‘Tis the Season for Tax Breaks
With April 15 rapidly approaching many are working hard to complete their taxes. For those who have recently bought or sold a home, there are a number of tax deductions that that may be available to them.
Real estate broker’s commissions, title insurance, legal fees, advertising costs, administrative costs, and inspection fees are all considered selling costs and may be used to reduce one’s taxable capital gain by the amount of the selling costs. That could result in a big savings depending on the final sale price.
Interest that is paid on a mortgage is also tax-deductible, within limits. A married couple filing jointly can deduct all their interest payments on a maximum of $1 million in mortgage debt secured by a first or second home.
Buyers may also be able to deduct some of the interest they paid on a home equity loan or similar line of credit.
One deduction that many buyers often overlook is points. Points or origination fees on a home loan that were paid during the purchase of a home are generally tax-deductible in full for the year in which they were paid.
Refinanced mortgage points are also deductible but only over the life of the loan – not all at once. Homeowners who refinance can immediately write off the balance of the old points and begin to amortize the new. Read more
It’s a Buyers’ Market for Real Estate Investors, too
Turn on any financial news program and at some point you’ll hear the experts extolling the virtues of diversification. Real estate, even through the market downturn, has long been considered a conservative, long-term strategy to growing wealth.
In fact, that very downturn has created a historic buying opportunity for potential homebuyers and investors alike. The combination of lower home prices across American and historically low mortgage rates, two essential factors that usually don’t trend in the same direction, have triggered a buyer’s market in many areas of the country. For real estate investors who want to rent their properties, this can make the difference in achieving positive cash flow sooner or right off the bat.
While some seasoned real estate investors make it look easy, to be successful, beginners should follow some basic principles. Read more
California Prop 90 Update!
California’s Prop 90 allows a home owner in California to sell their home, buy a replacement property in a participating county, and move a lower prop 13 based tax value from their old home to the new county for the purpose of home tax assessment. It allows the adjusted base year value of the original (sold) property to be transferred to the newly purchased or constructed home if eligibility requirements are met.There are some restrictions like the claimant or claimant’s spouse must be at least 55 years of age. The replacement property must be your principal residence and must be eligible for the homeowners’ exemption.
Participating counties are Alameda, Orange, San Mateo, Ventura, Los Angeles, San Diego, Santa Clara and now, El Dorado County.
There are also purchase price restrictions on the new replacement property. Read more
8 Tips to Save Your Sanity
I received some great advice from one of the great lenders I work with and I wanted to share it with you. Timely loan approval is critical in today’s real estate market and I wanted to share his tips with you.
8 Tips to Save Your Sanity
A buyer’s guide to the loan approval process.
Guidelines and requirements for loan approvals have recently become more rigorous and each transaction is processed with much more scrutiny. Keeping just a few things in mind could save your sanity, stress level and funding schedule.
1. Be expedient and thorough. When initiating a loan, and throughout the loan process, it is imperative to provide complete documentation to your Mortgage Advisor as quickly as possible. For instance, if all pages of the bank statement are requested, it really means all pages. While you and I might not think it’s necessary to include the reconciliation page of the statement, the lenders do. And, when they receive only five of the six pages of said bank statement, the loan process can become inefficient and stalled. Read more
It is starting to trickle down?
A question that comes up when talking about today’s housing market is if the recent economic stimulus packages and federal bailouts that we are all paying for will actually help the average homeowner. I wish I could tell you that I understand how it all is suppose to work. You wonder how pumping billions of dollars of taxpayer dollars into bleeding financial institutions will actually trickle down and help average hard working families who are struggling to keep ahead of their daily expenses and keep a roof over their family’s heads. I can’t tell you how it is all suppose to work but I can tell you that I can now see it on my newest mortgage statement. Read more

