Posts Tagged ‘Moving up’

Prop 60 and Prop 90 Transfer Tax Reminder

You may be thinking of selling your home by downsizing or moving closer to family, well Proposition 60 and Proposition 90 have to be considered too.  Ask your CPA.

California property owners who are over 55 years of age may qualify to transfer the assessed value of their principal residence home sold in one County to their new principal residence they buy in another County.

A copy of the tax bill from the other county and a copy of the applicant’s birth certificate will be required by the County Assessor to be included in the application.

This website provides property tax answers for property owners who are selling and plan to move.

A Copy of the grant deed for the new purchase along with a copy of the closing statement of both the sale and purchase are also required.

Here is a short summary of the eligibility requirements…

Los Gatos Homes and Real Estate Had 2 New Sales

Los-Gatos-House-for-saleThese two Los Gatos homes for sale prove that a listing price is rarely a selling price in our Real Estate market.  We are at a crossroads.   It just isn’t what you might think;

131 Millrich Dr.  this Los Gatos house sold for nearly 1% less than the asking and 411 Clearview Dr., a townhome, sold for nearly 5% over the listing price !

A reminder that ’sweet spotting’ your asking price will always pay off.

The good news….neither property was a short sale.

2 Los Gatos Houses sold this week,

131 MILLRICH DR, Los Gatos 95030 (Los Gatos)Single Family Home 3 bed(s) Baths: 4|1 bath(s)   SqFt: 2,593  Lot: 9,100 sq ft

List Price: $1,449,000     Sold Price $1,332,000.00

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411 CLEARVIEW DR, Los Gatos 95032 (Los Gatos)Townhouse  3 Beds, 2|1 Baths:  SqFt: 2,122 Lot: 2,220 sq ft

List Price: $749,000 Sale Price: $780,000

Assoc. Fee: $428

We see a crossroads ahead…one where the buyers in the Los Gatos Real Estate Market aren’t in the driver’s seat.    Could this mean the homes for sale are in a Seller’s market?

Remember…

Spring is coming and the end of the $8000 First time buyer’s credit is there waiting.   I wonder if will  lead to more vigorous sales?…bidding?

First Time Buyer Credit Forms Just Realeased:IRS

los-gatos-first-time-home-buyer-tax-creditThe program was originally designed for First Time Buyers only.  With the extension of the  tax credit came some other great news.  Just released today was the new IRS form for attachment to your tax filing.  Los Gatos home buyers  should be attaching this form when filing.

The new law allows a long-time resident of the same main home to claim the homebuyer credit if they purchase a new principal residence. To qualify, eligible taxpayers must show that they lived in their old homes for a five-consecutive-year period during the eight-year period ending on the purchase date of the new home. The IRS has stepped up compliance checks involving the homebuyer credit, and it encouraged homebuyers claiming this part of the credit to avoid refund delays by attaching documentation covering the five-consecutive-year period.

what you can and cannot deduct as a homeowner

Get your taxes done FREE

Great short Video Explanation of Credit

Fannie ‘Mae’ Get A Spanking

The spanking Fannie Mae is suffering has become intolerable.

Fannie-Mae-los-gatosThe rumor several banks have agreed to streamline short sales is true and will certainly make the spanking a light one.  How do I know?  When I inquired why my calls were not being returned, for a few days in October, contacts at BofA told me they were being trained for a new program to expedite… Read the rest of this entry »

How to buy a Fixer Upper and Fix it Up…Cheap!

Nearly everyone wants to do this so, Why don’t you?

fixer-upper-los gatos-san-jose-bayareaThe purchase of a fixer-upper house is often a catch-22 situation, because the bank won’t lend the money to buy the house until the repairs are complete, and the repairs can’t be done until the house has been purchased. Fixing up your new house is a costly idea in Los Gatos, San Jose and the whole Bay Area, really.

HUD’s 203(k) program can help you overcome this cost obstacle by enabling you to purchase or refinance a property plus the cost of making the repairs and improvements in one mortgage.

Dian Hymer of Inman News suggests “design your offer with a 60 day close and a 45 day finance contingency.”

Read the rest of this entry »

Is My Agent Lying to Me? Part 4 Seller’s Advantage

The fundamental reason homes do not sell in a timely manner is due to sell-my-los gatos-home-house-list-for salemisplacing it in the market.   Pricing!  No one is willing to pay more than something is worth… everyone knows that.  Still, I am often befuddled to find so many agents list a home for more than market price?   It’s called ‘buying the listing’.

