"Texas Real Estate" Tag Archive

Below are the articles tagged with the term "Texas Real Estate".


PAGE 1 OF 2

Rent vs. Buy

If you are a renter, you might be wondering how much mortgage you can afford.  Please use the Rent vs. Buy calculator on my website to figure out what you can afford.  I thought the following information was interesting, so I am sharing it with you.  It is reprinted with permission from the National Association of REALTORS and reprinted from REALTOR Magazine Online.

The following calculation assumes a 28% income tax bracket.  If your bracket is higher, your savings will be, too. 

Rent: _____________

Multiplier:  X 1.32

Mortgage Payment:  __________________

Because of tax deductions, you can make a mortgage payment – including taxes and insurance – that is approximately 1/3 larger than your current rent payment and end up wtih the same amount of income. 

Not only does owning a home give you a haven for yourself and your family, it makes great financial sense, too.  Right now, if you are a first time home buyer you can take advantage of the $8,000 tax credit available.  You must hurry, because it ends in April!  Call me today so we can get started.

signature



0 comments. This is an old post. The comments are currently closed. Click here to send me a comment via email.

Just in Time for Deer Season

COLLEGE STATION (Real Estate Center) – We’ve rolled out a revised edition of one of our most requested publications — The Texas Deer Lease. And with deer season having just begun, the timing couldn’t be better.

Center Attorney Judon Fambrough, who wrote the original report and oversaw the revision, will talk about the changes on this week’s Real Estate Red Zone podcast, which comes out tomorrow.

Until then, print a copy, or order it from our online store.

I’m Back!

Thank you for your patience while I have been on vacation.  I will be answering emails and returning phone messages as quickly as possible.  I do have a closing on Wednesday morning.  Please be patient.  I am working to catch up.  I haven’t forgotten about any of you.  I love helping people relocate to the Houston area, buy recreational land, and dream homes and selling every piece of real estate I can get my hands on, but I had a wonderful time on my vacation.  It was a great break and I hope to tell you all about it when I see you again.  I missed my babies, though.  Hope you all had a wonderful 4th of July!

signature



0 comments. This is an old post. The comments are currently closed. Click here to send me a comment via email.

Texas Quick to Bounce Back From Recession

WASHINGTON (Forbes) – Several Texas cities are poised for a quick recovery from the national recession, according to Forbes.

Austin–Round Rock ranked first on the magazine’s recent list of ten cities most likely to bounce back quickly.

Meanwhile, San Antonio ranked fifth, Dallas–Fort Worth–Arlington seventh and McAllen-Edinburg-Mission ninth.

To compile its list, Forbes looked at estimates from Moody’s Economy.com of the projected gross domestic product of metropolitan areas across the United States, as well as unemployment figures from the Bureau of Labor Statistics and home prices, incomes and affordability data from the National Association of Home Builders.

Forbes also put together a list of ten worst cities for recession recovery. No Texas cities made that list.

 

Texas Still Buyer’s Market

TEXAS (Real Estate Center, The Herald-Zeitung) – Despite rising foreclosure rates in the United States (now nearly 32 percent), the rate in Texas is down 14 percent since last year.

Jim Gaines, research economist with the Real Estate Center at Texas A&M University, said the Texas housing market is doing very well compared with the rest of the nation.

“We’re being compared to large, high-growth states like Florida, New York, California and Illinois, and our housing market is in much better shape. This is partly because about four or five years ago, we didn’t have the big run-up in prices that many of those states had,” Gaines said.

Texas also benefits from a lack of overbuilding, which often creates an excess of inventory to drive down home prices.

Affordable homes, low mortgage and interest rates, and first-time homebuyer tax credits also make this an ideal time to buy a home, according to Gaines.

PAGE 1 OF 2