Buy, Don't Rent,
When You Can Afford the Down Payment
After looking at all the
costs involved in buying house, you may have begun to have second
thoughts: Perhaps, it is better to rent a home.
Real estate in most areas
today is not a top investment compared with investment securities.
"You're not going to get a 30 percent return on your house,"
said Steve O'Connor, senior director of residential finance at the
Mortgage Bankers Association of America. In the past decade, people have
been advised to think of a home "as shelter not investment"
O'Connor said. "Wealth accumulation is secondary."
Still, as shelter, most
experts say if you can afford the down payment, it makes sense to buy your
home rather than rent it. That's because you can deduct mortgage interest
on income tax and build equity in your property. This is especially true
when mortgage interest rates are low. Mortgage interest rates are
deductible up to a $100,000 annual limit.
Example
A homeowner has a gross annual income of $40,000. The monthly mortgage
payment is $1,000 on a 30-year mortgage. In the first few years, 80
percent of that payment goes to interest and is therefore tax deductible.
In the 15 percent tax bracket, the homeowner saved about $375 more in
taxes with the home provision versus with only a standard deduction.
Lease-Purchase
Agreements
Some people take a middle
road. They ease into homeownership by renting a house or condominium with
an option to buy.
Lease-purchase gives a
buyer time to save for a down payment or to clean up a credit history.
It can work in a buyer's
favor in areas where real estate values are rising quickly at a rate of
10 percent a year. A buyer benefits from this appreciation because the
purchase price of the home is locked in on the day the buyer signed the
rent-to-own contract with the seller.
In most agreements, the
seller allows a portion of the rent to be applied towards the purchase
price, which some lenders consider to be part of the down payment. The
amount of rent credited could be 10 percent to 100 percent, based on
your contract.
Most rent-to-own options
require some down payment to secure the agreement, which is not refundable
in case the renter decides not to buy.
Homeowners who would agree
to a lease-purchase option include people who have had property on the
market longer than they wish or owners who had to move and want the house
to be lived in. The owner benefits with rental income to help pay the
carrying costs of the home, and the strong possibility of selling the
house when the contract expires.
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