Table of contents
 - featured image
Brett Warren
By Brett Warren
A A A

Liar loans are back: 1 in 8 home owners fibbed on the application

The dream of homeownership can drive people to do desperate things, including lying on their mortgage applications.

In fact, according to Finder's new research, thousands of Aussie homeowners have told a fib in order to secure their home loans.

The survey revealed that out of 1,114 respondents – 310 of which have a mortgage – 13% lied on their home loan application.

Liar Loan

That's 1 out of 8 applicants lying!

It's equivalent to 429,000 mortgagors who admit they falsified details during the home-buying process.

Stretching the truth during the home-buying process was a recipe for disaster

The survey further showed that 4% of Aussie mortgagors admit they lied about their income – more than 100,000 people.

The same proportion (4%) lied about how much debt they had during the application process.

Homeloan

Richard Whitten, a home loans expert at Finder, said:

"Falsifying information on a mortgage application can have serious consequences.

Not only could it potentially qualify as fraud, it could also lead to the loss of your home in a worst-case scenario.

While the lies might go unnoticed – the financial burden of an unaffordable loan could create a lot of stress.”

It seems that lying about their finances is not totally surprising, according to Whitten.

He further explained:

"As housing affordability deteriorates, Aussies are scared of being rejected and missing out on getting on the property ladder.

While small inaccuracies may not be the end of the world, if a lender finds a big discrepancy in the figures you've given them or you've outright lied about your financial position, the consequences could be severe.

Home loan contracts typically contain wording around providing misleading or incorrect information to a lender. In the worst case, lying on a mortgage application is grounds for a default event, meaning the lender could sell your property.

Legality aside, you're putting yourself in a risky position if you lie on your application and borrow more than you can afford."

Saving Money Home Loan Mortgage A Property Investm

However, he urged  Aussies not to inflate income figures or omit a loan or credit card when applying for a home loan:

“It’s important to track expenses as people sometimes forget where their money goes.

Lenders cross-check everything and applicants who intentionally provide incorrect information could potentially receive a black mark on their credit score and in severe cases applicants could have their loan called in, meaning they have to repay the loan in a hurry.”

Brett Warren
About Brett Warren Brett Warren is National Director of Metropole Properties and uses his two decades of property investment experience to advise clients how to grow, protect and pass on their wealth through strategic property advice.
No comments

Guides

Copyright © 2024 Michael Yardney’s Property Investment Update Important Information
Content Marketing by GridConcepts