Cleaning House: Secrets of a Truly Deep Clean

By: Jane Hoback

Published: January 14, 2011

Deep clean your house and you’ll brighten rooms and help maintain your home’s value.

De-bug the light fixtures

See that bug burial ground within your overhead fixtures? Turn off the lights and carefully remove fixture covers, dump out flies and wash with hot soapy water. While you’re up there, dust bulbs. Dry everything thoroughly before replacing the cover.

Vacuum heat vents and registers

Dirt and dust build up in heat vents and along register blades. Vents also are great receptacles for coins and missing buttons. Unscrew vent covers from walls or pluck them from floors, remove foreign objects, and vacuum inside the vent. Clean grates with a damp cloth and screw back tightly.

Polish hardware

To deep clean brass door hinges, handles, and cabinet knobs, thoroughly wipe with a damp microfiber cloth, then polish with Wright’s or Weiman brass cleaner ($4). Dish soap shines up glass or stainless steel knobs. Use a Q-tip to detail the ornamental filigree on knobs and handles.

Replace grungy switch plates

Any amateur can wipe a few fingerprints off cover plates that hide light switches, electric outlets, phone jacks, and cable outlets. But only deep cleaners happily remove plates to vacuum and swipe the gunk behind. (OK, we’re a little OCD when it comes to dirt!) Make sure cover plates are straight when you replace them. And pitch plates that are beyond the help of even deep cleaning. New ones cost less than $2 each.

Neaten weather stripping

Peeling, drooping weather stripping on doors and windows makes rooms look old. If the strip still has some life, nail or glue it back. If it’s hopeless, cut out and replace sections, or just pull the whole thing off and start new. A 10-ft. roll of foam weather stripping costs $8; 16-ft. vinyl costs about $15.

Replace stove drip pans

Some drip pans are beyond the scrub brush. Replacing them costs about $3 each and instantly freshens your stove.

Jane Hoback is a veteran business writer who has written for the Rocky Mountain News, Natural Foods Merchandiser magazine, and ColoradoBIZ Magazine.

Appeal Your Property Tax Bill

By: Barbara Eisner Bayer

Reproduced here with permission from HouseLogic/RealtorContent

To successfully appeal your property tax bill, you first need to do a bit of sleuthing into your real estate assessment.

Read your assessment letter

A real estate assessment is conducted periodically by the local government to assign a value to your home for taxation purposes. An assessment isn’t the same as a private appraisal, and the assessed value of your home isn’t necessarily how much you could sell it for today. Real estate assessment letters are mailed to homeowners annually, or perhaps every two to three years, depending where you live.

The letter will include some information about your property, such as lot size or a legal description, as well as the assessed value of your house and land. Additional details—number of bedrooms, for example, or date of construction—can often be found in the property listing on your local government’s website. Your property tax bill will usually be calculated by multiplying your home’s assessed value by the local tax rate, which can vary from town to town.

If you think your home’s assessment is higher than it should be, challenge it immediately. The clock starts ticking as soon as the letter goes out. You generally have less than 30 days to respond, though the time frame varies not just between states, but within each state. Procedures are often outlined on the back of the letter.

Gather evidence

Start by making sure the assessment letter doesn’t contain any mistakes. Is the number of bathrooms accurate? Number of fireplaces? How about the size of the lot? There’s a big difference between “0.3 acres” and “3.0 acres.” If any facts are wrong, then you may have a quick and easy challenge on your hands.

Next, research your home’s value. Ask a real estate agent to find three to five comparable properties—”comps” in real estate jargon—that have sold recently. Alternatively, check a website like Zillow.com to find approximate values of comparable properties. The key is identifying properties that are very similar to your own in terms of size, style, condition, and location. If you’re willing to shell out between $350 and $600, you can hire a private appraiser to do the heavy lifting.

Once you identify comps, check the assessments on those properties. Most local governments maintain public databases. If yours doesn’t, seek help from an agent or ask neighbors to share tax information. If the assessments on your comps are lower, you can argue yours is too high. Even if the assessments are similar, if you can show that the “comparable” properties aren’t truly comparable, you may have a case for relief based on equity. Maybe your neighbor added an addition while you were still struggling to clean up storm damage. In that case, the properties are no longer equitable.

Present your case

Once you’re armed with your research, call your local assessor’s office. Most assessors are willing to discuss your assessment informally by phone. If not, or if you aren’t satisfied with the explanation, request a formal review. Pay attention to deadlines and procedures. There’s probably a form to fill out and specific instructions for supporting evidence. A typical review, which usually doesn’t require you to appear in person, can take anywhere from one to three months. Expect to receive a decision in writing.

