This brings up the first thing to consider when comparing buying versus renting: the amount of time you’ll be there. Buying and later selling a home will usually cost about 10% or more of the value of the home. These costs mean that if the home only went up in value 10% or so in the year or two you lived there, you won’t be gaining anything (equity gain from principal pay-down is very little in the first years). You’ll often be better off renting if you’ll be in a town for less than a few years.
What about towns with faster rates of appreciation? Have you done some serious homework? If not, to assume appreciation will be more than the rate of inflation is just gambling. The sellers in the example above sold for the same price they bought the house for two years earlier – and this was in a decent and growing area. You can’t count on fast appreciation.
To Buy Or Rent – Cost Comparison
Looking at buying versus renting, you have to take into account that in many places it cost much more to buy. For example, in Miami a home can cost $200,000. The mortgage payment, taxes, insurance and maintenance will add up to about $1,600 per month, but you can rent the same size home for about $800.
What does that mean? Many real estate fanatics will say you’re at least buying something for your money, and renting is throwing your money away. Of course in this example more than $1,000 of your payment will be going towards interest alone, and that’s not buying you anything.
Suppose you can afford the $1600 per month, but instead you rent for $800 and put the other $800 into a decent safe investment that makes you 5%? In three years you’ll have over $30,000 in this account. If the home appreciated at 6% per year, it would be worth $231,000. The costs of initially buying it and then selling it would be around $13,800 (2% buying and 6% selling), leaving you with a gain of about 19,000 once we include your principal pay-down.
In other words, you would be at least $11,000 better off if you rented and banked the difference. Every market is different, of course, so you have to do the math. Compare the total costs of owning versus renting, and then make safe assumptions about the rate of appreciation for homes.
If you’ll definitely be in one place for a long time to come, it will almost always be better to buy than to rent. In the last example, buying becomes a better bet after about four or five years. Also consider that if you get a fixed rate mortgage, your payment will never change, a benefit landlords won’t offer you that on your rent payment.
To sum up, look at the time you’ll be there, the comparison of total monthly costs, whether rents are going up fast, and whether you have good reason to believe home prices will be going up fast. Then look also at all the personal factors. Do you want to be responsible for the maintenance, yard work and unpredictability of ownership problems?
To buy or to rent? In the end, you have to work this one out by yourself.
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Aug
27Descriptive Terms in Real Estate Ads – Even More Definitions
Posted By: Ramon Rivas on August 27, 2010 at 10:07 pm“Living Room” & “Family Room”
When a home has both a living room and a family room, we know which is which. It used to be that when an ad mentioned a family room, we could assume it also had a living room. Now some builders are building houses with something akin to the first use of “Great Room” above and calling it the “Family Room” on the floor plan. Thus houses and their terminology seem to be evolving. I suppose in the new builder speak we should just think of the room as an informal family living room.
“Patio” & “Terrace”
Both are outdoor living areas paved with something like slate or brick. A patio is level with the ground around it. A terrace has adjoining areas of ground which are higher, or lower, or perhaps both.
“Solarium,” “Sun Room,” “Florida Room”
These terms are used to describe rooms with lots of windows (often on three sides). Many times these areas also have skylights. The choice of what to call them seems purely personal. They tend to be charming, bright, sunny places in which to over winter plants and sit in the garden in chilly or downright cold weather.
“Jack and Jill Bath”
A bathroom with two doors into it. It is frequently situated between two bedrooms with doors to each. Sometimes the doors are into a bedroom and into a hallway.
“Waterfront” vs. “Water View”
Waterfront property actually has a common boundary with (frontage on) the water. Sometimes the property line actually goes into the water. Water view just means water can be seen from the property. Sometimes there is a beautiful view. Sometimes it means the water can be seen from one upstairs window when the leaves are off the trees! Also, many times a new structure might block the view at some time in the future unless there is a protective covenant or something to prevent it.
If you can get the verbiage down, you’ll be way ahead in the real estate game. Look for future articles on this subject or visit our site to read more terms.
| Filed Under: Articles Tagged with Adsense, Beautiful View, Building Houses, Cold Weather, Descriptive Terms, floor plan, Florida Room, Frontage, Google, Jack And Jill, Outdoor Living Areas, Selling A Home, Skylights, Sun Room, Sunny Places, Two Doors, Upstairs Window, Water View, Water Water, Waterfront Property |
Aug
26Descriptive Terms in Real Estate Ads – What Do They Mean?
Posted By: Ramon Rivas on August 26, 2010 at 11:02 pmThe Wise Seller
Be very truthful if you are a seller advertising your home. Mention your home’s best features, but do not exaggerate. If someone comes to look at your home and feels disappointed, they are not apt to buy. You are probably wasting your time and advertising money if your ads mislead.
The Wise Buyer
Take advertisements with a grain of salt and don’t get too excited until you’ve seen the property. Many sellers do not take the advice given above.
Now let’s examine some of the terms themselves and what they commonly mean.
“Open Floor Plan”
Describes a home in which rooms open out of each other and it’s possible to see from one room to another. Often entertaining rooms (living room, dining room, sun room, entrance foyer) are open to each other, and family living areas (kitchen, breakfast room, family room) are open to each other, while bedrooms have doors and open off a hall in a more traditional way.
