Daily Archives: July 2, 2011

Mt Kisco NY Homes sees Makeover musts: walls, floors, trim | Inman News for the Mt Kisco NY real estate market

Makeover musts: walls, floors, trim

Updating a 1980s rancher

 

Chair-rail molding and shadow boxes. Flickr image courtesy of <a href=Chair-rail molding and shadow boxes. Flickr image courtesy of Crown Molding.

Editor’s note: This is the first of two parts.

Q: We just made our last mortgage payment on our 1980s-era rancher in Pleasanton, Calif. We like living here. There’s plenty of room for us — especially now that the kids are gone — and the neighborhood is great. Trouble is, with its wall-to-wall carpeting, off-white walls and skinny baseboards, it really looks drab and dated. And did I mention that the kitchen and both bathrooms are vintage original?

Now that we’ve got some extra money, we want to spruce up the joint. Any advice on how to bring our place into the 21st century?

A: We’ve got plenty of ideas for you, but because of the scope of this project let’s talk about your bedrooms and living room first. We’ll save the “wet rooms” — the kitchen and bathrooms — for next week.

To put a new face on your old place, we suggest makeovers for your walls, floors and trim.

Walls: This is the easiest and least expensive makeover. We would start by picking up a few decorator magazines to see the latest in interior colors. Or just Google “hot interior paint colors.” Once you have a general idea of what you like, go down to a paint store (not a hardware store or big-box warehouse) and buy some samples of colors you think you might like.

Put some large swatches on the walls and live with them for a few days, noticing how the color changes with the light. When you’ve made your choices, buy top-quality acrylic latex paint and get to work!

If you’re unfortunate enough to have blown-on “popcorn” ceilings, now would be a good time to get rid of them. Because the job is such a mess and because these ceilings may contain asbestos, we prefer to leave this job to professionals.

Floors: The first thing Bill did after signing his escrow papers was tear out the living- and dining-room carpets and replace them with a Swedish ash hardwood floor. We think wood flooring is timeless, and we like it even more when it’s combined with modern short-pile or Berber carpet.

So pick your space — family room, entryway, hallway — and lay down some hardwood. You will have to choose what type of wood and what type of installation. There are dozens of species used for flooring.

You will also need to decide the type of installation. Stick flooring is nailed piece by piece, while a floating floor comes in larger, machined-formed pieces that are locked together. Plan to spend anywhere between $5 and $30 per square foot — but you can save yourself about 70 percent of that if you have the time, talent and patience to do it yourself.

Trim: New interior woodwork will be an eye-popping update to your ’80s rancher. It’s likely that you have slab doors, 2-inch flat baseboard and simple 1 5/8-inch bevel casing around your doors and windows.

We suggest you replace this dated look with raised-panel doors, 4 1/2-inch baseboard and a wider decorative casing. Don’t forget new hinges and handles for the doors.

Although it’s been around since the Victorians, a spot of wainscoting with a nice chair-rail molding still looks great, especially in the dining area.

To top things off, consider some 4 1/2-inch crown molding.

After your floors, walls and trim are taken care of, put on the finishing touches by changing out those old ivory-colored plugs and switches to some new white decorator ones. Then put in some new ceiling light fixtures.

Next up: The “wet” rooms: kitchen and baths.

       

      

 

    

   

 

      

 

   

  

via inman.com

North Salem NY real estate learns What to know when buying FSBO | Inman News for North Salem NY homes for sale

What to know when buying FSBO

REThink Real Estate

 Q: I saw a home in the newspaper being sold by a private seller. I would like to know all of the pro and cons of buying from a private seller.

 A: What you call a private seller is what real estate folk would call a home “for sale by owner,” or FSBO. It’s very common for homeowners considering having a go at selling their homes sans agent to write in and ask me about the pros and cons of selling FSBO. It’s much less common for a buyer to ask about the advisability of buying from an unrepresented seller, so your question presents a fabulous opportunity to clear some things up!

Generally, there is only one reason sellers list and try to sell their homes without using an agent: to save money on commissions.

Some sellers are experienced in real estate matters and just don’t think they need an agent’s help enough to warrant the cost of the commissions; others owe so much on their homes that they believe they cannot afford the commissions. Still others just don’t understand enough of what an agent does to understand why they should pay for these services.

No matter what the seller’s situation is, there are some functions that a listing agent would normally play on the seller’s side that FSBO buyers also miss out on and should consider when buying a home listed as by its owner.

