All Posts Tagged With: "first-time"
Time Winding Down for First-Time Military Borrowers To Get Tax Credits
The government’s landmark tax credit program for first-time home buyers is starting to drift back in focus again as tax day approaches. The unique $8,000 credit for new buyers and $6,500 credit for existing homeowners helped inject stability into the slumping housing market during 2010. Consumers and some industry observers have pushed for a renewal [...]
3Mar2011 | Chris Birk | 0 comments | Continued
US home values fall $9 trillion since 2006, says Zillow
American real estate, a traditional bastion of household wealth for the middle class, has lost $9 trillion in equity since 2006 according to the real estate marketing site Zillow.com. Zillow reports that US homeowners lost $1 trillion in 2009 and it expects that losses will total $1.7 trillion in 2010. Specifically, Zillow estimates that values [...]
9Dec2010 | Peter G. Miller | 0 comments | Continued
Bring Back The First-Time Homebuyer Tax Credit
The news from the National Association of Realtors is fairly brutal and speaks for itself: “Existing-home sales, which are completed transactions that include single-family, townhomes, condominiums and co-ops, dropped 27.2 percent to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 3.83 million units in July from a downwardly revised 5.26 million in June, and are 25.5 percent [...]
25Aug2010 | Peter G. Miller | 2 comments | Continued
First-Time Home Buyer Credit Still On For Vets
While the tax credit for first-time home buyers and sellers largely ended in April, the credit actually continues for active-duty military personnel until April 30, 2011, something that could be important for VA loan borrowers and veteran sellers. The $8,000 tax credit (along with its $6,500 companion credit for existing homeowners) spurred an uptick in [...]
3Jun2010 | Chris Birk | 1 comment | Continued
How Can I Buy Real Estate With Little Or Nothing Down?
Figures from the National Association of Realtor’s 2010 study of buyers and sellers shows that typical first-time buyers bought with 4 percent down while repeat purchasers paid 14 percent down. The repeat buyers presumably could put more down because they had equity from the sale of house #1 and they were older and had more [...]
1Sep2008 | Peter G. Miller | 0 comments | Continued
