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16 August
Earl McLain

Fun and purchasing a home are probably two concepts that cannot be further apart.

 

Instead of being fun, purchasing a home might prove to be nerve-wracking and stressful. This is understandably so since this is an investment that spans a lifetime – a whole set of generations even.

 

Buyers are intimidated by the various dimensions that make purchasing a home troublesome – the legal aspects, the financial aspects, dealing with brokers, agents, insurance, and others purchase concerns.

 

But dissecting these roadblocks and adding some spice to you choice of property could make this life-changing decision an enjoyable one.

 

Step 1: Assess your finances

The question here is can the buyer actually afford payments for a home. The buyer may want to consult a financial adviser as to the strategy he or she may employ in paying for a home. This is imperative especially if the buyer has a troublesome credit history and other financial obligations. The buyer must also reach a compromise between payment capability and desired property.

 

Step 2: Survey

With the explosion of information in today’s age, it becomes more exciting to search for possible properties. Newspapers, advertisements, referrals, brochures, and even the internet all give the buyer more choices and better options. Buyers should take full advantage of this information glut to facilitate his or her decision regarding a house.

 

Step 3: Learn from Others

If the buyer is a first-timer, he or she does not have to make the common mistakes newbies commit. He or she should contact people who have been in the same circumstance and learn from their experience. This will save the buyer from a great deal of grief later.

 

Even grizzled veterans of such purchases would do well to seek advice from trusted colleagues on the matter.

 

Step 4: Find an Suitable Agent

This is one of the most underestimated, yet important aspects of home buying. Most buyers end up with an agent by sheer accident. It would do well for the buyer to do research and contact an agent whose strategy and skills fit the buyer’s needs.

 

A skillful agent can save the buyer a great deal of trouble and is instrumental in a successful sale.

 

Step 5: Close the deal

A great deal of discussion and paperwork in involved in closing a deal. However, if the preceding steps were accomplished well, this step will most probably be exciting instead of worrying. Here, the buyer and the seller come to terms with the financial details, paperwork, and other details vital to the sale. If this comes up right, the buyer can now come home to an exciting new home. 


20 December

In the annual holiday special, Charlie Brown asks Lucy what she wants for Christmas

http://bit.ly/8GYXK7


6 November

According to reports on CNBC, president Obama signed a bill today to extend the current $8,000 tax credit
to first time home buyers and includes a $6,500 tax credit to exsisting home owners purchasing a home.
  

Senate lawmakers struck an agreement to not only push back the measure’s looming deadline but expand it to allow current homeowners and more affluent buyers to claim the credit. “We welcome efforts taken by Congress to extend the first-time home buyers tax credit for a limited period,” Treasury Secretary Tim Geithner and HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan said in a joint statement today. “This credit has brought new families into the housing market and contributed to three consecutive months of rising home prices nationwide.

Although various proposals to extend and expand the credit have circulated in Congress for weeks, Senate lawmakers finally reached a deal in recent days. Under the terms of the agreement, the deadline for first-time home buyers to claim the $8,000 credit would be pushed back to April 30, 2010. But the term “deadline” doesn’t mean the same thing as it does in the current credit. The Senate agreement stipulates that buyers must have a sales contract on a house by April 30 to be eligible, but it gives them an additional 60 days to close the purchase. That’s much different from the current credit, in which transactions must be closed by November 30. Looked at one way, the effective deadline of the credit under this agreement is actually the end of June.

But perhaps the most significant change is that current homeowners would become eligible for the tax perk as well. The current credit prevents home buyers who have owned a primary residence within the past three years from claiming the credit. The agreement, however, would allow current homeowners to claim up to $6,500 as long as the property they are vacating has been their primary residence for at least five years. Expanding the credit beyond first-time buyers is intended to boost home sales to “move up” buyers–those moving from one house to another–which some lawmakers, most notably Georgia Republican Sen. Johnny Isakson, argue is essential to a housing recovery.

The agreement also enables more affluent Americans to claim the tax credit. Senators moved to increase its annual income limits from $75,000 to $125,000 for single buyers and from $150,000 to $225,000 for married couples. These limits apply to both first-time and move-up buyers, although neither can purchase a home for more than $800,000 and still get the credit. Anyone taking the credit on a 2010 purchase can claim it on his or her 2009 tax return. And as long as home buyers live in the property they purchased via the credit for three years or more, the tax credit does not have to be repaid.


20 October

Too many people bought too much house for too many years. Yes, the financial system almost collapsed because mortgage bankers and brokers told lies about loan terms and loosened standards in dangerous ways, and investment bankers packaged those loans into bonds that were far more toxic than ratings agencies predicted.

But the roots of the mortgage contagion lie with all of us and our desire to own just a bit more house.

http://bit.ly/1z189J

Tom Keyes

Edina Realty

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19 October

Top 10 Red Flags for Homebuyers. Sellers don’t always disclose the whole truth to potential homebuyers, especially if they’re eager to sell. http://bit.ly/MvJGx

Tom Keyes

Edina Realty

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