Tax Break for Homeowners

Everyone is alway asking me the benefits of being a homeowner. I can’t stress enough the tax breaks people receive once they own a home are one of the top benefits for home ownership!

Here is a great article from the Chicago Tribune, (March 23, 2012 by Scott Wilson) that gives you the top five deductions for any homewoner:

For more specific information, see your tax preparer or call the IRS help line at (800) 829-1040.

•Mortgage interest.
You’re generally entitled to reduce your taxable income by the amount of mortgage interest you pay, as long as you itemize deductions on your tax return. Your lender should have sent you a 1098 form in January showing exactly how much interest was paid.

•Private mortgage insurance.
If you’re paying PMI, the amount is likely to be fully deductible as long as your adjusted gross income is $100,000 or less ($50,000 for married taxpayers filing separately). Borrowers with incomes above $100,000 may qualify for a partial deduction.

•Energy-efficient home improvements.
If you installed windows, doors or skylights that met the requirements of the federal Energy Star program in 2011, you could get a tax credit equal to 10% of the product’s costs. Hold on to receipts and documentation in case the IRS asks.

•Points.
The charges you paid in points to get a mortgage are generally deductible if it was a first mortgage on the property. In the case of a refinance of a loan, all or some of the point charges might be deductible, but it gets complicated — check with your tax preparer or the IRS.

•Property taxes.
The amount you pay in property taxes is deductible as long as it is based on the assessed value of your property (which is usually the case). If your mortgage company collects money from you for the taxes, the amount actually paid should be on the 1098 form you receive.

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What Happens if there is Roof Leak – Who is responsible?

What Happens if there is Roof Leak – Who is responsible – Me or my Association?

I get this question a lot because I go into many listing presentations where I see the roof has once leaked and the current owner never bothered to fix the damage. It is important to display your home when it is up for sale in the best light possible. Just telling buyers that the roof is fixed – won’t suffice in today’s market. A homeowner / seller must do everything to providing proof and or receipts that the roof is fixed and always fix the interior drywall as soon as the roof is fixed. The worst thing to do is get a buyer alarmed that there is deferred home maintenance.

The assocation is responsible for the roof repair and the drywall; while the homowner is responsible for the primer and paint (and more often then not – the entire ceiling needs to be painted because it’s hard to match those colors!) Read here in the Chicago Tribune, Feb 24, 2012 issue, from condo advisor Mark Pearlstein to learn more – go to end of article. I think his advice is great on “each association establish(ing) a repair policy regarding water infiltration.” Every association needs to be clear on their rules for unexpected maintenance.

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Who Owns My Mortgage?

Many of my buyers when shopping loans want their mortgage servicer to land up with a certain company because they have had good customer service with them. However, I thought this was a great article named, “Mortgages likely to change hands” from the Chicago Tribune, Feb 24, 2012 Issue to show buyers that Mortgage notes change hand a number of times and it’s out of the buyer’s hands. Very few in fact stay with the original lender.

A great place to find out if your loan is guaranteed by Freddie Mac or Fannie Mae is go to fanniemae.com/loanlookup.com or Mersinc.org/homeowners which tracks the identity of the servicers for registered loans.

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Strategic Default: What Happens When you Walk Away From Your Home?

I sit with clients every week in Chicago when they are ready to sell their home to discuss the market conditions and the home sales process. Many have been in their homes for up to 10 years and ready to move onto the next chapter in their lives but after our conversations feel stuck because they can’t sell due to the declines in property value. This article is a good read from Reuters, “What Happens When you Walk Away from Your Home?” by Chris Taylor to understanding some of the topics to consider when home owners walk away from their home.
Short sales are definitely an option as well where sellers work with the bank to take less then what’s owed on the mortgage. Feel free to call me at 773-307-2449 to discuss the market conditions in your neighborhood. Remember Real Estate is Local!

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Understanding the Key Players when Applying for a Home Loan

As a Real Estate Agent in Chicago – I have so many first time home buyers. I thought this was a great outline of the key people that every home buyer should know once they submit an application for a home loan. Source: Chicago Tribune May 29, 2011 – “Behind the Scenes players in Key Roles”

1. Processor. Once the bank receives your application from the loan officer or mortgage broker with whom you are working directly, a processor takes over.

