Tuesday, May 31, 2011

A family grows up with a seaside house in Dewey Beach

Dewey Beach, Del. —
As a child, Cheryl New looked forward all year to the first scent of salt air as her family rolled into Bethany Beach for their annual one-week vacation. As a young couple, Cheryl and husband Andy savored their week at a seaside rental.

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Victory gardens: a model for a more sustainable food future
Since Britain’s Prince Charles came to town this month to talk up the vital need for more sustainable food systems, another event pressed the message home for me: exploding watermelons.
In China, the land of lethal milk, toxic pet food and tainted honey, we now have cucurbits that have spontaneously detonated after farmers sprayed them with a growth hormone. Read the label, guys!

Adrian Higgins has been writing about the intersection of gardening and life for more than 25 years, and joined the Post in 1994. He is the author of several books, including the Washington Post Garden Book and Chanticleer, a Pleasure Garden.
(James Montgomery Flagg/ ) - Liberty sows “the seeds of victory” in a 1918 poster by JamesMontgomery Flagg.Perhaps it’s time to return to the victory garden and keep food safe from globalization.

Friday, May 27, 2011

Signs That You're Ready to Buy

Six tips that tell you it's time
Real estate agent congratulating home buyers
Figuring out whether you're ready to buy a house -- whether you're a renter or are aiming to move up or size down -- can be a daunting task. But there are signs that will indicate whether you're ready to take the buying plunge.
If you are thinking about buying, you're not alone. So are you ready to make the move? You might be if you:
1. Are familiar with the market. If you've been paying attention to how much houses are listed for in the neighborhoods you're eyeing and have a realistic view of how much a house will cost you, you're in good shape. But if you're dreaming about that big corner house with no clue about it's asking price, you may want to spend some more time becoming familiar with the market and how much houses are going for.

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10 Tips For Downsizers With Too Much Stuff

May. 19 2011 - 4:17 pm 
Gallery:  10 Treasures Hiding In Your Attic


The baby boomers, long known as master acquirers, are now learning a new skill: getting rid of excess stuff. Some are empty nesters moving to smaller digs. Others are helping their aging parents sort through their belongings before a move or are disposing of items in the wake of a parent’s death.

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Thursday, May 26, 2011

For Chinatown townhouse, D.C. architect Robert Gurney creates bright, eclectic space

Perhaps it’s unusual to look at an example of modern architecture and think of it as a “confection,” a term more commonly used for Queen Anne Victorians. But that’s what residences designed by architect Robert M. Gurney so often are: elegant assemblages of materials — concrete, steel, glass, exotic wood — that play nicely together.

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30-year fixed mortgage rates chart
By Janna Herron
updated 2 hours 29 minutes ago

Freddie Mac said Thursday the average rate on the 30-year loan fell to 4.60 percent from 4.61 percent. That's the lowest point since mid-December. The average rate on the 15-year fixed mortgage, a popular refinance option, slipped to 3.78 percent from 3.80 percent. That marked the lowest level since late November.
Rates have fallen for six weeks in a row. They tend to track the yield on the 10-year Treasury note, which
crept lower this week on worries over Europe's ongoing debt crisis.

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Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Our wonderful listing at 2709 Colston Drive, Chevy Chase, MD 20815 was in the Washington Post!

SOURCE: Trulia. Map by Gene Thorp/The Washington Post. Published on May 19, 2011, 11:03 p.m.

Where We Live: Rollingwood, bucolic but near the city

Photo by Amy Reinink/ PHOTO BY AMY REININK - Anna, Bradley, Lauren, Karla and Fritz Hirst play catch in the front yard of their house in the Rollingwood section of Chevy Chase
Karin Rich wanted her kids to have a childhood like the one she had.

Growing up in Rollingwood, Rich, now 34, played on the
Candy Cane City playground, rode her bike to shops along Brookville Road, explored the trails and creeks of Rock Creek Park, and generally enjoyed the small-town atmosphere that defined the Chevy Chase neighborhood.

Housing crisis: A sign that the worst is over

May 19, 2011: 2:14 PM ET
mortgage-bankers-delinquency-report.gi.top.jpgAfter several years of pain, the latest statistics from the Mortgage Bankers Association point to a housing market on the mend.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- The mortgage delinquency picture is getting brighter, according to an industry report released Thursday, with falling delinquency rates indicating the housing crisis may be at the beginning of its end.