Buying the listing is when an agent will do anything to stick a sign in your flower bed, including listing at a higher price just to get you to sign on the dotted line.  I call it,  sticking it to you.  That’s exactly what it is when you consider the fact that your home will see little exposure, sit on the market longer and end up selling for less than you expected.  It happens every time!

Elizabeth Weintraub writes “…Maybe the first agent knows there will be two other agents competing for the listing, so the first agent names an astronomical figure. The second agent, upon hearing the first agent’s price, beats it. The third agent comes in higher yet.”

This is all based on the fact you have already implemented the basic tips to sell your home.

Are you thinking “but, if a buyer offers less than we are asking we can’t negotiate”?  If your home is priced right you will have several buyers considering an offer.  This presents a problem for the buyers, a level of uncertainty that you will even consider their low offer.  Hence, the offers that come will be more in line with the market.  Less serious buyers will go fishing elsewhere and not waste your time.

This salesman ‘buy the listing’ tactic only leads to more work than is necessary. I had a similar experience of my own when I recently sold my personal residence.  I don’t use ‘buy the listing’ tactics but, market conditions led to the same result.    The market was falling and I had to lower my price two times to catch a buyer.  It was like chasing the market downhill.  If I had known the banking system was going to experience such failures I would have listed at the eventual selling price from the onset to avoid the trouble.

In reality, the chance a home will sell in the first few weeks is far greater when it is priced correctly and prepared well.  Sounds intuitive enough, Right?   Go look at some homes for sale and see how little thought is given to home preparation.   This is especially important when considering a short sale.   The sooner you can yield a willing buyer the sooner you can move the time consuming process forward.

Showhomes, a national franchised home stager staged Tracy Truitt’s listing and it sold in eight days.   Tracey said…“I had an almost full price offer within a week of Showhomes’ staging, and a 25% higher offer than the two offers that had come in previously to the home being staged,” Truitt says.

I found keeping my house prepared well, clean and neat, was tiresome after just a couple of weeks.  I am a terrible merry maid.  If I had to deal with a Realtor I would have lost my mind!  I know can do better than some..look at what  these people did.

Each time I made a price adjustment more people called and disrupted breakfast, dinner and quiet family time.  It was unnerving more than once.  Buyers  sense  desperation when you drop your price and lower offers will follow.

You can guard against this by simply stepping outside your bubble and looking at the competition in an unbiased fashion.  This means you will have to forget all the trouble and expense you suffered when you updated and improved your home.  A buyer’s eye only sees your home compared to other like properties that are available.  You must do the same. No one cares if Aunt Clara helped you cook your first Turkey there.

Is this boring yet?

Wake up!  Do a Walk Score or a Megans Law search for your home? How about a Crime Report review?   I will bet my favorite tie that buyers considering your home are.  Think like a buyer!

Following your internet searches and open house viewings you can reasonably determine what your home should sell for. This will afford you the knowledge and understanding to say no to –salespeople-.  Half hearted buyers will resist the urge to make low ball offers and serious buyers will make their highest and best offers.

Would you be interested in learning what buyers complain about most?  If so, please comment and I will provide a definitive list and some ideas to overcome them.

Tips on Appraisals

One in Four Homes Lowered Price

Why do agents take over priced listings

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Is My Agent Lying to Me? Part 3 Buyer

bbb low-cost housing, tegnestuen vandkunsten

Image by seier+seier+seier via Flickr

part 2

cont. – Start out on right foot. Trust begets trust. Only hire a Realtor you have every confidence is representing your best interests.  Be realistic and above all forthright.  Remember trust is earned.  The agent with the nice personality or “my friend’s friend”  isn’t the answer.   Every person who has been taken by a schiester says “…but they were such nice people.” Well, of course they were!  You wouldn’t give your money to an obvious ‘Vampire’ would you?

That darn Barry Madoff comes to mind.  Yuk!

Don’t run out and buy a box of  rope of garlic!

Note; refer to this list when considering who you should work with:

  • Are they easy to contact?  Are their responses timely?
  • Do they provide a list of past clients?
  • Can I access a 3rd party source where I can learn more about them?
  • Do they possess the skills and principals required to work for me?
  • Does their track record support their claims of success? …more
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Buying a Short Sale is like Mining for gold

Buying a short sale is like being a miner…A miner will dig and dig, for months, until they find gold right?  Buying a short sale can be very much like mining for gold.  You need to have a miner’s mindset and use better tools than the others.