In the current market climate, listing agents do a lot of reality-checking and expectation management with their sellers at every stage of the process.

From setting a list price that is based on the reality of today’s market (which often means using the facts and recent sales data to bring the seller’s list price down to reality) to helping sellers understand how their home truly compares to the other homes that are on the market in the same price range, to explaining why an offer that has come in below the asking price is or is not a strong offer, listing agents perform a large number of reality-checking functions that are very difficult for a buyer to do or simply do not get done when the seller has no agent at all.

While these functions are important in any transaction, they become extremely important in the case of a FSBO, because these sellers are more likely than others to have unrealistic expectations. Why do I say this?

Well, my experience with FSBO sellers has been that more often than not, they don’t want to pay an agent’s commission, but they want to receive a price for their home that is on par with — or even higher than — that fetched by the sellers of similar homes.

But those comparable sales prices did include agent commissions! And, generally, the FSBO seller is looking to save the commission off of their side of the transaction — they are not usually looking to pass the commission savings onto the buyer. This is unrealistic, especially given the highly educated, savvy mindset of many homebuyers today.

If the transaction is going to be done without the advantage of the professional expertise of an agent, then why shouldn’t the buyer demand a discount from the comparable sales prices, which included agents’ services?

Buyers who buy FSBOs should, in my opinion, insist on receiving a discount from the home’s fair market value for the buyer-side commissions the seller is not paying, and then use some of that savings to go hire a broker or attorney to advise them through the rest of the transaction.

(Many an attorney will review contracts and disclosures, or a buyer’s broker will help a buyer execute a FSBO transaction for far less than the 2.5 percent or 3 percent commission they would have charged for finding the property and doing the deal).

Actually, before going this route, buyers of FSBO properties should ask the seller to pay the buyer’s agent or attorney, so that the buyer will have the professional representation they need on this major transaction, including the contracts and disclosures.

If, after the seller pays the buyer’s representative or gives the buyer a discount for their side’s representation, if there’s any discount room left, it’s fair for the seller to realize that savings from not having hired a listing agent on their side of the transaction.

This brings us to some of the other major gaps that occur frequently in these FSBO transactions. FSBO sellers (and their homes’ buyers) miss out on the professional advice on making disclosures and the contacts, expertise and efficiencies of scale that make real estate transactions run smoothly — from securing an escrow provider to ensuring that disclosures are properly and thoroughly completed, to obtaining title insurance. Some buyers experience FSBO transactions as particularly bumpy and difficult to close, as a result.

And finally, if you are buying a FSBO property with cash, as the nonpublished portion of your email leads me to believe you might want to do, it can be especially easy to forgo many of the protections that a real estate broker or mortgage lender would have required in a standard transaction, like obtaining the inspections you need, running a title search to ensure title is clear and obtaining a title insurance policy, or having the home appraised.

None of these concerns I’ve mentioned are reasons to absolutely avoid a FSBO sale. But they are very good reasons to avoid buying a FSBO property without your own broker or attorney representation.

I’d strongly encourage any buyer considering purchasing a home that is being sold by owner to get their own broker and/or attorney. Try to negotiate for the seller to pay for it — but if they won’t, it’s worth the cash to pay for it yourself and make sure the transaction is executed in such a manner that your interests are protected.

And just for your information, there are also buyer’s brokers who shy away from representing even the buyer in these FSBO transactions.

They feel — rightly so, in many cases — that to represent their client properly, they essentially have to do double work advising the seller of their obligations and duties to the buyer the same way a listing agent would ordinarily do. Given that many of these sellers are somewhat unrealistic or otherwise difficult, doing twice the work for half the pay is an unattractive option.

But many other brokers and attorneys will represent your interests in a transaction where the home is being sold FSBO, despite the extra trouble. If you go that route, find one!

Tara-Nicholle Nelson is author of “The Savvy Woman’s Homebuying Handbook” and “Trillion Dollar Women: Use Your Power to Make Buying and Remodeling Decisions.” Tara is also the Consumer Ambassador and Educator for real estate listings search site Trulia.com. Ask her a real estate question online or visit her website, www.rethinkrealestate.com.

       

      

 

    

    

     

  

      

 

      

 

   

  

South Salem NY real estat learns how to Get a tax break for home improvement | Inman News for South Salem NY homes for sale

Get a tax break for home improvement

Real Estate Tax Talk

 

Flickr image courtesy of <a href=

In today’s down market, many homeowners are reluctant to pour more money into their homes. Before deciding whether to replace a roof or merely patch it, homeowner’s should consider the tax implications.