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Monday, May 23, 2011

Buy vs. rent: These days, buying wins

May 13, 2011: 8:37 AM ET
Buy vs. Rent: In Boston, renting still makes sense.The math is beginning to favor buying. But in some cities, like Boston, renting still wins.

NEW YORK (CNNMoney) -- For the first time in years, buying a home may beat renting.
Two factors are at play, according to researchers who recently crunched the numbers, Ken Johnson of Florida International University and Eli Beracha of East Carolina University for a paper to be published in Real Estate Economics.

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Your Home: How to sell in tough times

May 9, 2011: 2:12 AM ET
Peter and Lauren Meyer of Montclair, N.J., had to make dramatic price cuts to nab a buyer.Peter and Lauren Meyer of Montclair, N.J., had to make dramatic price cuts to nab a buyer. Their starting price in February 2010 was $1.149 million. After 5 price cuts, the home sold in November 2010 for $808,000.

(MONEY Magazine) -- If you're in the market to sell your home, you probably feel you can't catch a break. Nearly five years into the housing bust, when many experts thought the real estate market would at least have stabilized, sales and prices are still dropping in most of the country.

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Wednesday, May 18, 2011

"A great explanation of what can sometimes be a confusing subject from our friends at Federal Title..."

Dear Barbara C.,
I frequently hear a lot of misinformation shared at the settlement table. One of the primary areas of misunderstanding relates to the tax burdens compared among DC, MD and VA.  In an effort to help clear it all up, I have composed a drilled-down comparison of transfer taxes and real property taxes for the District of Columbia; Bethesda, Maryland; and Arlington, Virginia.
Homebuyers should expect to pay two main types of taxes on their homes, 1) transfer taxes are non-recurring and paid once at settlement and 2) real property taxes are recurring and paid semi-annually (when you pay depends on where you live).
Transfer Taxes
Aside from the down payment, transfer taxes are often the single largest expense a homebuyer will pay at settlement. Transfer taxes are also known as recordation taxes, stamp taxes or grantee taxes but are all lumped together on the HUD-1 settlement statement and identified, collectively, as "Transfer Tax."
For example in Montgomery County, Maryland, a homebuyer will customarily pay one-half of the total county transfer tax, state transfer tax and recordation tax. The total of these three taxes will be collected as a single line item on the HUD-1 and called "Transfer Tax."
Even more confusing in the District of Columbia and Virginia, the law requires homebuyers to pay the “Recordation Tax,” yet federal regulation requires those recordation taxes to be lumped together and identified on the HUD-1 as "Transfer Tax."
For the purpose of this discussion, the term "Transfer Tax" will include any and all one-time, non-recurring, taxes customarily paid by the homebuyer at the time of closing.
Transfer taxes vary depending on where the property is located, which may lead some homebuyers to think they are being penalized if purchasing a home in a city or county with a higher transfer tax rate, such as the District of Columbia.
While it's true that transfer taxes for DC properties are significantly higher than in Maryland or Virginia, the overall amount a homeowner will pay in taxes evens out over time thanks to property tax rates.

Property Taxes

Homeowners are typically expected to pay their property tax bill in two installments spread over the year. (For a summary of real estate tax rates by jurisdiction, including when property tax payments are due, see the homebuyer tax section of our website.)
As mentioned above, the District of Columbia may have one of the region's highest transfer tax rates, but it also boasts the region's lowest property tax rate at just $0.85 per $100 of assessed value. In Bethesda, Maryland the property tax rate is $1.027 per $100 of assessed value, while homeowners in Arlington County, VA pay $0.958 per $100 of assessed value.

Tax Comparison

Let's see how the taxes shake out for a homeowner in Washington, DC versus Bethesda, MD versus Arlington, VA over the course of 10 years, assuming tax rates remain unchanged. Remember: "Transfer Taxes" include ALL state recordation taxes and state/county transfer taxes as customarily apportioned, by jurisdiction, between the homebuyer and seller.
This figure also assumes that the purchase 1) is an owner-occupied residential purchase and, 2) that the homebuyer is a first-time homebuyer. Let's use $500,000 as our purchase price with 20 percent down:
Total taxes paid (estimate)
$500,000 purchase price


