First-time homebuyers walk into financial trap
Two years ago, Luis Mapula was living in a converted garage with his wife and two daughters, earning $54,000 a year as a fence company construction worker. Then, almost like magic, he became the owner of a $543,000 home with no down payment.
Situated on a quiet cul-de-sac off Quimby Road in East San Jose, the two-bedroom home was to have been his family’s piece of the American dream. Instead, it became a financial trap that consumed most of Mapula’s income. He got out only after his real estate broker took back the home and paid off the loan as part of a legal settlement.
Renters once again, the family has no plans to buy another home.
“Better a garage than live without enough to eat,” Mapula’s wife, Cristina Plata, said through a translator.