![]() |
![]() |
|
| |
How to Decrease the Value of Your Own House
Owning a house is part of the American Dream. Depending on where you live in the US - home ownership can be around 70%. That means that 70% of people own their own home. That is very high compared to other countries. Owning a home is usually a nice piece of independence and also part of building a nest egg for retirement. Home ownership is considered an investment. But then it is surprising how many home owners treat their own home as if it would be something they don't own. Imagine the case of a lady in Highlands Ranch, Colorado. She bought a ranch-style home in late 2004 for $265,000.00 - mainly financed through a mortgage. She owes about 95% of the house value to a mortgage company. Highlands Ranch, Colorado is a covenant controlled neighborhood. Strict rules are in place of how to maintain a certain level of landscaping and to keep the property in shape (+ many more things). The covenant rules give a development a more standard appearance, and control some of the activities that take place within its boundaries. When enforced, covenants protect property values. When buying a house in Highlands Ranch the new owner agrees to obey the covenant rules by contract. The lady from our example above decided to let maintenance of her landscaping slip. The grass was growing out of control. Then summer came along and as she did not have an automated sprinkler system for her yard no watering was done at all. This took care of the fast growing grass in a certain way. The grass started dying in the dry Colorado summer. The outside appearance of the former $265,000 home took a toll. Currently a real estate agent estimates the value of this house in question at $250,000. The lady from our example took her home and did not treat it as an investment. If she would have to sell her home now she will have difficulties to receive her invested money back. If she would continue to treat her home not as an investment she will eventually turn the investment into a liability and risk her credit history. Especially as her home is in a covenant controlled area she faces extra cost associated with her house. The covenant community association can even put a lien on her home and enforce the covenant rules by sending in a landscaping company to fix the problem - at the owners expense. In our example the Highlands Ranch Community Association has started the initial process of getting the property back on track. A dated notification has been send to the home owner to bring the property back into compliance with the rules. Overall - if investing money and letting interest in maintaining the investment slip, means the person involved is throwing money out of the window. If you have enough cash this is not a problem but who has enough cash to do this? Buying a house means to take on the burden to maintain it. Failing to do basic maintenance means to lower the value of the property. About The Author Christoph Puetz is a successful Entrepreneur and international book author. Websites operated by Christoph Puetz are Web Hosting Guide and Highlands Ranch Information and Reminder Service. This article can be published by anyone as long as the resource box (About the Author) is posted on the website including the links. These links must be clickable.
MORE RESOURCES: A 1750s farmhouse has a beautifully carved sandstone facade and offers sweeping views of the vineyards and the river. In downtown Manhattan, new condo developments offer owners both single-house-style privacy and luxe-building-style amenities. Where others saw a ruin, the buyer of a house in Millburn — a former contractor — perceived buried charm. Until the financial crisis, foreigners had been a significant force in the real estate market, an area broker said. A 1907 brownstone in Washington; a 1914 English Tudor in Kansas City, Mo.; and a 1925 bungalow in Sarasot., Fla. The difference between viewing housing as a luxury good or as a staple is the subject of a debate about the recovery. The property market in Stockholm has been insulated from the worst of the housing crisis by low interest rates and by a shortage of apartments in the city. Laka Nona medical city will include a medical school, hospitals, research centers and space for biotech start-up companies. Real estate listings noting a need for TLC acknowledge problems with a property. Just what those are is not always clear. Some economists and analysts urge a dose of shock therapy that would shift benefits to future homeowners from current ones: Let the housing market crash. Two longtime loftmates appeared to be going their separate ways, but the hunt for new apartments landed them in the same building in Williamsburg. West End Avenue and vicinity was once a stronghold of town houses. Three of the now-rare breed bear distinctive traces of the attentions of recent owners. At River Pointe, a community in Manchester, N.J., solar technology that earns energy credits is a standard feature in each house. Questions for a principal of the law firm Proskauer Rose and a co-chairman of the firm’s real estate division. The wealthy and celebrities often buy property under limited liability companies, often with whimsical names. Once a grand mansion steps from Central Park, it had fallen into disrepair. Now it is for sale for $8.95 million. One in eight homeowners had household debt exceeding half the monthly income in 2008, a recent report says. A parking space that comes with the lease; a condo building with no emergency reserve fund; a landlord’s liability in a burglary; dealing with fees on security deposits. An art collector builds a nontraditional house in an Alpine village where life hasn’t changed that much in decades. On Lake Waramaug, a converted boathouse has a stone foundation, a wraparound deck and direct access to the water. A half-dozen buildings on Second Avenue will house ventilation equipment, disperse smoke and allow for evacuation from subway tunnels in emergencies. A one-bedroom condo in Philadelphia, a three-bedroom bungalow in Tennessee and a two-bedroom house in Wisconsin. Developers in Midtown are refurbishing older buildings, using tax credits and public financing, as much as they are building from scratch. |
RELATED ARTICLES
![]() |
| home       | site map |       Disclaimer |       Privacy Policy |
| © 2006 |