverse mortgages that seniors still believe

Reverse mortgages have been misunderstood for forty years and show no sign of being understood better anytime soon. Oftentimes, this type of mortgage gets dismissed before it gets examined or is casually mentioned at dinner tables and equated to a “scam” and/or a “trap” by people who read something once and never went back to check whether it was accurate. Some of the fear may be reasonable but some of it is just wrong. The myths below keep showing up and deserve a direct answer.

Seven of them, below.

Image Credit: Bill Oxford/istockphoto.

Myth 1: The bank takes ownership of your home

This is the most persistent and misleading myth. The CFPB states plainly that when you take out a reverse mortgage, the title stays in your name. The lender holds a lien, exactly as with a conventional mortgage, but ownership does not transfer. You remain on the deed and you can still sell or refinance. Conflating a lien with ownership has kept an enormous number of people away from a product that might have genuinely helped them.

Image Credit: DepositPhotos.com.

Myth 2: Your heirs will be stuck with the debt

This one is verifiable in reality, yet somehow lands in the wrong conclusion. The CFPB explains that reverse mortgages are non-recourse loans, which means that your heirs can never owe more than the home is worth at repayment. If the loan balance exceeds the appraised value, FHA insurance absorbs the difference. Nobody comes after savings, investments or other assets. 

Image Credit: Liubomyr Vorona/iStockphoto.

Myth 3: The money you receive is taxable income

It isn’t. The IRS says it in a very straightforward manner: reverse mortgage payments are loan proceeds, not income. You borrowed against your equity and you were not paid. The proceeds will not push you into a higher tax bracket or affect Social Security or Medicare eligibility on their own. It may be worth discussing it with a tax advisor, but the money arriving in your account is not something the IRS counts as income.

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Myth 4: You can be forced out of your home

The HUD says that HECM borrowers may remain in their homes indefinitely as long as they keep up with property taxes, homeowner’s insurance and basic maintenance. The lender cannot call the loan early because the housing market shifted or because you had a difficult financial year. The “being-forced-out” scenario people describe is usually whatever happens when someone stops paying taxes or insurance. That would put any homeowner at risk, reverse mortgage or not.

Image Credit: Ridofranz/istockphoto.

Myth 5: Only desperate people get reverse mortgages

Be mindful that a status myth is financially damaging. Bankrate notes that financial planners increasingly recommend reverse mortgages as a strategic retirement income tool, a way to manage sequence-of-returns risk, delay Social Security, or build a growing line of credit. The product was redesigned after 2013 with significantly stronger consumer protections. Using home equity strategically in retirement is not like acting out of desperation; it is actual planning.

Image Credit: Drazen Zigic/istockphoto.

Myth 6: The lender can change the terms after you sign

No. The terms of a Home Equity Conversion Mortgage are set at closing. The CFPB’s guidance states that the loan comes due when you move, sell or die, not when the lender decides it would be convenient. Mandatory independent counseling from a HUD-approved counselor is required before any HECM closes. The lender cannot unilaterally alter the deal afterward.

Image Credit: Drazen Zigic/Istockphoto.

Myth 7: A reverse mortgage will consume all your equity

How much equity remains depends on how long the borrower stays in the home, the applicable interest rate and how much is drawn. Bankrate’s breakdown shows that borrowers who draw modest amounts early often leave significant equity behind, which eventually leads to the loan balance growing over time. The non-recourse protection exists because the math is unpredictable, so if it goes badly, the loss stops at the property value and reaches nothing else.

Image Credit: Inside Creative House/istockphoto.

The bottom line

A reverse mortgage is not right for everyone; most importantly, families are not having a conversation based on those real concerns. They are working from myths that circulate because they sound plausible and nobody looks them up. These seven are worth looking up. The moral of the story is that facts are considerably less frightening than the rumors.

The facts come from Bankrate, the Consumer Financial Protection Bureau, the IRS, HUD and AARP.

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