JurisdictionTransfer taxesProperty taxesTotal
District of
Columbia
$7,250.00$36,762.50$44,012.50
Bethesda,
Maryland
$4,052.50$51,350.00$55,402.50
Arlington,
Virginia
$2,999.70$47,900.00$50,899.70
See a tax rate breakdown for other DC Metro municipalities and counties

As you can see, the total amount of transfer tax plus property taxes paid over 10 years is far less in the District of Columbia compared to Maryland and Virginia.
This is partly because of the lower annual tax rate of just $0.85 per $100 of assessed value, and largely due to the Homestead Deduction, which homeowners qualify for so long as the property is their principal residence. Individuals who own multi-unit dwellings with five or less units also qualify for the deduction so long as they occupy one of the units.
Now, let's try the same thing, only this time we'll use $300,000 and $700,000 price points:
Total taxes paid (estimate)
$300,000 purchase price


JurisdictionTransfer taxesProperty taxesTotal
District of
Columbia
$3,300.00$19,762.50$23,062.50
Bethesda,
Maryland
$2,362.50$30,810.00$33,172.50
Arlington,
Virginia
$1,999.82$28,740.00$30,739.82
See a tax rate breakdown for other DC Metro municipalities and counties


Total taxes paid (estimate)
$700,000 purchase price


JurisdictionTransfer taxesProperty taxesTotal
District of
Columbia
$10,150.00$53,762.50$63,912.50
Bethesda,
Maryland
$6,052.50$71,890.00$77,942.50
Arlington,
Virginia
$4,999.58$67,060.00$72,059.58
See a tax rate breakdown for other DC Metro municipalities and counties

First-time Homebuyers

Homebuyers who have not owned property in Maryland and the District of Columbia may be exempt from paying their portion of transfer and recordation taxes. Unfortunately for Virginia homebuyers, no tax incentive exists.
To qualify for the transfer tax exemption in Maryland, all buyers must be first-time homebuyers. So, for example, if a wife owned a condo prior to marriage and now wants to purchase a house with her husband who is a first-time homebuyer, the exemption would not apply.
Furthermore, if you are purchasing as a "first-time homebuyer," and you intend to take title in the name of your revocable trust, or another type of entity, you will not qualify for the tax exemption in Maryland.
In the District of Columbia, the program is known as DC Tax Abatement, and, for a purchase price of $332,000 or less, it provides an exemption from the DC 1.1% Recordation Tax and an allowable credit from your seller(s) of 1.1% equal to the DC Transfer Tax. This is a 2.2% swing in favor of the homebuyer!
Additionally, the DC Tax Abatement program excuses first-time homebuyers from having to pay real property tax on their property for five years beginning October 1 following the date of closing. To qualify,  first-time homebuyers must 1) prove they live in DC, 2) must not have owned a property in the District for one year prior to the closing date, 3) meet the income requirement and 4) meet the purchase price requirement.
In sum, homebuyers can expect to pay two kinds of taxes on their property: transfer taxes and property taxes. Even though transfer taxes may be higher from one jurisdiction to the next, it doesn't necessarily mean a homebuyer is guaranteed to pay more taxes over the course of his/her ownership. First-time homebuyers may be eligible for tax exemptions.
For more information on taxes paid at settlement or during the course of homeownership, please contact the team at Federal Title.
Sincerely,
Todd Ewing, Esq.
Founder President
Federal Title & Escrow Company
It was the “perfect” house. A unique design. Spacious. Lots of alcoves, with bench seating in the windows. Expansive master suite. Stonework. An Old World feel. In the right neighborhood for close to the right price.
That’s how Marc Macenka wistfully describes the house that got away: a Dutch colonial in Carroll County, Md., that he and his wife, Deanna, lost to another bidder a year ago. They had envisioned living there with their then-2-year-old from the moment they saw it. With a second child on the way and the market and interest rates in their favor, they’d hoped to move quickly from their split-level home of 17 years in Linthicum.

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Safeway plots mixed-use development in Tenleytown

Safeway, one of the area’s top grocers, has updated its stores and solidified its presence in the region by playing the role of co-developer in mixed-use projects.
Now the Pleasanton, Calif.-based chain has its sights set on its next project, in Tenleytown, where the chain owns a 34,000-square-foot store off of Wisconsin Avenue NW and is considering a mixed-use project featuring a larger, 58,000-square-foot store, with some 150 apartments on top and 10 to 15 new town homes.

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