Showing posts with label subdivisions. Show all posts
Showing posts with label subdivisions. Show all posts

Friday, April 22, 2016

Reasons to Stay in Your New Home 5 Years

Whether you are buying your first home or your 4th home, the time you spend in your home before downsizing or upgrading makes a financial difference in your investment.  Most people start out in the real estate industry when they buy their first home.  Unless they come from a very wealthy family or have won the lottery, the home is priced modestly or on the low end and is built that way as well – smaller square footage, less bedrooms and baths, in an up and coming neighborhood.  First time
home buyers can be single professionals who are successful, in a steady job, with an income that is rising each year, but most people who buy a home for the first time are couples looking to start a family. These couples eventually would like to move out and move up to provide more space for their growing family.  They are “getting their foot in the door” with their first home to establish credit and create equity opportunity to eventually sell and move up to something bigger.

The biggest question then, to ask is this – how long do you stay in your home in order to make sure you aren’t losing money and to build enough equity to become a “move-up buyer?”  The answer to this depends, but it is typically about 5 years.  Below are the reasons for this number:

1.  Closing Costs: Whether you are buying a new or previously owned home (resale) or refinancing your home, you are going to “run into” closing costs.  Closing costs is the profit for loan originators, title companies, and the state in which you live (recording fees) which are charged during the loan process.  Every company needs to make money, and closing costs are how they make theirs.  Closing costs are, most of the time, added to the principle of your home, increasing your loan amount and shrinking your home’s equity.  Each time you make a real estate transaction, you are charged these costs.  Staying in your home approximately 5 years “pays off” these closing costs enough for there to be enough equity in your home (most of the time) to have money for a down payment when you move to your next “move-up” home.

2.  Interest: Even with the historically low interest rates in the market today, the mantra in real estate still stands, “The Bank Gets Paid First.”  When you are paying your monthly loan payments, you will notice on your mortgage statement that the amount of principle being paid on your home is significantly less than the amount of interest being paid.  You can also see this on your amortization schedule during your closing.  As your loan “ages,” the amount of interest balances the amount of principle and eventually ends up being less than the amount of principle during the last years of your loan.  If you only stay in your newly purchased home for a short period of time – say 3 years – the amount of principle you “pay off” will not be enough to merit a sale and move unless you are making extra principle payments each month.  The recommended period of time to stay in your home, reduce the amount of interest charged, and pay off as much principle as you can in order to gain equity during a sale is 5 years.

3.  New Vs. Used: The type of home you buy can also make a difference in how much time you spend in it before you upgrade to something bigger and better.  If you are buying a new home, it really doesn’t make that big of a financial difference in the time you spend in the home because typically, in a new house, you don’t end up with much maintenance on the home until about 4 – 5 years in.  On a previously-owned home, resale home purchase, however, there may be a significant amount of upgrade and upkeep that you will expend when you first move into the home.  Depending on the age of the home and the last time it was renovated, big system items, such as hot water heaters, condensers, garbage disposals, ductwork, roofing, etc. could end up needing to be repaired or replaced.  If you look at the amount of money you spent on renovating the home, the amount of interest you pay on your monthly mortgage payment, and the amount of closing costs you paid during the initial purchase; you may see that it would behoove you to stay in the house for about 5 years (or more) to get the equity out of the home to pay off your financial investment.

4.  Appreciation: The “golden days” of “instant appreciation” are fewer and farther in between when it comes to purchasing your first home in an “up and coming” area.  During the real estate boom of the early 2000’s, subdivisions were seeing appreciation in their homes from the beginning and build out of Phase I to the commencement of building Phase II.  You have probably seen the prices on the signs change from Phase I to Phase II where the exact same floorplan started selling $10,000 – $20,000 higher in Phase II than it did in Phase I.  Those days of instant appreciation are very rare, so when you purchase your home in an area you expect to experience residential and commercial growth, you, as a homeowner, may have to wait a little bit longer for that long-anticipated
appreciation to come about.  Along with the other factors mentioned above, this is yet another reason to wait approximately 5 years before selling and moving to a bigger and better home.

Ron Lee Homes, a home builder in St. Tammany Parish, specializes in 2nd home (and above) move-up homes.  Whether you are looking to build a semi-custom or fully custom new home in Mandeville, Covington, Madisonville, or Abita Springs, Ron Lee Homes will work with you and provide base floorplan designs for your consideration.  Buying or building a new home can seem a little challenging, but working with the team at Ron Lee Homes will make your home buying / building experience a pleasant and satisfactory process.  To get started with the plans for the home of your dreams today, Contact Ron Lee Homes at 985-626-7619 or E-mail Info@RonLeeHomes.com.


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Friday, September 4, 2015

Strong Custom Home Building Numbers in Louisiana

1-54 Maison du Lac Exterior 1Custom home building is going strong in Louisiana and at Ron Lee Homes in West St. Tammany Parish. The 2014 Census Bureau’s Survey of Construction (SOC) reports that 34 percent of the homes built in the South Central Region were custom built.  This means the home was built for you the owner, by a custom home builder, who will either build on your lot or build on a lot owned or purchased by the builder in the area of your choice in St. Tammany Parish. The other 66 percent were spec homes (speculatively-built homes) meaning they were houses built for sale or houses finished on a builders’ lot, ready for a home buyer to purchase. The house was sold to the potential buyer at one total sales price instead of selling the house and selling the land separately.

The SOC defines new home starts into several different categories which include houses built for sale, houses built by contractors, homes built by owners and for rent houses.  Not only does the SOC report if the houses are built for sale, by contractors, owners or for rent, they also report if the new home starts are being built in a community development with a homeowner’s association (HOA).  The HOA is created while the development is being built, and then ownership is turned over to a homeowner board which enforces private deed restrictions and maintains common areas.  In 2014 it is reported that 58 percent of single-family homes were built in a community with a homeowner’s association.
3-lot-199-bedic-creek-exterior-front-3Why the uptick in the custom home market?  Many speculate that the limited builders’ means to borrow money via Acquisition Development and Construction (AD&C) loans have put a damper on their ability to purchase land, build a home on the land and sell the house to a potential buyer. Borrower restrictions are not new, so custom home building is the logical route to take for any builder that has vast experience and “comfort” in being able to build custom.  It was estimated that in 2014 one in four new home starts were custom homes. The custom home market is still on the rise and has reached levels above 2012-2013 but is still below the 2008-2011 levels.

At Ron Lee Homes, we build custom homes in many different subdivisions in the area including Terra Bella Village, Bedico Creek Preserve, Maison du Lac, and many more.  These communities also have established homeowners associations as well, and have lots available to buy and build a new custom home.  If you are interested in designing and having the home of your dreams built in St. Tammany Parish, Contact Ron Lee Homes at 985-626-7619 or e-mail Info@RonLeeHomes.com.