This person’s job is to gather necessary documents the lender needs to make a decision, review them to be certain all the lines have been filled out and the boxes checked, and verify what you say is true. He or she will order a credit report and appraisal, and verify your employment, income, bank accounts and any other financial information you provided.

Your real estate agent might also employ a back-office processor to make sure the various inspections have been ordered and the paperwork has been filed with his counterpart in the lender’s back office.

2. Appraiser. You pay for the services of this valuation expert, but your lender hires this person to determine what the property you intend to purchase is worth.

In most instances, an object’s worth is judged to be what an informed buyer is willing to pay in an arm’s-length transaction. But when obtaining a home loan, the house stands as collateral for the hundreds of thousands of dollars the bank is giving you to buy the place. So the bank wants to know what the house would fetch if it had to repossess the place and put it back on the market.

Simplistically, an appraisal is a snapshot in time of the value of the house based largely on what similar properties in the vicinity have recently sold for. Appraisers don’t randomly assign values. Rather, they look for similar houses within a certain radius of the subject property that sold within the most recent past, make adjustments for such differences as a finished basement or extra bedroom and bath, and then offer their professional opinion of the home’s value.

While you may never see the appraiser, you are entitled by law to a copy of her valuation; you paid for it. If you or your agent believes the appraiser might have missed more comparable properties, you have every right to ask her to reconsider or ask the lender to order a second valuation.

3. Underwriter. Once your loan package is complete and verified, it is shipped to the individual who will decide whether you are worth the risk. Years ago, underwriting was done by hand, one loan at a time. Then the computer took over, spitting out the final say-so in a matter of seconds. Now, the process is usually a combination of human and machine decision-making.

The underwriter will analyze your credit history and credit score to make sure it meets the lender’s requirements. He’ll also calculate your housing and debt-to-income ratios to determine if you have the financial wherewithal to make the monthly payments, and evaluate your savings to make sure that you have enough money for the down payment, closing costs and a cushion of cash-on-hand should you run into financial difficulty.

4. Surveyor. If the underwriter gives your application his blessing, a survey of the property is ordered. A surveyor will review land records and create a plat showing the property’s boundary lines and where the house sits on the parcel of land. His survey also will contain information about any easements that are on the property, including those required for power, telephone and sewage.

Such utility easements are normal, but your lender will want to make sure that no one from a neighboring property has legal access to your property or has the right to go through it to get to a street or highway. Typically, such easements lower the value of the property.

The surveyor also will look for any encroachments that are over the boundary line — one way or the other — between your property and that of your neighbors.

5. Termite inspector. Inspections for wood-destroying insects are required for loans on almost all dwellings except condominiums.

The inspector will look for evidence of termites or termite damage as well as that of carpenter bees, carpenter ants and beetles. If any problems are discovered, the lender won’t approve the loan unless they are corrected. Usually, remediation is the seller’s responsibility.

6. Mortgage insurer. If you’re making a less-than-20-percent down payment, the bank will require insurance to protect it against the possibility that you won’t make your payments as promised.

You pay for the coverage, but the lender picks the insurer, not you. Still, lenders usually work with several different companies, so it may be worthwhile to research rates so you can request that the lender use the least expensive alternative. Realize, though, that each mortgage insurer has its own credit rules.

7. Title search. If all things are a go, your last stop will be at the closing table, where you will sit down with a settlement or escrow agent who will ask you to go over and sign a stack of legal papers.

Before you arrive, someone in the agent’s office will have conducted a search of the land records to make sure there are no defects. If there are, the title company will work to have them corrected.

But because there is a possibility of hidden defects not reflected in the records — a missing heir, for example, or a forged signature — the lender will require that you also purchase lender’s title insurance.

Here, there is no choice of insurers. But you will be offered the option of also buying your own policy, which will protect you against fraud, mistakes or undisclosed ownership, and defend you — as opposed to the lender — against any lawsuit attacking your interest in the property.

8. Lawyers. The closing agent will explain each document to you, but she should not dispense legal advice. Her job is to make certain that the lender’s instructions are being followed, so she works on behalf of the lender and not either party to the transaction. If you want or need legal representation, you should hire your own attorney.

9. Notary. Sometimes the title attorney or escrow agent may also be the person who notarizes the documents you sign at the closing table. This is to attest that you are who you say you are and actually signed the papers. But it also protects you against the possibility that someone might try to forge your signature.

