When you experience a loss of property, your insurance company will ask you for the proof of purchase which can take two forms; a purchase receipt or a current home inventory of your personal belongings. Even if you are a highly organized homeowner, you might find it challenging to locate receipts for all the valuables […]
Older Baby Boomers Are Staying Put
In the past homeowners had a natural progression in owning homes. They would begin homeownership with a starter home, move onto a dream home to raise a family, then downsize upon becoming empty nesters and finally moving into a retirement home to finish out their years. But recently, Marianne Cusato’s 2016 Aging-in-Place report indicated that […]
Buyer Attraction – Sell It Quicker
Rent or Own – You Will Pay for the House You Live In, Yours or Not
You want irony? You may think you can’t buy a home right now but if you are renting you are buying a home for your landlord. Here are several factors to support this argument. Regardless of whether a mortgage is held by an owner-occupant or an investor, they are amortized so each payment made reduces […]
Facts or Myths about Mortgage Financing
“This is going to be the year”
As we begin the new year everyone seems to have the same things on their resolution list. Lose weight, save money, exercise more…well maybe this is your year to invest in a rental home. With a strengthening real estate market, rents are on their way up, home values are steady and mortgage rates for non-owner […]
It’s not the 1960s, 50 years of change
Can ½ Percent Really be Worth 5 Percent?
According to an article posted by Bankrate.com on December 12th, the 30-year fixed mortgage rate rose to 4.02 percent which is up 3 basis points since the same time last week. At that rate you will pay $478.57 a month in principal and interest for every $100,000 financed. That is $1.73 higher than last week. […]
IRS Says: Time May Be Running Out if You Rented Your Home
During the housing market bust that happened around 2007, some existing homeowners opted to rent out their main residence instead of selling it for less money. Interestingly, the IRS tax code will allow the temporary rental of a principal residence without the homeowner losing the exclusion of their capital gain with some time limit restrictions. […]