May 2, 2024

Is It Better to Buy or Rent?

Buying

Purchase costs are the costs you incur when you go to the closing for the home you are purchasing. This includes the down payment and typical closing costs.

Yearly costs are recurring monthly or yearly expenses. These include mortgage payments, condo fees (or other community living fees), renovation costs, maintenance costs, property taxes and homeowner’s insurance. Property taxes, the interest part of the mortgage payment, and in some cases, a portion of the common charges, are tax deductible. The resulting tax savings is accounted for in each item’s totals. The mortgage payment amount increases each year for the term of the loan because the tax credit shrinks each year as the interest portion of the payments becomes smaller.

Lost opportunity costs are tracked for the initial purchase costs and for the yearly costs. The former will give you an idea of how much you could have made if you had invested the down payment instead of buying your home.

Selling costs are the costs you incur when you go to the closing for the home you are selling. This includes the broker’s commission and other fees, as well as the remaining principal balance that you pay to your mortgage bank. “Proceeds from home sale” is the money that you receive from the person who is buying your home. This amount is equal to the value of the home that year and is shown as a negative number since it is not something that you spend money on, but rather, it is money you receive.

If your cumulative buying total is negative, it actually means you have done very well: you made enough of a profit that it not only covered the cost of your home, but also all of your yearly operating expenses.

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=8d6bda5f6014671a3bd7a4ed55e279d7

Bucks: When Banks Impose Homeowner’s Insurance

Paul Sullivan writes this week in his Wealth Matters column about something called “force-placed insurance.” It is the insurance that a mortgage company buys when it believes the owners of a house no longer have insurance on the property.

But as Mr. Sullivan found out, mortgage companies are often imposing the insurance on homeowners already having trouble making their mortgage payments. Because the insurance is more expensive than homeowners’ insurance available on the open market, the additional costs have been sending some homeowners into foreclosure.

In other cases, particularly in areas prone to natural disasters, Mr. Sullivan reports, homeowners have been getting notification that they lack flood or hazard insurance even if they already have the coverage or don’t need it.

His main advice for anyone who has received these notices is to act quickly to prove to the mortgage company that the insurance is not needed.

Have you received one of these letters from your mortgage company? What was your experience? Mr. Sullivan reported that he got a letter in November from his lender and it took him four months to resolve the issue. Were you able to resolve your dispute more quickly? If so, how?

Article source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=e25980d94e0cde9a575f123fdca56991