Your mortgage lender is the person who can tell you how to proceed.
Generally, a lender will require that you pay the debt and remove the lien before a new financial agreement can be made based on the property.
Yes.
Your association -- or whomever placed the lien on your title -- can describe the steps necessary for you to follow in order to release the lien and clear your title.
A lien on the deed -- unit's title -- clouds it, meaning that monies to satisfy the lien must be paid before clear title can be transferred.
Read your governing documents and work with your association attorney to file a lien for unpaid assessments.
YES. Condo Fees
When inquiring about a condo loan a person needs to know what they want to spend, what features they desire in the condo and where they want the condo to be located.
Your association attorney is better prepared to answer this question in your particular situation. There is no standard.
The effect of a lien is to cloud title based on monies owed. The title cannot change hands without the removal of the lien, meaning the lien amount is paid before title is clear.
There are a few sites dedicated to comparing remortgage interest rates. A couple of them are as follows: Remortgage-Me and Remortgage-Search. Both of these sites have facilities to compare interest rates for remortgage.
Yes.A lien is a matter of public record and the credit bureaus will pick it up and add it to your record.
You can find the perfect Remortgage CCJ ( County Court Judgements) at Remortgage online. They can answer all of your questions and you can get free Remortgage Quotations.
This is a task for your association's counsel. Filling an improper lien, improperly, may give the debtor an easy out of the monies owed.