Atlanta Real Estate Blog

Short Sales / Foreclosure Report - August 6, 2008 59 Foreclosures, 84 Short Sales
August 6th, 2008 10:26 PM

 

 
 

Short Sales / Foreclosure Report - August 6, 2008  59 Foreclosures, 84 Short Sales

 

Short Sales List

 

Cities of Atlanta, Marietta, Mableton, Powder Springs, Acworth, Austell, Smyrna, Vinings, Kennesaw, Woodstock, Sandy Springs, Dunwoody, Alpharetta, Roswell, Norcross, Canton, Waleska, Duluth, Lawrenceville, Suwanee, Sugar Hill, Braselton, Buford, and the

Counties of Cobb, Cherokee, Gwinnett, North Fulton, and DeKalb.

Complete list updated daily at:  Short Sales Homes in North Atlanta

 

Foreclosure List

 

Complete list updated daily at:  > Foreclosure Homes in North Atlanta

 

Short Sales / Foreclosure Homes added to First MLS (FMLS)  in the last 24 hours

Act quickly to buy the property you want.  Short Sales / Foreclosure Homes do not last.

For additional information on these or other properties,  please call our office.  We are here to be of service!

 

Short Sale / Foreclosure Report: 59 Foreclosures, 84 Short Sales as of August 6, 2008

Lee Marlin, Realtor, Keller Williams Realty Atlanta North
Office: 404-384-2274,  Fax: 770-509-5097

                                                                                                  

 

 

 

Tags: Short Sales, Foreclosures, North Atlanta, Daily Report

 

 


Posted by Lee Marlin on August 6th, 2008 10:26 PMPost a Comment (0)

How Do I Qualify For The First Time Home Buyer $7,500 Tax Credit?
August 5th, 2008 10:18 PM
 

How Do I Qualify For The First Time Home Buyer $7,500 Tax Credit?

This article, courtesy of Kenneth Harney and the Washington Post Writers Group, explains how first time buyers can get the most from the new First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit.

Sellers  waiting "until the market improves" before listing a home for sale, now have a reason to put their homes on the market right now since buyers will want the $7,500 tax credit savings.

Buyers  waiting for "home prices to fall further", now have a $7,500 reason to  buy a home right away to gain the tax credit.

 

Tax credit for home buyers works like an interest-free loan
Purchasers can shave as much as $7,500 off their IRS bills, though it must be repaid.  
By Kenneth R. Harney, Washington Post Writers Group


August 3, 2008  
WASHINGTON — Anyone who’s been sitting on the sidelines hesitant to jump into the housing market until conditions settle down should know these dates: April 9, 2008, through June 30, 2009.

They mark the eligibility period for the home purchase tax credit created by the housing bill enacted last week.  If you have not owned a house during the last three years — or are considering buying a first home — and you close on a purchase before the end of next June, you may be eligible for a credit of as much as $7,500 against your federal taxes for 2008 or 2009 ($3,750 if you file taxes as a single person).

The new tax credit is expected to benefit hundreds of thousands of buyers.  Here’s an overview of the specifics.

* The basic idea:  To jump-start housing sales and clear out stocks of unsold real estate, Congress is offering tax credits to encourage new purchasers. Buy any house — new, old, in any location or condition for any price — within the designated time period and the IRS will cut as much as $7,500 off your tax bill this year or next.

For example, if you’re an eligible buyer of a home this year and you owe the IRS $4,000 on your total 2008 income tax bill, your $7,500 tax credit could wipe out everything you owe plus get you a $3,500 refund.

* Eligibility rules:  If you own a home now, you’re not eligible.  If you sold your home more than three years ago and now rent, you are eligible. The same is true if you’ve never owned a home.  Close on a house before next June 30 and you can claim a credit of up to 10% of the purchase price to a maximum of $7,500.

If your adjusted gross income exceeds $150,000 ($75,000 for singles), the credit maximum begins to phase down.  You cannot claim the credit if you financed the property using a state or local housing agency’s tax-exempt bond mortgage, or do not plan to use the house as your principal residence.

* Payback:  Unlike some past tax credits, this one must be repaid over an extended period.  Starting in the second tax year after purchase and continuing for up to 15 years, taxpayers are expected to make pro-rata repayments to the government on their federal filings.  Over a 15-year payback period for the full $7,500 credit, the cost would be $500 a year.

If you sell the house before the end of the repayment period, and you have no gain on the sale, you won’t be expected to repay the remainder of the credit from the proceeds.  If you have a net gain, the “recapture” cannot exceed the amount of your gain.  In other words, the federal government is taking on all or much of the risk that the value of your new house won’t increase over time.

At its core, the new tax credit works very much like an interest-free loan.  You pay the principal back in increments over time, but there’s no interest charge to you.

Rob Dietz, an economist for the National Association of Home Builders, says the credit not only will pull first-time buyers into the market but also will have a powerful “multiplier effect” as thousands of sellers of these credit-assisted houses go out and purchase replacement homes for themselves — extending the effect of the credit into the move-up segment.

How do you claim the credit?  If you qualify, you simply request the credit on your tax return for either 2008 or 2009, which will be modified for that purpose.

Even if you purchase in 2009, you can take the credit against your 2008 taxes by filing an amended return.  The home builders group is launching an educational website, at www.federalhousingtaxcredit.com, with additional information for consumers.

Lee Marlin, Keller Williams Realty Atlanta North

Tags: For Buyers, Federal Housing Tax Credit, For Sellers, $7,500 Tax Credit, Federal Housing Tax Credit, first time buyers, interest-free loan


Posted by Lee Marlin on August 5th, 2008 10:18 PMPost a Comment (0)

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