
Showing posts with label Tax Credit. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Tax Credit. Show all posts
Wednesday, February 17, 2010
The Half-Price House

Where: 23xx Hillwood, in Maplewood
What: 3 BR/3BA split-level (1984) with almost 1,700 FSF on a .38 acre lot
Who: listed by Carol Bromen (RE/MAX); selling agent: Ross Kaplan (Edina Realty)
How (much): just sold for $175k
When: listed - July, '09; closed - Feb, 2010
[Note to Readers: I NEVER divulge details of an in-process transaction that I'm handling, for obvious reasons. However, once a deal is closed and a matter of public record, I may cite otherwise publicly available information as evidence of particular market activity, trends, etc.]
This home and the couple who bought it (my clients) are the flip side of today's distressed housing market.
First-time Buyers who qualify for a tax credit, they paid the bank-owner $175k -- just about half what the previous owners paid in March, 2006.
Even after the fix-up time and money the Buyers will now have to invest . . . that's a whale of a discount!
Labels:
first-time Buyers,
Maplewood,
Tax Credit,
the half-price house
Sunday, February 15, 2009
$8,000 Tax Credit Q & A
Parsing the Home Buyer Tax Credit
Realtors are already fielding questions from clients (see below) about the newly-passed $8,000 tax credit for home buyers.
Details are still sketchy -- the stimulus bill's provisions repeatedly shifted -- but the gist of it appears to be: 1) a scaling tax credit of up to $8,000 (not the $15,000 floated at one point) -- the formula is actually 10% of the home's price, so you max out buying anything over $80,000 (pretty low threshold); 2) a phase-out based on income levels; and 3) no repayment (it's a true credit).
As the details emerge, I think a lot of America is going to discover (remember?) how bad they are at math, and why they hated it in school!
Realtors are already fielding questions from clients (see below) about the newly-passed $8,000 tax credit for home buyers.
Details are still sketchy -- the stimulus bill's provisions repeatedly shifted -- but the gist of it appears to be: 1) a scaling tax credit of up to $8,000 (not the $15,000 floated at one point) -- the formula is actually 10% of the home's price, so you max out buying anything over $80,000 (pretty low threshold); 2) a phase-out based on income levels; and 3) no repayment (it's a true credit).
As the details emerge, I think a lot of America is going to discover (remember?) how bad they are at math, and why they hated it in school!
Still confused? Just ask your Congressman -- they'll know!Q: I read a news account saying that the $8,000 tax credit for home buyers is refundable-- does this mean that those paying less than 8K in taxes will be refunded the difference?
A: No. The "refundable" part is that you pay your taxes, then get a refund for whatever part of the $8,000 credit you qualify for. So, if you paid $5k in federal taxes and bought a $100,000 house, you'd qualify for the whole $8,000 -- and therefore get the whole $5k refunded. (You'd actually qualify for 10% x $100k, but it's capped at $8k).
If you pay less in taxes than the credit you qualify for, you leave that money on the table -- you can't get a refund for taxes you never paid. So in the case above, you're "out" $3,000.
Labels:
$15k,
$7.5k,
$8k,
Home Buyer Incentive,
stimulus bill,
Tax Credit
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