“Traditional Floor Plan”
Used to describe a home with rooms opening off a hall or halls. Each room can usually be closed off with a door.
“Split Bedroom Plan”
A term often used to describe a home (usually one level) with the master bedroom on one side of the living areas and the rest of the bedrooms on the opposite side.
“Dormer Window”
A window in an upstairs room that has a slanting ceiling which follows the slope of the roof. The window is in an upright position, but that causes it to stick up above the roof, so it gets its own little roof (usually a gable roof) that is tied into the main roof where they meet at right angles.
If you can get the verbiage down, you’ll be way ahead in the real estate game. Look for future articles on this subject or visit our site to read more terms.
Jul
18Quick Home Sale at Tampa Real Estate – Real Estate Agent Can Help You Out
Posted By: Ramon Rivas on July 18, 2010 at 10:17 pmIn selling your home in Tampa real estate, you definitely want to get the full measure of your property value. But of course, you can achieve so if you can make an excellent quick sale of your home in Tampa real estate.
Selling a home is not always that easy. It is quite difficult especially if you can’t have the help of your family and friends regarding selling your home quickly in Tampa real estate. In this case, the best person that can help you out in selling your home is a real estate agent. Through the professional means of the real estate agent, you can have a quick sale of your home in Tampa real estate.
Typically, you need to find a real estate agent that has the knowledge about the market and of the property prices and comparative price range of your home. So it is really best for you to find the right real estate agent that can aid you with a quick sale of your home.
You can take time in finding the right real estate agent ,do not rush out, you really have to make sure that you will have the person that has the proper knowledge and experiences in real estate, and in Tampa real estate market. You can ask for recommendation for family and friends in order to at least contact few real estate agents and can able to interview them, for you to find the right one.
As soon as you have the right real estate agent, he/she will definitely ask you to make home improvements. Your real estate agent will make you improve your home in order to attract potential buyers. Yes, indeed, you need to attract buyers in order to make quick sale of your home in Tampa real estate.
Your real estate agent will ask you to repaint your home if it needs to be repainted. Your real estate agent will let you clean the whole house and make sure it is comfortable place and spacious enough for the buyers. You need to remove unnecessary or unusable equipment or furniture.
You have to free your home from unpleasing odor. You have to clean up the bathrooms and the kitchen. Check out the faucets, if they have leaks or if they are still functioning well, if not, better to replace them with new ones.
Check out the yard, trim the trees, grass and clean the gutter. Plant some flowers and hang potted plant, these can help you attract buyers.
Yes, this process takes lots of work, so if you cant do it by yourself, you can hire someone to help you out in cleaning the whole house.
Your real estate agent will help you out in coming up with the right asking rice. The agent has the skill and ability to help you out give the true value of your home. Yes, the right real estate agent can give you the best deal with your home in Tampa real estate.
A critical part of selling a home is the appraisal. Here’s how to plan for it.
You have a contract to sell your home and now the appraiser is coming. The appraisal needs to come in at a good price in order for your buyer to get his loan. What should you do?
The Appraiser Says
Appraisers typically tell people not to do anything special before they come. They tell the owner they see lots of houses and they can look past a little clutter and dust. “Don’t be nervous,” they counsel. Appraisers are sincere people. I’m sure they mean what they say.
I Say
On the other hand, appraisers are human. They respond to cleanliness and order and to good maintenance the same way buyers do. If you’ve let your hair down, get your home back into “show” condition before the appraiser comes.
Everything you know about a tidy approach to your home, well mulched flower beds, door knobs that are attached firmly and work smoothly, lack of finger prints, lack of clutter, and all the rest applies. Take a look at a “Uniform Residential Appraisal Report” form if you doubt me. The age of the home and the “effective age” are asked for under the “General Description.” Don’t you think how well your home appears to be cared for affects the number that appears under “effective age?”
The Uniform Appraisal Report requires information about materials (and their condition) used for floors, walls, trim and finishing elements, bathroom floors and wainscots, and for interior doors. Appraisers train themselves to notice these details. If yours are dusted, polished, and free of scratches and fingerprints, don’t you think you might be giving your appraisal a nudge in the right direction?
The Report also asks about kitchen equipment (refrigerator, range and oven, disposal, dishwasher, fan and hood, microwave, and washer and dryer). Do you think it’d be a good idea to have them clean and purring?
The Report asks about amenities such as fireplaces, patios, decks, porches, fences, pools, and sheds. If an appraiser is going to take special note of such things, shouldn’t they be swept, cleaned, and have paint in good condition? Also, clean out the gutters if they need it. If it should be raining on the day your appraisal is done, you want your house to handle the rain water well.
Let me share the “comments” section of an appraisal which got the owners what they wanted. I think it’ll give you a good feel for what you need to do. “The subject is well maintained and no physical, functional or external inadequacies were noted. Marketability is enhanced by hardwood flooring throughout a majority of the home, an updated kitchen, fresh interior and exterior paint, transom windows, built-ins, a front porch, a rear patio, a large storage shed, 4 fireplaces, etc.”
The appraiser is a human being. Make sure you do everything you can to appeal to them and you’ll get a good appraisal.




