Welcome to the CENTURY 21 JRS Realty company blog. This blog is dedicated to our customers, clients, and agents. We will post interesting articles, fun facts, and motivational items that deal with Real Estate related issues of the 21st century.We proudly operate two offices in Union County and serve all of Union, Middlesex, Hudson, Bergen, and Essex Counties here in New Jersey. For more information visit www.C21JRS.com
Monday, April 30, 2007
For Buyers
Saturday, April 28, 2007
For Sale By Owners
Monday, April 23, 2007
For Buyers
6 Creative Ways to Afford a Home
Thursday, April 19, 2007
CENTURY 21 JRS Realty Seminar
Monday, April 16, 2007
Understanding Capital Gains in Real Estate
Cost of the purchase—including transfer fees, attorney fees, inspections, but not points you paid on your mortgage.
Cost of sale—including inspections, attorney’s fee, real estate commission, and money you spent to fix up your home just prior to sale.
Cost of improvements—including room additions, deck, etc. Note here that improvements do not include repairing or replacing something already there, such as putting on a new roof or buying a new furnace.
Wednesday, April 11, 2007
For Home Owners
A pending foreclosure is stressful and confusing। If you can help owners through this difficult time, you could earn their gratitude and loyalty for years to come। Encourage owners to contact their lender to see whether a loan workout option is available। If the problem is temporary, options include Forbearance. A lender may allow a borrower to reduce or suspend payments for a short period of time, after which another option must be agreed on to bring the loan current within a specified time period. A forbearance option is often combined with a reinstatement, especially if the borrowers know they’ll have enough money to bring the account current. The money might come from a hiring bonus, an investment, an insurance settlement, or a tax refund.
Reinstatement. Lenders may be willing to discuss accepting the total amount owed to them in a lump sum by a specific day.
Repayment plan A borrower might be able to forge an agreement with the lender to resume making regular monthly payments, in addition to a portion of the past due payments each month, until the loan is current.
If the problem is long-term, options include Mortgage modification. If the borrower can make at least some of the payment on the loan but doesn’t have enough money to bring the account current, the lender might be willing to permanently change one or more terms of the original loan to make the payments more affordable. Examples include:
- Adding the missed payments to the existing loan balance
- Changing the interest rate, including making an adjustable rate loan into a fixed-rate loan
- Extending the number of years to repay the loan.
Claim advance. If your mortgage is insured, you may qualify for an interest-free loan from your mortgage guarantor to bring your account current. The repayment of the loan may not start for several years.
If keeping the home isn’t an option, alternatives include Sale. The lender will usually agree to a specific amount of time to find a purchaser and pay off the total amount owed. The borrower will be expected to obtain the services of a real estate professional to market the property aggressively.
Pre-foreclosure sale or short payoff. If the property’s sales value isn’t enough to pay the loan in full, the lender might accept less than the full amount owed to cut its losses. This option can also include a period of time to allow the borrower’s real estate professional to find a qualified buyer. A pre-foreclosure sale could provide additional funds to pay other lien holders and a few moving costs.
Assumption. The lender might agree to permit a qualified buyer to assume the mortgage payments, even if the original loan documents state that it’s nonassumable.
Deed in lieu. The lender might agree to allow the borrower to voluntarily “give back” the property and forgive the debt. Although this option sounds like the easiest way out, the borrower must generally attempt to sell the home for its fair market value for at least 90 days before the lender will consider this option. Also, this option may not be available if the borrower has other liens, such as judgments by other creditors, a second mortgage, or IRS or state tax liens.
Source: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (www.hud.gov)
Saturday, April 7, 2007
New Power Site
CENTURY 21 JRS Realty now offers a web site dedicated specifically to each home by itself. No more searching to find your home through thousands of pages on some search engine. Now with CENTURY 21 JRS Realty every home will have one web site dedicated only to that home. Our clients will enjoy their own web address and web site with slides shows, school information, room measurements, census reports, maps, and much more.
For Sellers
Cost of the purchase—including transfer fees, attorney fees, inspections, but not points you paid on your mortgage.
Cost of sale—including inspections, attorney’s fee, real estate commission, and money you spent to fix up your home just prior to sale.
Cost of improvements—including room additions, deck, etc. Note here that improvements do not include repairing or replacing something already there, such as putting on a new roof or buying a new furnace.
Wednesday, April 4, 2007
For Sellers
1. Give your forwarding address to the post office, usually 2-4 weeks ahead of the move.
2. Notify our charge cards, magazine subscriptions, and bank of the change of address.
3. Develop a list of friends, relatives, and business colleagues who need to be notified of the move.
4. Arrange to have utilities disconnected at your old home and connected at your new one.
5. Cancel the newspaper.
6. Check insurance coverage for moved items. Usually movers only cover what they pack.
7. Clean out appliances and prepare them for moving, if applicable.
8. Note the weight of the goods you’ll have moved, since long-distance moves are usually billed according to weight. Watch for movers that use excessive padding to add weight.
9. Check with your condo or co-op about restrictions on using the elevator or particular exits.
10. Have a “first open” box with the things you’ll need most—toilet paper, soap, trash bags, scissors, hammer, screwdriver, pencils and paper, cups and plates, water, snacks, and toothpaste.
Plus, if you’re moving out of town:
1. Get copies of medical and dental records and prescriptions for your family and your pets.
2. Get copies of children’s school records for transfer.
3. Ask friends for introductions to anyone they know in your new neighborhood.
4. Consider special car needs for pets when traveling.
5. Let a friend or relative know your route.
6. Carry traveler’s checks or an ATM card for ready cash until you can open a bank account.
7. Empty your safety deposit box.
8. Put plants in boxes with holes for air circulation if you’re moving in cold weather.
For Sellers
1. Give your forwarding address to the post office, usually 2-4 weeks ahead of the move.
2. Notify our charge cards, magazine subscriptions, and bank of the change of address.
3. Develop a list of friends, relatives, and business colleagues who need to be notified of the move.
4. Arrange to have utilities disconnected at your old home and connected at your new one.
5. Cancel the newspaper.
6. Check insurance coverage for moved items. Usually movers only cover what they pack.
7. Clean out appliances and prepare them for moving, if applicable.
8. Note the weight of the goods you’ll have moved, since long-distance moves are usually billed according to weight. Watch for movers that use excessive padding to add weight.
9. Check with your condo or co-op about restrictions on using the elevator or particular exits.
10. Have a “first open” box with the things you’ll need most—toilet paper, soap, trash bags, scissors, hammer, screwdriver, pencils and paper, cups and plates, water, snacks, and toothpaste.
Plus, if you’re moving out of town:
1. Get copies of medical and dental records and prescriptions for your family and your pets.
2. Get copies of children’s school records for transfer.
3. Ask friends for introductions to anyone they know in your new neighborhood.
4. Consider special car needs for pets when traveling.
5. Let a friend or relative know your route.
6. Carry traveler’s checks or an ATM card for ready cash until you can open a bank account.
7. Empty your safety deposit box.
8. Put plants in boxes with holes for air circulation if you’re moving in cold weather.
Sunday, April 1, 2007
Seminar Success
Congratulations to CENTURY 21 JRS Realty
Congratulations to Team Excel