Archive for the 'Homebuyer Tax Credit' Category
Knoxville Home Buyers Dont….
April 30th, 2010 categories: Homebuyer Tax Credit
Close on May 28th 2010
The federal home buyer tax credit expires April 30 and the deadline is sparking a home sale surge. It figures to burden real estate, mortgage and title offices nationwide over the next 60 days so plan your closing date accordingly.
Especially because the last Friday in May is the Friday before Memorial Day.
Now, if the connection between the tax credit and Memorial Day is not immediately clear, think of your own office on a 3-day weekend’s Friday. Some of your colleagues take a half-day at work, others take the entire day off.
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Knoxville Home Resales Boom Into The End Of The Tax Credit And Around The Country
April 28th, 2010 categories: Buyers, Existing Home Sales, Home Values, Homebuyer Tax Credit, Market Trends, Pending Home Sales, Statistics
Existing Home Sales rose in March, as expected. U.S. home buyers closed on 7 percent more homes as compared to February.
Furthermore, versus March 2009 — a month many people equate to the low point of the U.S. economy — sales volume was up 16 percent.
“Existing home sale” is the technical term for a home resale; a home previously inhabited by a person. It’s the opposite of a “new home sale” which is a sale of a newly-constructed home.
Existing Homes Data is tracked by the National Association of Realtors® and a closer look at the March data reveals some other interesting notes:
- Year-over-year sales are higher for the 9th straight month
- Real estate investors represented 19 percent of all homes purchased
- First-time home buyers account for 44 percent of all buyers
Also worth noting is that the supply of available homes is down on a broader basis. At the current rate of sales, the existing home inventory will be exhausted in 8 months.
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Will The Knoxville Housing Market Slow Down After The Tax Credit Expires??
April 22nd, 2010 categories: General, Home Price Index, Home Values, Homebuyer Tax Credit, Housing Starts, Market Trends
After a strong March showing and a surprise upward-revision for February, Housing Starts are, once again, trending better.
It’s yet another signal that the housing market in Farragut and nationwide is stabilized.
A Housing Start is a new home on which construction has started and, over the last 6 months, home builders are averaging one half-million starts per month.
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Knoxville Home Buyers It’s Time To Re-Approve Your Pre-Approval
April 12th, 2010 categories: Buyers, Existing Home Sales, FHA Mortgages, Homebuyer Tax Credit, Household Finances, Market Trends, Mortgage Guidelines, Mortgage Rates
As the federal home buyer tax credit nears its April 30 end-date, there’s a lot of would-be home buyers in Knoxville still working to get under contract.
A piece of advice for all of them : If your pre-qualification and/or pre-approval letter is more than 8 weeks old, it would be prudent to have your lender “re-pre-approve” you. Mortgage guidelines have been in flux and your original lender letter may now be invalid.
For example, over the past half-dozen months, the majority of mortgage lenders have reduced their risk tolerance with respect to:
- Maximum debt-to-income ratios
- Minimum allowable credit scores
- Calculation of “assets in reserve”
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Knoxville Home Buyers You Only Have 30 Days……
April 1st, 2010 categories: Buyers, FHA Mortgages, Homebuyer Tax Credit, Market Trends
To Take Advantage Of The Federal Tax Credit
The credit ranges up to $8,000 for first-time homebuyers, and up to $6,500 for existing homeworkers who have lived in their main home for 5 of the last 8 years.
Claiming the federal tax credit is a two-step process. First, you must be under contract for a new home on or before April 30, 2010. Then, you must close on said home on or before June 30, 2010.
There are no exceptions on the dates (except for certain members of the military).
Timeline aside, homebuyers and the subject property must also meet minimum requirements in order to be tax credit-eligible:
- You can’t purchase the home from a parent, spouse, or child
- You can’t purchase the home from an entity in which the seller is a majority owner
- You can’t acquire the home by gift or inheritance
- Each buyer in the purchase must meet eligibility requirements
- The home sale price may not exceed $800,000
- Buyers may not earn more than $125,000 as single-filers; $225,000 as joint-filers
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Knoxville FHA Buyers You Better Hurry — Fees Increase 1/2 Percent Starting Monday, April 5, 2010
March 30th, 2010 categories: Buyers, FHA Mortgages, Homebuyer Tax Credit, Market Trends, Mortgage Rates, New Home Sales

Have you Been Looking At Homes?? Plan on using FHA financing to buy your new Knoxville Area Home??
Starting Monday, April 5, 2010, getting an FHA mortgage in Knoxville TN and nationwide will be more expensive for borrowers.
In new guidelines set forth earlier this year, the FHA announced plans to raise additional revenue and reduce the overall risk of its mortgage portfolio.
The changes include the following:
- Increase Upfront Mortgage Insurance Premiums from 1.75% to 2.25% for everyone
- A plan to reduce seller concessions from 6 percent to 3 percent
- An increase in minimum downpayment for FICOs 580 or lower
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Knoxville Home Buyers Only 7 Weeks Remain To Find A Home, Claim Up To $8,000 In Tax Credits
March 11th, 2010 categories: Buyers, General, Homebuyer Tax Credit, Market Trends, Mortgage Rates
Knoxville Home Buyers Now Is The Time To Buy!!
There many reasons to buy a home now like I pointed out in a post last week. This tax credit is just one of them.
In November, Congress extended and expanded the First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit program to include a subset of “move-up” buyers — homeowners that have owned and lived in their home for 5 of the last 8 years.
The credit ranges up to $8,000 per buyer. There’s now just 7 weeks left to take advantage.
To be eligible, home buyers must be under contract for a new home no later than April 30, 2010, and must be closed no later than June 30, 2010.
In addition to meeting the deadline dates, there’s a basic set of requirements to be tax credit-eligible:
- You can’t purchase the home from a parent, spouse, or child
- You can’t purchase the home from an entity in which the seller is a majority owner
- You can’t acquire the home by gift or inheritance
- Each buyer in the purchase must meet eligibility requirements
There’s other criteria, too.
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