Allow me to assist to you with your real estate needs in the areas of Montgomery, Bucks, Chester and Delaware counties. I am a licensed and accredited real estate agent serving the communities of Abington, Ambler, Audubon, Bensalem, Blue Bell, Bridgeport, Center Square, Chalfont, Chester Springs, Collegeville, Conshohocken, Dresher, Doylestown, Downingtown, Erdenheim, Fairview Village, Fort Washington, Flourtown, Harleysville, Hatboro, Hatfield, Hilltown, Horsham, Jenkintown, Lafayette Hills, Lansdale, Lederach, Lower Gwynedd, Lower Providence, Montgomeryville, Norristown, North Wales, Oaks, Oreland, Perkiomenville, Plymouth Meeting, Plymouth Township, Salford, Schwenksville, Skippack, Solebury, Souderton, Spring House, Spring Mount, Upper Dublin, Upper Gwynedd, Valley Forge, Warrington, West Point, Whitpain Township and Worcester Township to name a few!
rheta santangelo, sal paone, michael evans
rheta santangelo, sal paone, michael evans
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Advantages of Buying

rheta santangelo, sal paone, michael evans

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Call me for more information! 215.913.5000

Owning vs Renting

Our goals are simple -- to ensure that you're happy with the home you buy, that you get the best deal you can, and that owning the home helps you to accomplish your financial goals. Most people should eventually buy homes, but not everyone and not at every point in their lives. To decide whether now's the time for you to buy a house, consider the advantages of buying and whether they apply to you.

Owning should be less expensive than renting Here's a guideline that may change the way you view your seemingly cheap monthly rent. In order for you to see how expensive a home you could afford to buy while having the same approximate monthly cost as your current rent, simply do the following calculation:

Take your monthly rent, multiply by 200 = purchase price of home

Example: $ 750 x 200 = $150,000

So, in the preceding example, if you were paying rent of $750 per month, you would pay approximately the same amount per month to own a $150,000 home (factoring in tax savings). Now your monthly rent doesn't sound quite so cheap compared to the cost of buying a home, does it?

Even more important than the cost today of buying versus renting, what about the cost in the future? As a renter, your rent is fully exposed to increases in the cost of living, also known as inflation. A reasonable expectation for annual increases in your rent is 4 percent per year.

Wealth and Equity

Over the many years that you are likely to own it, your home should become an important part of your financial net worth -- that is, the difference between your assets (financial things of value that you own such as bank accounts, retirement accounts, stocks, bonds, mutual funds, and so on) and your liabilities (debts). Why? Because homes generally increase in value over the decades while you're paying down your loan (mortgage debt) used to buy the home.

Even if you're one of those rare people who owns a home but doesn't see much appreciation (increase in the home's value) over the decades of your adult ownership, you will benefit from the monthly forced savings that results from paying down the remaining balance due on your mortgage. Retirees will tell you that one financial joy of retirement is owning a home free and clear of a mortgage.

All that home equity (which is the difference between the market value of a home and the outstanding loan on the home) can help your personal and financial situation in a number of ways. If, like most people, you hope to someday retire, but (also like most people) saving doesn't come easily, your home's equity can help supplement your other sources of retirement income.

Tapping into equity
How can you tap into your home's equity?

Some people choose to trade down -- that is, to move to a less costly home in retirement. Sell your home for $250,000, replace it with one costing $150,000, and you've freed up $100,000. Subject to certain requirements, you can sell your home and realize up to $250,000 in tax-free profits if you're single; $500,000 if married.

Another way to tap your home's equity is through borrowing. Your home's equity may be an easily tapped and low-cost source of cash (the interest you pay is generally tax-deductible).

Some retirees also consider what's called a reverse mortgage. Under this arrangement, the lender sends you a monthly check you can spend however you want. Meanwhile, a debt balance (that will be paid off when the property is finally sold) is built up against the property.

Balancing your investment
In your zest and enthusiasm to buy a place and make it your own, be careful of two things.

Don't make the place too weird. You'll probably want or need to sell your home someday, and the more outrageous you've made it, the fewer the buyers it will appeal to -- and the lower the price it will likely fetch. If you do make improvements, focus on those that add value: for example, skylights, a deck addition for outdoor living area, updated kitchens and bathrooms, and so on.
Beware of running yourself into financial ruin. Changing, improving, remodeling, or whatever you want to call it costs money. We know many homebuyers who have neglected other important financial goals (such as saving for retirement and gaining the tax benefits of doing so) in order to endlessly renovate their homes. Others have racked up significant debts that hang like financial weights over their heads.

 

MONTCO Chamber of CommercePrudential Fox and Roach Realtors

1120 Bethlehem Pike, Spring House, PA •  Direct  215.913.5000 rheta@rheta.com