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Home Buyer Tax Credit

Las Vegas and Henderson Real Estate Outlook: Moving Towards Recovery

Wednesday, November 18th, 2009

 

Las Vegas
and Henderson Real Estate Outlook: Moving Towards Recovery

Hello everyone from Las Vegas Real Estate Outlook 702-307-4070. The huge impact of the federal homebuyer tax credit program, which is now set to continue and even expand through next spring, dominates the housing resale numbers this week.

Sales of existing houses during the third quarter jumped by 11.4 percent over second quarter sales, according to the National Association of Realtors.

And the increase in sales came in pretty much every part of the country — in 45 states along with the District of Columbia.

Check out some of these extraordinary increases — all tied in part to homebuyers rushing to complete purchase transactions before the tax credit’s original expiration date of November 30th, plus mortgages at rock bottom five percent rates or less.

In North Dakota, sales were up 42.4 percent, Rhode Island 27 percent, Pennsylvania 26 percent.

In some hard hit local markets, sales gains were almost off the charts. In Orlando, they were up 80 percent for the quarter. In Las Vegas and Henderson sales were 30 percent higher this year over last. So do you think things are stirring out there? You bet they are, and economists have not yet even begun to assess the potential effects on future sales flowing from the brand new $6,500 tax credit for “repeat” buyers.

That means people who’ve owned their house for a consecutive five of the previous eight years, and now want to downsize, move up or just move to a different location.

That credit, which took effect November 6th, will be available for home purchase contracts signed by April 30th of next year and closed by June 30th. If it is a Las Vegas Short Sale Home, you need to buy now or within the next two months.

Of course, not all of the developments underway in the economy right now are favorable to Las Vegas housing and Henderson real estate.

Start with the unemployment rate, which just jumped to 10.2 percent, the highest in decades. Most economists agree that the true jobless rate, factoring in people who have stopped looking for jobs and those working part time, takes the effective unemployment rate nationally closer to 18 percent.

That’s a major negative for home buying prospects.

Moreover, the flip side of record housing sales numbers can’t be ignored either: Prices are still way down from year ago levels in many areas — and they’re down 11 percent during the third quarter compared with 2008.

So that’s all pretty sobering.

Nonetheless, the fact is that the only way we are going to move towards full recovery is by selling many houses, at very attractive prices and low interest rates.

That is happening right now in a big way — and it looks like it should continue well into the spring.

Steve & Gerri Wadkins® Realtors-Advanced CDPE 702-307-4070

To Buy A Home 702-307-4070 ext 106 www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com

To Short Sale a House 702-307-4070 ext 107 www.VegasShortSaleHomes.com  

Henderson Home Buyer Tax Credit Extended, Expanded Las Vegas

Tuesday, November 17th, 2009

Henderson Home Buyer Tax Credit Extended, Expanded Las Vegas

The extension of the first-time Las Vegas homebuyer tax credit will help continue to clear out inventory, but expanding the credit to include more buyers may not be as helpful in high-cost housing areas. 702-307-4070

President Barack Obama recently signed legislation that extends the deadline on the first-time homebuyer tax credit and adds a smaller tax credit for move-up and other Henderson homebuyers.

The extension and expansion gives homebuyers a tax incentive to buy a home until at least April 30, 2010 — April 30, 2011 for qualifying military personnel. The previous deadline was just weeks away, November 30, 2009.

“The extension of the first-time home buyer tax credit will be crucial to clearing out unsold inventory and especially the lagging bank owned inventory that has not even hit the market yet,” said Steve Wadkins of ReMax Associates Henderson Nevada.

That’s true of many housing markets.

The existing tax credit for first-time homebuyers remains at a maximum $8,000.

A new tax credit of up to $6,500 is available to qualifying existing homeowners who buy a new primary residence (or have one built) by April 30, 2010, if they owned their existing home for five consecutive years over the last eight years. Second homes don’t qualify for the credit. www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com  

Las Vegas Home buyers have to repay the credit if they live in their primary residence less than 36 months and are not members of the military.

The new rule also raises the qualifying income limits to $125,000 for single taxpayers and $225,000 for joint taxpayers, from the current $75,000 and $150,000. www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com

The maximum allowed home purchase price is $800,000, which won’t be as useful to move-up buyers in high-cost areas.

Both first-time Henderson home buyers and others must contract to buy a home by April 30, but close escrow by June 30, 2010. To search for Las Vegas Home or Henderson Hom or Summerlin Home www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com  

Buyers can claim the credit on their 2009 taxes, even if the purchase is made in 2010 by filing an amended return.

Steve Wadkins said “This will also assist in selling the short sale inventory that those buyers were afraid to consider because of the time frame involved in closing them when they were on this deadline to close by the end of the month (November).”

Buyers who don’t owe taxes can have the credit refunded to them as a rebate.

More information is available from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS}, including a question and answer page.

It’s all good news for the housing market.

The National Association of Realtors says as many as 400,000 resale transactions (1.2 million for both new and resale homes) were completed specifically because of the first-time home buyer tax credit, since it began, and that put a dent in the housing inventory.

The first-time home buyer tax credit’s availability has coincided with mortgage rates often hanging below 5 percent, according to Gerri Wadkins of Wadkins Home Team ReMax Associates.

Tax credit history

The new legislation includes provisions to stifle fraud after the Internal Revenue Service identified 167 suspected criminal schemes and opened nearly 107,000 examinations of potential civil violations of the first-time homebuyer tax credit.

Cheating the IRS is a federal felony that comes with a fine of up to $250,000 and three years in a federal pen, or both.

To combat fraud, a HUD-1 Settlement Statement will have to be attached to the tax return to secure the credit.

