- Feb 6, 2010
- 6,243
- 1,967
Hope so [emoji]128532[/emoji] Saving up for a home at the moment.
You looking to stay in the town bra?
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Hope so [emoji]128532[/emoji] Saving up for a home at the moment.
You looking to stay in the town bra?
Nah too expensive out here, rather get a big house and commute.
Tracy prolly cheaper for him. Toward Vallejo you gonna have to go further to Fairfield for a little cheaper. Vallejo ok tho. Mid 6 for somthin niiiice...Nah too expensive out here, rather get a big house and commute.
So you going to Tracy or towards vallejo? I feel it
I would take that type of information from Zillow with a grain of salt TBH. Consult with a local mortgage broker in your area for accurate information. I know here, the assessed value is based on the original purchase price and can't increase more than 1.5% per year while you own the property. If you want the property value reassessed, you are able to petition it with the local assessor if you think it's lower.
So my husband and I are looking to buy a house in eastern NJ or western PA. We want a property with some land or at least just a big back yard. I just don't want to be on top of my neighbors
Anyways, I've been looking at some properties that are $150k-$200k and need a little bit of work or some upgrading, but on Zillow it will tell you the tax assessment and how much the yearly property tax is. Let's say that I buy a home for $150k but they have it assessed at $40k and I'm paying like $3200 a year in taxes. How often do they assess the property? I don't want to buy a house expecting to pay around $3200/yearly in taxes and then have them come and assess it at some crazy amount and then be F'd when it's time to pay taxes... I don't know if this is a stupid question, I don't even know if I know what I'm talking about but it's a little nerve-wracking trying to figure this out - haha!
Were there major issues? Are you paying for an inspector for each step of the build?Just had my inspector complete his pre drywall inspection of my house. I'm really glad I paid to get that done. Hopefully the builder will address the issues.
Were there major issues? Are you paying for an inspector for each step of the build?
So my husband and I are looking to buy a house in eastern NJ or western PA. We want a property with some land or at least just a big back yard. I just don't want to be on top of my neighbors
Anyways, I've been looking at some properties that are $150k-$200k and need a little bit of work or some upgrading, but on Zillow it will tell you the tax assessment and how much the yearly property tax is. Let's say that I buy a home for $150k but they have it assessed at $40k and I'm paying like $3200 a year in taxes. How often do they assess the property? I don't want to buy a house expecting to pay around $3200/yearly in taxes and then have them come and assess it at some crazy amount and then be F'd when it's time to pay taxes... I don't know if this is a stupid question, I don't even know if I know what I'm talking about but it's a little nerve-wracking trying to figure this out - haha!
Smart, wish I would have hired somebody.Nothing too major. I am paying for an inspector for pre drywall and closing. I wanted to do an inspection for pre drywall to catch significant structural issues while they're still relatively quick and inexpensive to fix.
If it's anything like California, or specifically Santa Clara County, you get reassessed on the purchase price of the house. Most places in San Jose, are around 1.25% for property tax rate. Those assessed rates are probably grandfathered in for the current homeowner, so once you buy, you will be paying property taxes on the purchase price of the house.
Housing market will decline but I don't see it crashing like it did last decade. Lenders are much smarter now.
Still can't believe they had no doc loans back then.That's why you have pre qualifications. This isn't the mid 2000s where you can tell a lender you make x amount of dollars and they don't need to verify income. Housing market will decline but I don't see it crashing like it did last decade. Lenders are much smarter now.
Student loans is the next crash, hopefully not as devastating.