Seniors today are scared of outliving their money. Many are worried they will be a burden on their children or spouse in later years, others are embarrassed they still have to work in their 70's and even 80's. Some are petrified they will have to choose between medicine and food, and others are angry that their retirement/investment portfolios have been annihilated by recent market activities. Several are mad that their fixed incomes are not keeping up with rising costs of living and finally some are sick and tired of high taxes. Seniors around the country benefit in countless ways from this program. Many seniors use the program out of financial necessity: to pay medical co-pays, pay taxes, payoff credit card debt, make home repairs or to avoid foreclosure. Other seniors can afford to pay for a vacation of a lifetime, to buy a new car, or to purchase life insurance to leave their heirs more money than if they merely were to inherit the home.
A common fear among seniors is that if they choose a reverse mortgage , the lender will ultimately own the home - but the lender never owns the property. Typically at the end of the loan, after both spouses die, the heirs sell the home to repay the reverse mortgage loan. If there is any money left after the sale, the remaining money passes to the heirs.
Ms. Prather has worked in the mortgage lending industry for nearly 10 years and has guided hundreds of families through the reverse mortgage process. She is a national speaker on the topic of reverse mortgage s and has been interviewed in television, radio, and newspapers regarding seniors and housing issues. She is the President of the National Association of Professional Mortgage Women, LV, and a member of NRMLA, the National Reverse Mortgage Lenders Association.
www.stephanieprather.com
702-688-5609
State of Nevada Office of the Attorney General Wrong about Reverse Mortgages Says Stephanie Prather




