Don't forget, you first-time buyers... if you are interested at all, now is the time!! the deadline is this year, and if not extended, that will be that for this great tax credit that does not have to be repaid (in years past, it did)... check out this article, and check in with me if/when you have questions... and want to know the local market conditions.
"First-Time Homeowners Offered Tax CreditsBy Holden Lewis, bankrate.com Published: 5/14/2009This year some first-time homebuyers will charge their down payments to the taxpayer.Buyers will be allowed to use their first-time homeowner tax credits as down payments when they get FHA-insured loans, Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Shaun Donovan announced this week. Depending on the buyer's tax-filing status and the price of the home, the tax credit can be as much as $8,000.
The National Association of Realtors hailed the announcement, and asked taxpayers to subsidize all home purchases, and not just for first-time buyers.
The decision to finance first-time homebuyers' down payments with tax dollars was a highlight of a week that saw little change in mortgage rates.
Mortgage rates have been remarkably steady in the last few weeks. The Obama administration successfully adopted a policy of driving mortgage rates down and keeping them there. Observers believe that the Treasury and Federal Reserve are keeping rates in a narrow range by buying mortgage-backed securities whenever rates threaten to rise.
Donovan boasted about the effort to keep mortgage rates low when he spoke this week before a meeting of the National Association of Realtors. "And we are taking action to further help the housing market recover," he said as he introduced the down payment subsidy.
The down payment initiative is built onto this year's first-time homebuyers' tax credit, in which qualified buyers can get an income tax credit of 10 percent of the home's price, or $8,000, whichever is less. The credit is half that for spouses filing separately, and the credit phases out for higher-income filers.
Under the plan announced by Donovan, buyers can get a piggyback mortgage or an unsecured bridge loan for the amount of the tax credit when they get a Federal Housing Administration-insured mortgage. The piggyback or bridge loan can take the place of a down payment. Typically, FHA-insured loans require a down payment of at least 3.5 percent.
Borrowers will be expected to pay off the piggyback or bridge loans when they claim the tax credit on their 2009 returns next year or their amended 2008 returns this year. To claim the tax credit, buyers have to buy by the end of 2009.
"We think the policy is a real win for everyone, ensuring that borrowers can tap into the numerous organizations that are already part of the FHA network," Donovan told the Realtors. He cited a home builders' study that claimed that the tax credit will stimulate 101,000 sales to first-time buyers, and another 59,000 home sales to people who will be able to buy homes because first-time buyers bought their homes.
By using tax credits as down payments, buyers won't have to put some of their skin in the game by shelling out their saved-up cash to make down payments.
For years, the FHA grudgingly allowed down payment assistance programs, or DPAs, to operate. DPAs were a mechanism by which home sellers could indirectly fund buyers' down payments. A seller isn't allowed to supply the buyer's down payment money.
But DPAs exploited a loophole that allowed charitable organizations to make down payments for needy buyers. The DPAs accepted "charitable contributions" from sellers, then gave equivalent "donations" to the buyers to cover their down payments.
After years of griping about higher default rates on loans that used down payment assistance, the FHA persuaded Congress to ban DPAs last October as home sales were declining precipitously. Now it appears that the FHA will let the IRS replace down payment assistance programs.
The DPA business was dominated by two nonprofits: AmeriDream and Nehemiah. AmeriDream president Ann Ashburn told Bankrate: "By setting this policy, the FHA is tacitly acknowledging the mistake it made last October when it convinced Congress to ban charitable down payment assistance. That mistake cost hundreds of thousands of Americans the opportunity to become responsible homeowners, accelerated the decline in home prices, and likely delayed the housing market's recovery."
Ashburn added, "Down payment assistance must be a long-term, privately funded program, not a short-term subsidy funded by the U.S. taxpayer." She supports H.R. 600, a bill that would allow DPAs to resume their activities.
In response to the FHA's new down payment policy, the National Association of Realtors patted itself on the back. "Last year, NAR asked Congress to pass housing stimulus legislation, which passed and is beginning to show results," the Realtors' president, Charles McMillan, said."
http://www.frontdoor.com/Home-Finance/FirstTime-Homeowners-Offered-Tax-Credits/55087
Take care, and until next time,
Karena Jolley of the MendoGroup team
Coldwell Banker Mendo Realty Inc
lic 01482063
phone 707 354 2999
www.mendogroup.com
No comments:
Post a Comment