Archive for the ‘homes’ Category

If you own real estate property make sure you paid property taxes by 4/10/08

Friday, April 4th, 2008

I was having an email exchange with somebody about county taxes which are due in the next few days.

Here is what we talked about

Dear David

The seller pays his taxes according to the county assessed price. If it’s a house that was purchased 45 years ago for $28,000 (ha, ha,) her yearly payments should be around $600. Proposition 13 is protecting homeowners from a big raise in tax payments. Not more than 2% a year.

When you buy that same house for $1.1M (I am giving you an actual example from reality) your taxes will be about $13,200 a year. You would have to pay it in 2 installments one by December 10 and the other by April 10. $6600 each.

When you buy the house the county takes time to adjust the prices and you might benefit (temporarily) from that by paying what your seller paid, but be sure that the county will remember you and ask you to pay for the adjusted price. That would be the assessed price. They should send you a letter with the amount that you need to add on top of the original payment and probably let you pay it in 2 installments.
Have a great day!

Miri

—–Original Message—–
From: David

Thanks Miri for the answer. I should check this HUD-1 document.

What are the supplemental taxes? Aren’t they included in the Property tax?

Thanks,

David.

On 4/3/08, Miri Bialik <mbialik@interorealestate.com> wrote:

Hi David, if you just closed on the house there are 2 options:

1. The escrow company calculated your taxes and charged you through escrow and

you are good until November 2nd (becomes delinquent by December 10th)

2. The escrow company didn’t charge you but gave you credit for the time the

seller owned the house and it’s your responsibility to pay.

The answer will be in the HUD-1 document – the closing statement.

Most probably they have already charged you but it’s your responsibility to

make sure that you paid your taxes. The penalty for not paying on time is brutal.

———- Forwarded message ———-

From: David > Date: Thu, Apr 3, 2008 at 3:16 PM

Hi Miri,

Thanks for the information. If I start to own a house on Feb 29,2008

then when my property tax is due?

Thanks,

David

On 4/3/08, Miri Bialik <miri@miribialik.com> wrote:

Hi,

If you own Real estate property make sure you paid property taxes by 4/10/08.

Property taxes were due Feb 2nd and they become delinquent if the county

does not get them by 4/10/08. The penalty is painful.

Always at your service, Miri

Santa Clara County Monthly Housing Statistics since 1997

Wednesday, March 12th, 2008

xxx1.jpg

The real estate market of 2007 looks like a repeat of 2002. The inventory went over 5000 homes and some took more than 200 days to sell. There was correlation between the number of homes for sale and the closed sales. This pattern repeated itself yearly. Lower inventory in January, with less activity and higher supply of home in the summer with more homes getting sold. 2007 started like a normal year but ended with abundance of homes for sale and less activity. The inventory remained high whereas less homes got sold. The laws of supply and demand dictated lower prices and transition to a buyers’ market.

This condition does not reflect the Real estate market of desirable areas. Palo Alto, Los Altos, Mountain View, Saratoga, Cupertino and South Sunnyvale are behaving differently. Many homes in these areas are still being sold for over asking price.

Can you imagine? In the midst of a market downturn - multiple offers?

Thursday, February 7th, 2008

crazy-market.jpgCan you imagine? In the midst of a market downturn, 15 prospective eligible buyers compete for one home (Carniel). Another home (Richelieu Ct.) was sold for almost $200k more than asking price (with 14 offers) last week. It happened last week in Saratoga. About 6 homes that were priced under $2m were sold for more than 10% over the asking price. Some of them got sold just before the end of the year and some are still in contracts. The rain did not scare buyers away. The same thing is happening in Cupertino, where 12 families competed on one home, and in South Sunnyvale, the Homestead High area, low-end homes in Los Altos (under $2M) and in Palo Alto.Inventory is growing slowly but so is activity.These examples are not valid for every market and definitely not for the entire Silicon Valley. Even in the most attractive market there are homes that are not selling. If they are priced too high, over the market value, they will take a long time to sell and the sellers will end up getting a much lower price when they finally sell. A few examples are a house near Montclaire Elementary School in Los Altos (a highly desirable area) which has been on the market for more than 52 days, and a small house with a huge lot near Nimitz Elementary School in Sunnyvale.Smart buyers are not afraid of looking again at the same homes and offering lower prices. Now is a good chance to get A good deal