Same-as-Cash Financing Auburn NY

Same-as-cash financing allows the homeowner to apply for a bank loan for the full amount of the purchase, defer payments for the term of the loan (generally 90 days, six months, or 12 months), and pay no interest on the loan provided the entire principal is paid back within the approved loan time frame.

Bank of America
800.432.1000
8 Dill Street
Auburn, NY
Bank of America - Auburn-Genesee Street
800.432.1000
120 Genesee St
Auburn, NY
Bank of America - Seneca Falls
800.432.1000
54 Fall St
Seneca Falls, NY
Bank of America - Camillus Commons
315.487.0772
5345 West Genesee Street
Camillus, NY
Chase Bank
(315) 488-9255
3508 W Genesee St
Syracuse, NY
Bank of America - Grant Avenue
800.432.1000
185 Grant Ave
Auburn, NY
HSBC Bank
1.800.975.HSBC (4722)
Seward Mansion- South St 63 Genesee Street
Auburn, NY
Citizens Bank - Camillus/Wal-Mart
315-468-8622
5399 West Genesee St.
Camillus, NY
Bank of America - Onondaga Hill
800.432.1000
4865 W. Seneca Turnpike
Syracuse, NY
Citizens Bank - Camillus
315-487-3446
3524 West Genesee Street
Syracuse, NY
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Same-as-Cash Financing

Source: REPLACEMENT CONTRACTOR Magazine
Publication date: July 1, 2006

By Mary Beth Temple

The advertisement promises that you can “Buy now and make no payments until 2007!” Savvy customers flock to these programs, often called same-as-cash financing, as they look to maximize their financial resources. “The old paradigm in financing home improvements was low monthly payments and low interest,” says John Harris, senior vice president of EnerBank USA, a specialist in same-as-cash financing for the home improvement industry. “The new paradigm is same-as-cash for 90 days or six months.”

How It Works

Same-as-cash financing allows the homeowner to apply for a bank loan for the full amount of the purchase, defer payments for the term of the loan (generally 90 days, six months, or 12 months), and pay no interest on the loan provided the entire principal is paid back within the approved loan time frame.

After the loan is approved, the homeowner receives a two-party check made out to both the homeowner and the contractor. The homeowner endorses the check when the job is finished, and the clock starts ticking on repayment when the check clears the bank. Banks don't provide this service for free, of course. The contractor pays a percentage of the loan amount in fees, which vary according to the term length of the loan.

Click here to read full article from Replacement Contractor