Home improvements — a new bathroom or kitchen, for example — can increase the value of a home and reduce any taxes due on the profit earned from its sale.

Home repairs provide no immediate tax benefits to a homeowner. They are not tax deductible and they are not added to the home’s basis (cost), for tax purposes. As far as taxes go, they are a nonevent. Thus, a homeowner who patches a leaky roof gets not tax benefits.

Home improvements are very different, though. The cost of an improvement is not deductible, but it is added to the home’s basis for tax purposes. For example, the cost of adding a new roof to a home is added to its tax basis. This reduces any taxable gain when the home is sold.

Of course, a substantial amount of gain is usually tax free, anyway, under the home sale tax exclusion: $250,000 for single homeowners and $500,000 for married owners filing jointly. But homeowners with substantial equity can still benefit from an increased tax basis in their homes.

For example, if Joe and Jane purchased their home in 1990 for $250,000 and it is now worthy $1 million, they will have a $750,000 gain. A full $500,000 of this amount is tax-free because Joe and Jane are a married couple and qualify for the tax exclusion.

But this leaves $250,000 subject to taxation. If Joe and Jan had spent $250,000 adding improvements to their home, they would have no taxable gain. This is because the $250,000 is added to the home’s original $250,000 basis, providing an adjusted tax basis of $500,000.

As a result, their gain on the sale would only be $500,000, not $750,000; and this entire gain would be tax-free because of the $500,000 exclusion.

So how do you tell the difference between an improvement and a repair? Here’s the basic rule provided by the Internal Revenue Service: A repair keeps a homeowner’s property in good operating condition but it does not:

-Materially add to the value of the property
-Substantially prolong its useful life, or
-Make it more useful (see: Treasury Regulations, Subchapter A, Section 1.162-4).

In contrast, an improvement adds to the value of a homeowner’s property, prolongs its life, or adapts it to new uses.

The problem with this definition is that virtually all repairs increase both the value and useful life of the property being repaired. The key difference between a repair and an improvement is that a repair merely returns property to more-or-less the state it was in before it stopped working properly. The property is not substantially more valuable, long-lived, or useful than it was before the need for the repair arose.

In contrast, an improvement makes property substantially more valuable and/or long-lived or useful than it was before the improvement.

You need to compare the situation before and after you made the expenditure involved. Have you just returned your property to the state it was in before the need for the repair arose? Or, have you made it much better?

If the answer to the first question is “yes,” you’ve repaired the home. If the answer to the second question is “yes,” it’s a home improvement.

Good examples of repairs include repainting a home, fixing gutters or floors, fixing leaks, plastering, and replacing broken windows. Examples of improvements include adding a deck to a home, a new bathroom, installing a new heating system, or putting on a new roof.

Next week we’ll discuss how homeowners can make sure that the IRS will view their changes as home improvements rather than repairs.

Stephen Fishman is a tax expert, attorney and author who has published 18 books, including “Working for Yourself: Law & Taxes for Contractors, Freelancers and Consultants,” “Deduct It,” “Working as an Independent Contractor,” and “Working with Independent Contractors.” He welcomes your questions for this weekly column.

   

Armonk NY homes finds a Blockbuster With A Different Kind Of Awesome | Email for Armonk NY real estate

Today we are breaking from our normal Friday Email Review Series to bring you a special announcement. If you are bummed because you didn’t get your email review fix today, you can see all past Email Review blog posts here.

The secret to every internet marketing campaign since Al Gore created a series of tubes for us to call home, the secret of many e-commerce success stories, the secret to every small business and big brand’s internet ROI rock and roll story is built around one thing: Your email list.

On Wednesday, June 29, 2011…join me, Chris Brogan, Peter Shankman, and Jason Keath for the Advanced List Building For Social Media Marketers Webinar.

Jason and I created a short promo video for your viewing pleasure and entertainment. Huge thanks to Tom Webster (Blue Sky Factory client and personal friend) for the voice over as well as Walt Ribeiro for allowing us to use his original music.

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Having trouble seeing the video? Watch directly on YouTube.

Remember, this webinar is limited to the first 1,000 sign-ups. Register now!

Sign Up Now

DJ Waldow
Director of Community, Blue Sky Factory

50 Ways eBook

Email marketing does not have a lot of value unless you have a list to send to. We've found that many email marketers struggle with ways to grow their list. Good news! We have an eBook that can help: 50 Ways to Build Your Email Marketing List. What are you waiting for? Download the eBook now!

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