Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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In your example, roll the 20K bond into the total price being paid now use the 20% down which would now be 50K instead of 46K and the bond interest is dropped to the 4.5% mortgage rate vs the current 6% plus rate. This only makes sense if you have the extra cash for the down payment and the mortgage interest is at least 1 to 2 % below the bond interest. If they are close to the same interest then there is little value in paying off the bond and rolling into your mortgage.
The better deal is to find a resale that already has the bond paid and your getting it for around 50 cents on the dollar.
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
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#17
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#18
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#19
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We ended up paying off our bond. If you have a $20K bond at 5.5% interest, you'll be paying a little over $20K in interest over the period of 30 years essentially doubling the amount of bond. Someone mentioned they'd break even after 11 years. Its suprising how fast the time goes by. We've been here 7 years and it seems like yesterday. It just makes me glad we're not paying all that extra interest. And a paid off bond is a selling point if you do decide to sell. With the glut of houses on the market, it may be the factor that induces a person to buy your home rather than a similiar house that still has the bond.
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#20
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Another 65er. The example used was a 230K (I prefer the US thousand to the Latin word mille) a 20K bond for a total of 250K. 20% down is 50K with a 200K mortgage. And yes Citizens will allow you to do that. So the example works and your not left with a 20K bond.
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
#21
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And you know this how?
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#22
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The more I think about this, the less likely I think that it is possible to fold the the bond amount into your mortgage. If that were the case, why wouldn't everyone with a mortgage have rolled it into their mortgage where the mortgage interest would be tax-deductible?
In the example we discussed, it was suggested that the $20,000 bond would be rolled into the $230,000 purchase price so that the mortgage provider would expect a $50,000 downpayment (20%). My home cost roughly $230,000 and we put down $46,000 and have a $184,000 mortgage. Neither my wife nor I asked if we could roll the bond into the mortgage and no one from TV(sales rep/loan officer, etc.) mentioned it either. I would have been happy to add $4,000 to the downpayment and had a $200,000 mortgage where all the interest would be deductible. If those with mortgages out there have rolled their bond into their mortgage amount, first I say "congratulations" and second, I ask, "how did you do that?" |
#23
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I just asked when I did the application and somehow they did it. I have no idea why more don't do it. I did put more then 20% down, but not enough to cover 100% of the bond and still have 20% on the remainder. I think I did 25% at the time and also did a 15 year mortgage. So the bank was at the 100% bond paid with 20% down much sooner, probably within a couple years. However no matter how I was doing it I would ask the question. I have found that almost all mortgage terms are negotiable. Interest rate, terms, years, escrow, down payment, closing costs, they are all open to discussion and change. They are in the business of lending money and if you have solid credit, solid qualifications with assets to keep them whole, they will make adjustments to gain your business.
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
#24
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Kevin & Linda Village of St. James, Cape Cod Ma, Boston Ma, Nashua NH, Albany NY |
#25
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IMHO: One would assume that paying the bond would enhance the value of the property by the amount of the paid bond. I don't think buyers view it that way. I didn't when I was searching for my TV home. If you are going to keep your home indefinitely (???) then it doesn't matter, but I believe that paying the bond is discounted in the sale more than the amount paid - in general. Also, one can make more than 6% in the market so there is a little "float" on the positive side if one is so inclined.
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Tom W |
#26
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Life is to short to drink cheap wine. |
#27
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#28
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Does anyone know what the bonds are on the new area, for designers, and villas?? Thanks. Lee |
#29
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Mine was 23.5K in Buttonwood, designer section #164 - Jan 2011
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#30
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Thanks Russ, because my "realtor" keeps telling me $20,000, and I suspected that the newer areas have started moving upwards of that.
Lee |
Closed Thread |
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