Miner img for posts

“How many months is this going to take?”   This question is being asked with great regularity… too much really.   The answer…It depends on who has the mine.  Period.  If the Listing agent  (who has the mine or short sale) is not proactive then it doesn’t matter how hard your Realtor works or how high your offer is…you won’t find any gold.

Your Realtor is your mining pick.   They need to know how to qualify the listing agent’s knowledge, experience and ability or, at least, be willing to work to help the listing agent make progress with the bank who is ultimately going to approve the short sale and…shine the light on the gold.

A successful gold miner will have a map of the gold mine and know how to navigate it.   Your Realtor of choice will need to have a good map and understand the best way to navigate their way to the gold and extract it.   This map is developed through representing sellers AND buyers of  short sale properties, understanding all the pitfalls  and the best practices to avoid them.

More and more short sales will be coming to the market and,  the best homes and best buys available, will likely be short sales.   This is the market condition reality for the next year or longer according to Banking industry experts and Real Estate professionals based on market statistics and economic conditions.

The extremely low interest rates are bringing droves of buyers out and multiple offers on the best homes are the norm in San Jose as well as Los Gatos and all around Santa Clara County, for that matter.  Too many miners and not enough mines.  You can avoid having to compete with these buyers if you realize they are overlooking the opportunity in front of them.  The Short Sale properties.    Agents are avoiding them because they think  that most of them will never close.    Ahhaa!    The key!   Find other mines!  Be a good miner and have the sharpest pick!

Are you planning to move up? Consider foreclosure stratetgies…

best-san-jose-skyline1Are you a homeowner planning on moving up to a bigger or more expensive home? Here’s a guide for planning the transition in today’s foreclosure heavy market.

Figure out how much your current home is likely to sell for.
Have your real estate professional conduct a comparative market analysis. “Be realistic about pricing the home so it moves quickly,” adds Sandy Guralnik, a broker with Coldwell Banker United in Charlotte, N.C. This will help you avoid a long gap between when you buy your new home and sell your old one.

Consider the market.
If you have only been in the home two or three years and made little or no down payment, you probably do not have have enough equity to sell at a profit in today’s soft market. You might even owe more on the mortgage than the home is worth.  This is far to common in the current foreclosure heavy market.  On the other hand, if your home has appreciated well, it might be easier to move up to a bigger and better home than ever before!  Especially in Cambrian Park, Los Gatos, and Saratoga.  Cupertino has consistantly bucked the market recently.

Consider your finances.
Your overall debt picture is important if you plan to move into a larger, more expensive home. In addition to a higher mortgage, you’ll likely have higher utility, insurance and property taxes as well. If you owe money on a home equity loan, you’ll have to pay that back when you sell the home, which will eat into your profit.

Get preapproved by a reputable lender.
The lender will tell you how much money they’re willing to lend you, which will tell you how much house you can afford. Then, figure out how much you’re comfortable spending. The two numbers are not necessarily the same.  Your comfort zone should be your guide here.

Determine your long-term housing needs.
Will you be starting or expanding your family in a few years? Will the larger home be as teen-friendly as it is toddler-friendly? Is there a place for a home office if one of you eventually works from home?  With the many economy issues this should play a large part in your decision process.   Not to speak of the inventory that is available today.

Be realistic.
Most people will not be able to move up from a starter home into their dream home. It’s a long-term process that occurs over several moves, says Debbie Wong, a certified residential specialist with Prudential California Realty in San Mateo, Calif. Plus, it’s harder to qualify for a loan if the jump in monthly payments is too big, she says. Not to speak of all the hoops many lenders are expecting you to jump through now.

Preview properties in your target price range and location.
Most importantly does that “Super Foreclosure Deal” really translate into a home. Look to see whether the homes match your trade-up goals.

Get your home on the market.
Moving up will go more smoothly if you are able to sell your home before trying to buy another. For one thing, many Sellers are leery of contracts in which the sale is contingent on the Buyer selling their current home. Foreclosures are held by Banks that are not willing to diminish there pool of potential buyers.  If they accept your offer they will be required to place the home on a pending status and other buyers will be considering it. Finances also are an issue.   Bridge loans to carry you from your current home to the next are almost impossible to get today.