In most places where an attorney is not required by law to be present at the settlement, a third-party witness known as a notary signing agent is dispatched for the sole purpose of identifying you and obtaining your signature.

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Board Must Provide 10-30 Days Notice to Adopt Special Assessment

So many buyers in the Chicago Market buy into condo buildings and their biggest fear is a special assessments. Hopefully buyers and their real estate agents/lawyers due their due diligence to ensure the building the buyer is buying into (and sharing one roof with other owners) is financially sound. However, emergencies do happen in any home and unexpected costs arise (Just as if a buyer was in a Single Family Home).

I thought this was a great article for any association to understand what to do when emergencies happen in your building and a special assessments needs to be levied: “Little Notice on Special Assessment for Repairs”.

Bottom-Line: Board Must Provide 10-30 Days Notice to Adopt a Special Assessment (If the Special Asssessment was not considered an Emergency).

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Associations Now Becoming Landlords in Chicago

These are great points for any home owner’s association in Chicago to consider when an a unit in your building is behind on their assessments. Read More at “Associations Wise to Use Caution in Leasing Units”.

My opinion is with banks taking longer (sometimes up to 2 years) to actually foreclose on units – the associations should absolutely find a renter to help pay the associations dues and someone to watch over the unit. It’s better the unit being occupied (especially in Winter) then vacant. Plus, the association is helping make the unit whole again on their assessments. Definitely using a real estate agent will help the association find a qualified tenant, prepare all the documents so the association is protected and help find the resources to manage the unit while the tenant is present.

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Understanding your Good Faith Estimate (GFE)

In the Land of Google – we all comp shop. I always tell my buyers to sit down with their lender and understand line by line what is on their GFE (Good Faith Estimate) before committing to one lender. This article in the Chicago Trib laid out some of the fees to watch for and can be negotiated: ef=”http://http://www.chicagotribune.com/classified/realestate/sc-cons-0105-junk-fees-20120106,0,1118657.story”>

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What Information Should and Should not be put in meeting minutes?

I just read the following article in the Chicago Homes Magazine (part of the Chicago Tribune Sunday edition), May 13, 2011 “Practical and legal guidance on association issues”

I get the question a lot from sellers about to put their condo on the market “What Information Should and Should no be put in meeting minutes?” and here’s what I read:

“The purpose of minutes is to have a corporate record of action taken by the board,” James Slowikowski, of Dicker, Kahn, Slowikowski & Zavell Ltd said. Minutes should only reflect what actions were taken, what were the votes and the outcome of the votes.  Anything else is unnecessary.  Something may be added to explain a vote of the topic of the motion, but if no action was taken by the board, you don’t have to.”

This is interesting because I’ve experienced in my own association meetings where we’ve discussed ideas for possible upcoming projects that we would LIKE to see (but not needed), criminal activity, other association members and all of this is recorded in the minutes. Then when a unit goes to sell and the buyer sees a POSSIBLE special assessment because of POSSIBLE project – the buyer may ask for a credit or funds held in escrow when in fact this was just a passing comment.

Personally, I think this is unfair for the seller.  Yes, if a project has launched  and a special assessments has been assessed then it should fall on the seller.  However, if there are no votes on moving forward with the project then the buyer has to be willing to take that risk that the funds needed to execute that project would likely fall on that buyer. The most important thing for the buyer to review is the scope of the project and the amount of reserves that the association has earmarked for projects.

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Associations

The most common question I have from buyers when they are looking to purchase a condo is “How do I know if the association is financially sound?“  Typically you can review the last 12 months of meeting minutes, budget, and the rules and regulations that the association has agreed to. But even with all that information, the buyer is still taking a risk when buying into a condo building. I’ve seen special assessments as much as $15,000 for a mere 2 bedroom unit to go towards an elevator project – that’s $15,000 that is not going towards any equity!

As an active Realtor in Chicago, I feel that it is more important for my buyers to buy into a sound association then anything else with the transaction.

Board members within associations are all volunteer-based and with larger buildings there is a large time-commitment put on these members.  So my goal for this category-blog is to start gathering all the great questions I get from sellers and buyers AND more importantly from articles I read that I feel is relevant for associations to keep up-to-date on.

If you have a specific question you want answered feel free to email me at NArndt@Dreamtown.com

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