Got $2,500? Buy a House
Rock-bottom interest rates and an $8,000 tax credit make a home possible for many first-time buyers — with no trick mortgages or financial gymnastics required.
With that tax incentive, average credit and less than $2,500 in savings, it’s possible to buy a $150,000 starter home for about $1,000 a month, taxes and insurance included.
Most people who want to buy are stuck with a home to unload first. First-time buyers don’t have that problem. But many don’t have the down payment money either.
The $8,000 federal tax credit solves that. It is literally a gift: All you need to do is buy a first home for $80,000 or more to receive a 10% — to a maximum of $8,000 — rebate from the government, even if you had no taxes withheld.
The government is even letting homebuyers with Federal Housing Administration (FHA) mortgages borrow against the tax credit right now — it’s called a bridge loan — and then repay it at tax time.
There are several items you must meet in order to qualify, but it’s not complicated.
A triple play like this one probably won’t happen again in your lifetime:
* Money’s cheaper than dirt.
* Home prices have been knocked back to 2003 levels.
* The federal government wants to pay you up to $8,000 for buying a house.
Talk to us, or any qualified lending professional, about your options for buying a house now. There really may never be another chance like this in your lifetime.