Potential
buyers sometimes forget to factor in the down payment, homeowners
insurance and the possibility of depreciation, as well as the costs
associated with closing the transaction, moving, purchasing major
appliances, and home, landscape and pool maintenance, not to mention
furnishings and design accessories once you move in.
The days of calling up the
landlord to fix your problems come to an abrupt halt when you're a
homeowner. You'll be responsible for everything from malfunctioning
appliances to leaky faucets to broken heating and air conditioning units
and everything in between. And if you buy an older home, you'll
probably eventually encounter costly repairs, such as replacing the roof
or windows.
To determine whether you can afford to buy a home, you should do the following:
1.
Determine the property value of homes that interest you. The property
value (what the home is worth) is determined by comparing the prices of
homes recently sold of similar size in the same neighborhood. Your real
estate agent will be able to provide this information to you.
2.
Review different mortgage loan types and compare their required down
payment amounts to the money you have available. Down payments, based on
a percentage of the value of the property and determined by the type of
mortgage you select, typically range from three to 20 percent of the
property value. Don't forget to factor in private mortgage insurance, a
policy that allows mortgage lenders to recover part of their financial
losses if a borrower fails to full re-pay a loan. Mortgage insurance
makes it possible to buy a home with as little as 3 percent down.
Usually, the lower the down payment, the higher the PMI, which typically
will cost somewhere between $40 and $125 a month.
3.
Get an estimate of your closing costs, including points (the dollar
amount paid to a lender for obtaining a lower interest rate on a
loan—one point is one percent of the loan amount), taxes, recording,
inspections, prepaid loan interest, title insurance (a policy that
insures a home buyer against errors in the title search; cost of the
policy is usually a function of the value of the property, and is often
borne by the purchaser and/or seller) and financing costs from your
mortgage lender or a real estate professional. These will generally add
up to between 2 and 7 percent of the property value. You'll receive an
estimate of these costs from your lender after you apply for a mortgage.
4.
Add the down payment requirements and the closing costs together to
determine the amount of money you'll need right off the bat. But you're
not done yet.
5.
Think about the actual move. Will you hire a moving company or rent a
truck? Either way will cost you. The more stuff you have, the more it
will cost.
6.
Property taxes. Many lenders will require an impound account in which
monthly payments for property tax (and often insurance) are paid
together with the monthly mortgage payment. You can figure your average
annual tax rate will be about 1.5 percent of the purchase price of your
home.
7.
Next, budget for maintenance and repairs. HouseMaster, a home inspection
company with 300 franchises nationwide, said that based on a study that
evaluated 2,000 inspection reports, the typical costs of major repairs
are:
- Roofing: $1,500 to $5,000
- Electrical systems: $20 to $1,500
- Plumbing systems: $300 to $5,000
- Central cooling: $800 to $2,500
- Central heating: $1,500 to $3,000
- Insulation: $800 to $1,500
- Structural systems: $3,000 to $1,500
- Water seepage: $600 to $5,000Once you crunch the numbers and find you come up a bit short, investigate ways to reduce or creatively fund your down payment—it can come from a variety of sources. Check with your realtor or lender to find out what's available.You'll also need to factor in the cost of homeowners insurance. In addition to the type of construction, age of the home, your credit history and past insurance history, new issues like litigating costly toxic mold cases are raising homeowners insurance rates.In fact, the National Association of Insurance Commissioners reports that homeowners will spent an average of $822 on homeowners insurance in 2007, the last year data was available.In your final analysis of whether you can afford to buy a home, you'll want to weigh the costs with the financial benefits—a consistent mortgage payment (unlike rent, which can increase), the tax benefits (you can deduct, in most cases, mortgage interest, closing costs, and property taxes), and the all-important appreciation factor—the rate of increase in a home's value.And of course, you'll want to weigh perhaps the biggest benefit of all—having a place to call your own.Contact Us
AURUM ESTATES
#1-2, Opp. Uniworld Gardens,
Adjoining indian oil petrol pump,
Sohna Road Gurgaon
(Haryana) 122018
Tel: +91 124 3295123
Mob: +91 9999997969
Fax: +91 124 2217833
Email: info@aurumestates.com
website http://aurumestates.com
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