Education
You’ve heard the warnings from a neighbor, a news headline, or a worried adult child — and suddenly you stop asking questions. In this episode I break down the five myths that keep homeowners from even exploring reverse mortgages. I use plain examples, real stories, and clear rules so you can separate the facts from the fear. If you want to protect your home, your savings, and your peace of mind, this episode will give you the straight answers you need.
What You’ll Learn
- Why the bank does not own your home: how a reverse mortgage places a lien, not a transfer of title, and what that means for control.
- The five homeowner requirements that keep you in the home: live there as your primary residence, pay taxes, keep insurance, maintain the home, and keep your name on title.
- What happens after you die: why heirs are not automatically stuck with debt and the common options heirs have.
- Why owing more than the home’s current value does not create personal liability: the non-recourse nature of HECM loans and how mortgage insurance protects estates.
- Why reverse mortgages are not only for people in financial crisis: real examples of retirees who used HECMs to reduce monthly payments, create a credit line, or protect retirement savings.
- How negative amortization works and why a growing loan balance is part of the program — plus when to ask for an amortization estimate.
- Practical steps to avoid surprises: the key questions to ask any lender, documents to request, and red flags that deserve a second look.
- When a reverse mortgage is not the right choice: simple signs that suggest other options may be better.
By the end of this episode you’ll know which fears are based on old stories or misinformation and which issues need careful planning. You’ll get clear rules, real-life examples, and concrete next steps so you can decide whether a reverse mortgage fits your retirement goals. Tune in to learn what to ask, who to call, and how a reverse mortgage could help you stay in your home and reduce financial stress.