If the review is unsuccessful, you can usually appeal the decision to an independent board, with or without the help of a lawyer. You may have to pay a modest filing fee, perhaps $10 to $25. If you end up before an appeals board, your challenge could stretch as long as a year, especially in large jurisdictions that have a high number of appeals. But homeowners do triumph. According to Guy Griscom, Assistant Chief Appraiser of the Harris County (Texas) Central Appraisal District, of the 288,800 protests filed in his Houston-area district in 2008, about 58% received reduced assessments.

How much effort you decide to put into a challenge depends on the stakes. The annual U.S. median property tax paid in 2008 was $1,897, or 0.96% of the median home value of $197,600. Lowering that assessed value by 15% would net savings of about $285. In some parts of New York and Texas, for example, where tax rates can approach 3% of a home’s value, potential savings are greater. Ditto for communities with home prices well above the U.S. median.

There are a few things to keep in mind as you weigh an appeal. The board can only lower your real estate assessment, not the rate at which you’re taxed. There’s also a chance, albeit slight, that your assessment could be raised, thus increasing your property taxes. A reduction in your assessment right before you put your house on the market could hurt the sale price. An easier route to savings might lie in determining if you qualify for property tax exemptions based on age, disability, military service, or other factors.

This article provides general information about tax laws and consequences, but is not intended to be relied upon by readers as tax or legal advice applicable to particular transactions or circumstances. Readers should consult a tax professional for such advice, and are reminded that tax laws may vary by jurisdiction.

Barbara Eisner Bayer has written about mortgages and personal finance for the past 15 years for Motley Fool, the Daily Plan-It, and Nurse Village, and is the former Managing Editor of Mortgageloan.com and Credit-land.com. She has successfully challenged her real estate assessment.

Mortgage Options: Patronizing the Family Bank

homes for sale in houston texasBy: Lisa Kaplan Gordon

Published: July 27, 2011

In a time of choked credit and painfully low CD rates, some home owners and their parents are cutting financial institutions out of the mortgage picture and banking on each other.

In a time of choked credit and painfully low CD rates, some home owners and their parents are cutting financial institutions out of the mortgage picture and banking on each other.

The Bank of Mom and Dad can earn 4% or 5% on cash savings by holding the mortgage on the kids’ property. This symbiotic lending gives parents a source of income that beats the rate of return of, say, a money market fund. For younger folks who need a loan, it’s a good way to secure hassle-free financing at a reasonable rate.

Of course, this family lending only works if Mom and Dad have enough cash to make the mortgage, and the kids have the wherewithal to make monthly payments. But if viewed and conducted correctly, family lending is a win-win arrangement; if not, Sunday dinners will be awkward!

A dentist friend of mine in Maryland holds the paper on both his kids’ homes. His children were looking for mortgages; his savings weren’t earning much; so he gave them mortgages at 4%, nearly a point below what a bank would have charged, but more than triple what he was earning on his savings.

“It helped both of us,” he says.

My husband and I have been loyal customers of Gordon Savings and Loan since my mother-in-law was widowed 19 years ago and struggled to maintain her lifestyle on safe, fixed-interest investments.

Through the years, we’ve paid Mom between 4% and 9% on the interest-only mortgages she’s held on our home and investment properties. At times, we’ve given her a point higher than falling mortgage rates because, after all, she’s our mom, and without that extra income we’d have to kick in anyway.

At the end of the loans, she retrieves her principal with her assets — and pride — intact. If she were to die before, the loans would become part of her estate.

These loans work for us because we don’t:

  • Beg banks for loans.
  • Pay points.
  • Spend extra money on property appraisals, credit checks, and bank processing fees.

We’d rather miss a limb than miss a payment; and Mom would rather cash our checks then ask her other kids for money. So, all in all, it’s worked well, but not without a few hiccups.

When the economy collapsed, Mom got nervous. During a pasta dinner, she handed us a letter that expressed her love and called her loans.

Dawn Rickabaugh, a Los Angeles financial consultant who specializes in the secondary private mortgage market, says we should have included in our deal an escape hatch that allowed Mom to sell all or part of the loans to a third party, just like banks do.

“Parents have to think like a bank and have an exit strategy,” says Rickabaugh.

In the end, we rejiggered things and repaid some, but not all, of Mom’s loans.

Here are some lessons we’ve learned about family loans:

  • Document loans completely and professionally. Settlement companies can draw up the mortgage, or you can use services, such as www.LendFriend.me, which structure, document, and manage loans made among family and friends.
  • Consider solutions to worst-case scenarios. What happens to payments if a child loses their job or divorces? Under what circumstances can the loan be recalled? A lawyer or mortgage writer can help you answer these questions.
  • Make sure borrowers, aka “the kids,” are financially stable and have equity in the property. They may have to save a little money before they qualify for a family loan.
  • Remember that real estate isn’t particularly liquid. If you think you’ll need your investment money soon or quickly, don’t make a long-term mortgage.

Have you ever given a loan to a family member? How did it work out?

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