Determine the best time for your move.
If you want to move in the summertime, start your other preparations early enough to meet that goal.

Wallpaper?…Not Again? New Styles are making it cool!

After years on the decorative outs, wallcoverings are back in style. They’ve shed their dowdy association with teddy bears and tiny country prints and re-emerged in fresh, attention-getting forms.

wallpaper-has-style-again1Wallpaper’s return has followed a decline in the popularity of faux finishes, noted Stacy Senior Allan, marketing director for wallpaper maker Thibaut Inc. Maybe one too many badly sponged walls convinced us to leave the wall decorating to the experts.

But like faux finishes, wallpaper adds a dimension that a plain coat of paint can’t, Allan noted. Especially in rooms without a lot of soft surfaces – dining rooms and bathrooms, for example – wallpaper adds softness and a layering effect, she said.

We talked to some leaders in the industry to find out the latest trends in wallpaper, and here’s what’s hot:

Tradition with a twist
Ages-old motifs are still around, but in oversized forms and surprising colors. ”Everything has gone large-scale,” said Paula Berberian, creative services manager for Brewster Wallcovering Co. Familiar designs such as damask and Jacobean prints are being blown up into bold proportions and rendered in unexpected hues or metallics.

The result is a less stuffy look that can work even in modern settings. It can be busy, though, so Lilly Sosic of the Brunschwig & Fils showroom in Beachwood’s Ohio Design Centre said wallpapers with oversized graphics might be best for areas where people don’t spend a lot of time – a powder room, for instance, or a foyer.

Or cover just one wall, suggested Gina Shaw, vice president of product development for York Wallcoverings. Not only is creating a feature wall a returning trend among designers, but it’s also a less costly way to bring interest to a room, noted her colleague at York, director of marketing LeRue Brown.

Sophisticated finishes
Texture adds a third dimension to many of today’s wallpapers. Thibaut’s Allan said improvements in manufacturing technology allow wallpaper to have raised textures and embellishments that weren’t possible earlier.

As a result, many of the new wallpapers enhance rather than dominate a room. ”Wallpaper used to be really ‘pay attention to me,”’ she said. Now it tends to play a supporting yet glamorous role.

Sand and tiny bead accents are popular, as are bits of bling such as crystals and pearls. Metallics are big, too, but don’t be scared away by bad memories of disco-era Mylar. Metallics now are more subtle, often used just for accents.

floralsEco chic
The world is wearing its Earth obsession on its walls. That means grass and leaf designs are popular, as is grass cloth, a classic look that’s making a comeback. It’s made of reeds, bamboo and other natural grasses, Berberian said, so it fits right in with people’s desire to decorate with renewable materials.

Spa blues and greens are strong from a color standpoint, as are other Earth-inspired shades. Brown remains popular, often paired with brighter colors.

wallpaper-is-back’60s flashbacks
It’s a mod, mod world, at least for the people who missed the ’60s. The bold geometrics, pop art and bright colors that exemplified that groovy decade are in big demand among younger consumers, and that’s translating to wallpaper design.

Because many of the fans of ’60s design are young enough to be decorating dorm rooms or first apartments – or even their tween or teen bedrooms – the look is strong in lower-priced, repositionable decals. The peel-and-stick decals use an adhesive like the one used in Post-it notes, so they leave no residue when they’re removed.

Handcrafting
The renewed interest for handmade goods is apparent in wallpapers, too. Shaw thinks it’s an effect of the uncertain economy, an appreciation for things that are crafted thoughtfully and made to last.

Handmade wallpaper can be pricey, but more mass-produced wallcoverings have the look and feel of hand crafting. Berberian said many have raised inks, which give the illusion of hand-printing. Asian-inspired designs and line drawings or other simple motifs are common, too.

Such wallcoverings often include layered colors and small mistakes that make them appear handcrafted, Allan said.

Global influences
Our well-traveled society has shrunk the planet and brought the colors and designs of other cultures to Western walls. African countries and India are particularly strong influences in wallcovering design and in home decor in general, Berberian said.

You’ll see that in paisleys and ikat designs, elongated geometric patterns originally used in fabrics that have the appearance of having been stretched. Animal prints are strong, too, and you can even find wallpaper that resembles faux reptile skins so closely they almost look and feel real.

© 2009, Akron Beacon Journal (Akron, Ohio).
Distributed by McClatchy-Tribune Information Services.