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Mortgage Information
There is an emerging market force towards energy efficient homes. From
Florida to Alaska mortgage lenders are increasingly using energy
mortgages to make homes more affordable and poising their companies
to capture this new market trend.

What is an energy mortgage? An energy mortgage is a mortgage that
credits a home’s energy efficiency in the home loan. There are two types
of energy mortgages:

Energy Improvement Mortgage - Finances the energy upgrades of an
existing home in the mortgage loan using monthly energy savings

Energy Efficient Mortgage - Uses the energy savings from a new
energy efficient home to increase the home buying power of consumers
and capitalizes the energy savings in the appraisal

In 1995 the Residential Energy Services Network (RESNET) was formed
as a partnership between the national mortgage industry, Energy Rated
Homes of America, and the National Association of State Energy Officials
.
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Energy Ratings and Mortgages
Home energy ratings provide a standard measurement of a home’s
energy efficiency. Ratings are used for both and new and existing homes.
In new homes rating often verify energy performance for the ENERGY
STAR homes program, energy efficient mortgages, and energy code
compliance. Homeowners who want to upgrade the home’s energy
efficiency can use the energy rating to evaluate and pinpoint specific,
cost-effective improvements. For existing homes, homeowners can
receive a report listing cost-effective options for improving the home’s
energy rating. An energy rating allows a homebuyer to easily compare
the energy performance of the homes being considered.

There are two types of ratings:

Projected ratings – Ratings performed prior to the construction of a
home or prior to the installation of energy improvements to an existing
home.
Confirmed ratings – Ratings completed using data gathered from an
on-site inspection, which could include performance testing of the home.
Confirmed ratings involve an on-site inspection of a home by a residential
energy efficiency professional, a home energy rater. Home energy raters
are trained and certified by a RESNET accredited home energy rater
training provider.

The home energy rater reviews the home to identify its energy
characteristics, such as insulation levels, window efficiency, wall-to-
window ratios, the heating and cooling system efficiency, the solar
orientation of the home, and the water heating system. Performance
testing, such as a blower door test for air leakage and duct leakage, is
usually part of the rating.

The data gathered by the home energy rater is entered into a RESNET
accredited computer program and translated into rating score. The home
receives a score between 1 and 100, depending on its relative efficiency.
An estimate of the home’s energy costs is also provided in the report.
The home’s energy rating is then equated to a Star rating ranging from
one star for a very inefficient home to five stars for a highly efficient home.


Unlike an energy audit or a weatherization assessment, a home energy
rating is a recognized tool in the mortgage industry. Home energy ratings
can be used in a variety of ways in the housing industry. The star and the
rating score provide an easily understandable means to compare more
efficient homes by their relative energy efficiency, since a rating
quantifies the energy performance of a home.
Rick Jenkins

(913) 579-3638

Rick@CleanEfficientEnergy.com