Home Buyer Tax Credit: How It Works
First-time homebuyers in 2008 can take an income-tax credit on their purchase, thanks to passage in Congress earlier this year of the first-time home buyer tax credit.
The definition of first-time homebuyer is generous. To get the credit, the homebuyer cannot have owned a home in the previous three years. The home must be a principal residence and purchased between April 9, 2008 and July 1, 2009.
The credit is equal to 10 percent of the purchase price, up to $7,500. Single taxpayers with modified adjusted gross income up to $75,000 and couples with MAGI up to $150,000 will qualify for full credit. Singles with MAGI up to $95,000 and couples with MAGI up to $170,000 will get a reduced amount. Those with higher incomes don’t qualify.
If the amount of tax a homebuyer owes is less than the amount of the credit, they get to keep the difference in the form of an IRS refund.
The homebuyer must begin to repay the credit in two years in increments of about $500 a year over a 15-year period for those who received the full credit
Homebuyers who sell their home before the credit is repaid must pay off the loan with any profits. If they sell the home at a loss, the loan is forgiven.
[Editor's Note: The credit is set to expire in mid-2009, although industry groups, including the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®, are encouraging Congress to extend it. NAR is also encouraging Congress to make the credit available to all buyers and to eliminate the repayment requirement. More detail on how the credit works is available from NAR on REALTOR.org.]
Source: Chicago Tribune, Mary Umberger (12/28/2008)
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Monday, December 29, 2008
Friday, December 12, 2008
How low will interest rates go!?!
30-Year Rates at Lowest in 4 Years
Freddie Mac reports a decline in the 30-year fixed mortgage rate to 5.47 percent during the week ended Dec. 11 from 5.53 percent last week and 6.11 percent a year ago.
Some lenders are locking in even lower rates as they build on momentum started when the Federal Reserve announced plans last month to purchase a substantial number of mortgage-backed securities. HSH Associates and Inside Mortgage Finance are reporting interest on 30-year fixed loans at 5.33 percent and 5.09 percent, respectively.
Freddie Mac chief economist Frank Nothaft says mortgage rates also were driven downward by the recession and rising unemployment.
Source: The Washington Post, Dina ElBoghdady (12/12/08)
© Copyright 2008 Information Inc.
Freddie Mac reports a decline in the 30-year fixed mortgage rate to 5.47 percent during the week ended Dec. 11 from 5.53 percent last week and 6.11 percent a year ago.
Some lenders are locking in even lower rates as they build on momentum started when the Federal Reserve announced plans last month to purchase a substantial number of mortgage-backed securities. HSH Associates and Inside Mortgage Finance are reporting interest on 30-year fixed loans at 5.33 percent and 5.09 percent, respectively.
Freddie Mac chief economist Frank Nothaft says mortgage rates also were driven downward by the recession and rising unemployment.
Source: The Washington Post, Dina ElBoghdady (12/12/08)
© Copyright 2008 Information Inc.
Tuesday, December 9, 2008
Open House This Weekend!
Here's your chance to see a pristine home on rarely available street. This executive home features great views of golf course and lush landscaping. As you enter the stone courtyard you see this home is special. Formal entry, gound floor office with sliders to courtyard, formal dining room, large eat in kitchen with granite, custom window treatments, 4 bedrooms plus loft upstairs, laundry room, security system and so much more. Come see this wonderful home, you will not be disappointed you'll be home!
Open House Saturday Dec. 13th, 11:00am - 4:00 pm
1691 Emerald Point Ct, El Cajon, 92019
For more information or directions, call Kimberlee (619) 987-5143.
Open House Saturday Dec. 13th, 11:00am - 4:00 pm
1691 Emerald Point Ct, El Cajon, 92019
For more information or directions, call Kimberlee (619) 987-5143.
Friday, December 5, 2008
Investor 4 Loan Limit
Investors Not Happy With 4-Loan Limit
Some real estate investors are up in arms over a new Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac policy that limits to four the number of real estate loans that can be held by a single person.
The rule, which took effect Dec. 1, prohibits an investor from obtaining even a fifth mortgage no matter how much money he puts down or how much income documentation he provides. It offers no exceptions for assets or history of success as a real estate investor.
“The four-house rule is going to keep us in a recession longer,” said Tom Hutchens, an Atlanta-area investor. “It’s going to keep qualified buyers out of the market.”
Some investors are trying to work around the rule by partnering with other investors to either buy in cash or use their eligibility to borrow.
Source: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, D.L. Bennett (12/05/08)
Some real estate investors are up in arms over a new Fannie Mae-Freddie Mac policy that limits to four the number of real estate loans that can be held by a single person.
The rule, which took effect Dec. 1, prohibits an investor from obtaining even a fifth mortgage no matter how much money he puts down or how much income documentation he provides. It offers no exceptions for assets or history of success as a real estate investor.
“The four-house rule is going to keep us in a recession longer,” said Tom Hutchens, an Atlanta-area investor. “It’s going to keep qualified buyers out of the market.”
Some investors are trying to work around the rule by partnering with other investors to either buy in cash or use their eligibility to borrow.
Source: The Atlanta Journal-Constitution, D.L. Bennett (12/05/08)
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