To search or Buy a Home www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com

To Short Sale Your Home: www.VegasShortSaleHomes.com

Steve & Gerri Wadkins® Realtors Advanced CDPE

702-307-4070

 

 

 

Henderson Home Buyer Tax Credit Extended, Expanded Las Vegas

Thursday, November 12th, 2009

 

Home Buyer Tax Credit Extended, Expanded

The extension of the first-time Las Vegas home buyer tax credit will help continue to clear out inventory, but expanding the credit to include more buyers may not be as helpful in high-cost housing areas.

President Barack Obama recently signed legislation that extends the deadline on the first-time home buyer tax credit and adds a smaller tax credit for move-up and other Henderson home buyers.

The extension and expansion gives home buyers a tax incentive to buy a home until at least April 30, 2010 — April 30, 2011 for qualifying military personnel. The previous deadline was just weeks away, November 30, 2009.

“The extension of the first-time home buyer tax credit will be crucial to clearing out unsold inventory and especially the lagging bank owned inventory that has not even hit the market yet,” said Kim DiBenedetto, president of the Monterey County Association of Realtors.

That’s true of many housing markets.

“California Association of Realtor studies tell us that for more than 75 percent of home buyers this year, the tax credit was very important and more than 40 percent of the home buyers would not have been able to buy without the credit,” added DiBenedetto.

The existing tax credit for first-time homebuyers remains at a maximum $8,000.

A new tax credit of up to $6,500 is available to qualifying existing homeowners who buy a new primary residence (or have one built) by April 30, 2010, if they owned their existing home for five consecutive years over the last eight years. Second homes don’t qualify for the credit.

Las Vegas Home buyers have to repay the credit if they live in their primary residence less than 36 months and are not members of the military.

The new rule also raises the qualifying income limits to $125,000 for single taxpayers and $225,000 for joint taxpayers, from the current $75,000 and $150,000.

The maximum allowed home purchase price is $800,000, which won’t be as useful to move-up buyers in high-cost areas.

“Part of the bill also expanded the credit to move up buyers, however, it may not be as helpful to the homeowners in our areas because there is a cap on the purchase price of $800,000, but we are grateful to anything that will help even a few,” said DiBenedetto, a real estate agent with Coldwell Banker Del Monte Realty in Carmel.

That’s also true of high-cost markets nationwide.

Both first-time Henderson home buyers and others must contract to buy a home by April 30, but close escrow by June 30, 2010.

Buyers can claim the credit on their 2009 taxes, even if the purchase is made in 2010 by filing an amended return.

DiBenedetto said “This will also assist in selling the short sale inventory that those buyers were afraid to consider because of the time frame involved in closing them when they were on this deadline to close by the end of the month (November).”

Buyers who don’t owe taxes can have the credit refunded to them as a rebate.

More information is available from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS}, including a question and answer page.

It’s all good news for the housing market.

The National Association of Realtors says as many as 400,000 resale transactions (1.2 million for both new and resale homes) were completed specifically because of the first-time home buyer tax credit, since it began, and that put a dent in the housing inventory.

Home sales also add property and sales tax revenues to the coffers of local governments as reduced inventory helps boost prices and home values.

The first-time home buyer tax credit’s availability has coincided with mortgage rates often hanging below 5 percent, according to Jeff Howard, CEO of Erate.com.

As the November 30 tax credit deadline neared, reports from the Commerce Department, revealed new home sales slipped 3.6 percent in September and were down 7.8 percent from September 2008.

Tax credit history

As part of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008, Congress first created a $7,500 first-time home buyer tax credit for those who purchased a home between April 8, 2008, and July 1, 2009.

Later, under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Congress extended the credit and raised it to an $8,000 tax credit for those who purchased homes by the current November 30, 2009 expiration date.

By October 9, 2009, more than 1.2 million tax returns had claimed about $8.5 billion in the refundable tax credit, for both new and resale homes – according to the Treasury Inspector General for Tax Administration (TIGTA).

A TIGTA audit also revealed last month that nearly 90,000 taxpayers — including nearly 600 children — may have fraudulently enjoyed the credit, hoodwinking the government out of more than $600 million.

The new legislation includes provisions to stifle fraud after the Internal Revenue Service identified 167 suspected criminal schemes and opened nearly 107,000 examinations of potential civil violations of the first-time homebuyer tax credit.

Cheating the IRS is a federal felony that comes with a fine of up to $250,000 and three years in a federal pen, or both.

To combat fraud, a HUD-1 Settlement Statement will have to be attached to the tax return to secure the credit.

To search or Buy a Home www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com

To Short Sale Your Home: www.VegasShortSaleHomes.com

Steve & Gerri Wadkins® Realtors Advanced CDPE

702-307-4070

Approved Home Buyer Tax Credit Approved Henderson Las Vegas Nevada

Monday, November 9th, 2009

Approved Home Buyer Tax Credit Approved Henderson Las Vegas Nevada

 

 

Home Buyer Tax Credit EXTENDED for EVERYONE! This comes as great news for our economy. Las Vegas & Henderson Nevada has been one of the hardest hit Cities. If you are a Henderson Home Buyer or a Las Vegas Home Buyer, take note….BUY now before pricing of Henderson Homes or Las Vegas Home pricing goes up.

 

To Buy a Henderson Home or a Las Vegas Home click on www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com or call Gerri Wadkins at 702-307-4070 ext 106

 

To Short Sale Henderson Home or Short Sale Las Vegas Home click on

http://www.wadkinshometeam.com/vegasShortSale.html

 

 

Steve & Gerri Wadkins® Realtors-Advanced CDPE

702-307-4070

www.WadkinsHomeTeam.com

 

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  • Avg. Days on Market: 69

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