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What is Rent to Own / Lease Purchase?

September 15th, 2007 by George

By Robert J. Bruss
Inman News

You’ve been looking for months for your first home, or you want to upgrade to a nicer home in a better community. It’s a great time to buy a home, everybody tells you.

Finally, you find the ideal home for sale, which has most of what you want (there is no such thing as the “perfect home.”)

But when you sit down with the mortgage lender to go over your income and credit to see if you can obtain the home loan you need, the lender says your FICO (Fair Isaac Corp.) credit score is too low to get an affordable interest rate. A mortgage at 7.5 percent interest is the best he can arrange, but he’s not sure you can qualify for the high payment.

Will you give up, resigned to waiting a year or two before buying a home? Of course not.

You know the house you want to buy has been listed for sale three or four months so the sellers must be anxious. The eager real estate agent phones to ask if you got your mortgage preapproval. You report the bad news that you’re not willing to pay 7.5 percent interest.

Fortunately, you’re working with an experienced realty agent. She suggests renting the house for up to two years until you can improve your FICO score. Then she explains you can lock in the purchase price at today’s market value. “Tell me more” is your swift reply.

WHAT IS A LEASE-OPTION? Your real estate agent then explains a lease-option, also known as “rent to own” in many communities, is a combination rental, sales and finance technique that has been used by thousands of home buyers and sellers.

However, a lease-option is not the same as a lease-purchase, which obligates the buyer to buy, usually within a year or two. With a lease-option, if home prices plummet, the buyer doesn’t have to exercise the option to buy.

Personally, I bought my current residence with a lease-option when I realized I was “cash challenged” without enough money for a down payment. Through my buyer’s agent, I offered the sellers a 12-month lease at $1,500 per month with $10,000 nonrefundable option money. As the vacant house had been listed for sale about six months, I asked for a 100 percent rent credit toward my option purchase price, which was just slightly below the asking price.

After hesitating about 10 days, my sellers accepted, but only for a six-month rental term. I readily agreed. Three days later, I hired a moving van and moved into my new home. About five months later, I exercised my purchase option and took title. At the closing, I received credit against the option price for my $10,000 option money plus the $7,500 total rent paid for five months.

Lease-options work especially well when there is an oversupply of homes listed for sale, such as the current “buyer’s market” in many cities. When a home seller needs someone to pay enough rent to cover the mortgage payment but doesn’t require an immediate cash sale, a lease-option can be ideal.

THERE ARE ALWAYS MORE LEASE-OPTION BUYERS THAN SELLERS. For some unexplained reason, there are usually more “rent to own” buyers than sellers. Having used lease-options to buy and sell houses for almost 30 years, I’ve learned a properly marketed lease-option can solve problems for both buyers and sellers.

The key to lease-option success is the amount of rent credit the tenant will earn each month toward the down payment. Although I negotiated a 100 percent rent credit when I bought my present home, as a seller I usually agree to only a 33 percent rent credit. As a motivated seller, I’ve agreed to 50 and even 100 percent rent credits.

Although the lease-option buyer doesn’t get any income-tax deductions, the buyer’s rent credit is far better, like a “forced savings account.” Of course, if the buyer doesn’t exercise the purchase option, the rent credit plus the option money is forfeited.

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Buying 101 - Part 2

July 28th, 2007 by George

Are You Ready to Own

Home ownership means you no longer pay monthly rent for the roof over your head. You can do what you want with your house (within reason). When you leave, you can sell it to recoup the purchase price and - with any luck - earn a profit too.

But don’t kid yourself. home ownership comes with a slew of disadvantages, responsibilities, and downright headaches.

So before going any further, consider whether your lifestyle and finances make homebuying a smart move.

TIP: High costs mean you should be prepared to say put. Except in a roaring real estate market, it usually doesn’t make sense to buy a home you’ll own for less than three or four years. Reason: the high transaction cost of buying and selling property means you could lose money on the deal. If you do make money, you’ll pay capital gains taxes if you’re in the house less than two years.

So ask yourself if you can really stay put for that long. Will you need to move because you are transferred by your current employer or a new one? Are you thinking of going back to school?

TIP: It may make more sense to rent On the financial side, one key question is whether it costs more, on average, to rent or own in your area. The rule of thumb is that if you pay 35 percent less in rent than you would for owning - including the monthly mortgage, property taxes, and any homeowner’s fees - then it’s smarter to continue renting.

Only if all those answers still point towards owning should you proceed to the next step - getting the money right.

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Am I paying too much for rent?

June 26th, 2007 by George

Jeez, I really despise writing that check every month for rent. None of the money goes to work for me, but merely goes to pay off my landlord’s mortgage. Not to mention, the appreiciation the landlord is seeing month-in and month-out on the property.

But, am I actually paying too much for rent, comparitively speaking? What are others in my area paying? Are there better deals out there that I don’t know about? Am I just wasting my money every month, when I could purchase a home and put my money to work for me?

Well, Rentometer has come to your aid. The rentometer website is a visual tool to help you decide just that.

Input your information into the rentometer homepage…

Rentometer Homepage

Simple input, simple interface. A few seconds later you get your results.

Rentometer Results

The results give you a range of rent rates in your area of interest. Low, High, and the median, and then compare what you are paying to those numbers.

Drawbacks:

  • The rentometer does not account for your particular location. Remember, you get what you pay for.

  • The rentometer does not account for number of bathrooms.

  • The rentometer is only as good as the information entered into it. It is only an approximate average of rent costs, and is not definitive, due to its drawbacks.

  • The rentometer does not account for amenities: pools, fitness centers, etc.

  • The rentometer is geared towards renters, therefore, you can imagine where their funding comes from.

But, for a cool visual tool and information resource, rentometer does it’s job. However, that being said, you still have to decide is it better to rent or buy (see dontrenew.com’s blog post on this matter).

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to Buy or to Rent… That is the Question…

June 23rd, 2007 by George

 Buy    OR     Rent

dontrenew.com was established for that very question.

Should I buy or should I continue to rent?

There are pros and cons to both, and only you can decide what is appropriate for you.  Let’s take a look at what some of these pros and cons are:

Buying Pros

  • Historical uptrend in appreciation of real estate values
  • Tax deductions provide huge incentives
  • Place to call home
  • Housing market set for rebound
  • You are not paying someone else’s mortgage for them
  • Seller are providing tons of incentives right now

Buying Cons

  • Finances can become over-extended
  • Risk of ownership

Renting Pros

  • Rental rates typically a little lower than a mortgage payment
  • Financial commitment is typically one year or less
  • Risk of ownership is avoided

Renting Cons

  • No chance of gaining appreciation of homes value
  • No tax deductions
  • You are paying someone else’s mortgage for them
  • Rental rates continue to rise
  • No sense of ownership

Well how do you decide which is best for you?  Its a financial decision for most people (while others may move frequently due to work, etc.).

  1. Most importantly, Run the numbers - use dontrenew.com’s Buy vs. Rent calculator to decide what makes more sense
  2. How long are you planning to live there?
  3. What is your gut feeling?  What is your sense of ownership?

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