Before Harvey I became familiar with some City of Houston issues with issuing "remodeling" permits with respect to flooded houses and financing/refinancing issues for known flooded properties.
It occurs to me that lenders may be hesitant to collateralize loans with property that is subject to flooding and/or have been flooded .... AND .. since Harvey there has been criticism of the local governments (city and county) regarding "allowing" people to build homes in areas that are subject to flooding (which includes releases by the Corps of Army Engineers).
Those are the types of issues that was the subject of my questions/concerns ... and I was not challenging your knowledge base .... making an inquiry .... btw ...
the renting of flooded properties has already begun.
Originally Posted by LexusLover
no worries, I did not think you were challenging me on my knowledge.
As far as being in a Flood prone area or even in the Flood Zone. I have never had an Underwriter decline my loan over that. If you are in the Flood Zone, we mandate Flood Insurance, just like Hazard.
What I am worried about is Sale Comps and or justifying to the Fannie Mae/Fredie Mac Collateral UW, asking why the appraiser used a comp 1-3 miles away and not one down the street. This is where you will see areas that have home sales ranging from $375k-$600k depending on stage of Remodel that have flooded or the one down the street had no damage. If home is remodeled and did not flood, it sells for top dollar, as opposed to the one that sold for $375k. That did flood and is not remodeled.