Go to content Go to navigation Go to search

Wikipedia Explains - A lease purchase contract

September 25th, 2007 by George

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A lease purchase contract (also known as Lease Option) is a form of real estate purchase which combines elements of a traditional rental agreement with an exclusive option of right of first refusal to later purchase the home.

These contracts are commonly used where a buyer wants to purchase a home, but due to credit issues would not qualify for a conventional mortgage and does not wish to, or would not qualify, for FHA or VA financing.

Under the typical terms, the tenant/buyer chooses the home and seeks a landlord/seller to serve as an investor. The tenant/buyer then agree to a lease period, during or after which the tenant/buyer has the exclusive right to purchase the home at a previously agreed-upon price. The tenant/buyer pays to the landlord/seller a non-refundable option deposit that is applied to the purchase price of the home. The tenant/buyer then pays to the landlord/seller a sum that is typical to the rental amount usually on a monthly basis, of which a portion of that monthly payment may or may not be applied to the purchase price of the home, but which normally covers the mortgage amount owed by the landlord/seller.

Should the tenant/buyer not wish or be unable to purchase the house, the tenant and landlord can agree to extend the option period, convert the lease purchase contract into a traditional rental agreement, or end the contract with the tenant moving out and the landlord seeking other renters or buyers.

 Subscribe in a reader

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.

Read the rest of this entry »

 Subscribe in a reader

Sellers getting Creative

September 15th, 2007 by George

By Lauren Baier Kim - realestatejournal.com

Selling a home in a down market is not unlike hawking ice cream in February.

In this cold real estate climate, there aren’t many people clamoring to buy, leaving home sellers
facing a tough time. Some may go the traditional route and hire a real-estate agent at a full commission to sell their home.

But when the housing market is sluggish and home prices drop, this can be costly: a seller of a $200,000 home could pay $12,000 in real-estate commissions at a 6% rate — cutting even more into homeowners’ potential profits. Also, securing financing for a new home is increasingly difficult for many people.

In a special package of articles this week, RealEstateJournal.com looks at people who’ve sold their homes using a variety of
nontraditional methods:

• A Seattle Internet entrepreneur who posted a “Make Me Move” price of $1.25 million on Zillow.com for his condo and sold his home for close to that price.

• A widow in New Jersey, looking to downsize, swapped her home with neighbors who were looking for more space.

• A CEO decided to auction off his multimillion Florida estate after a long listing period failed to net a buyer.

• A couple who went the “for-sale-by-owner” route and left an expensive Portland, Ore., suburb for a
more affordably priced area in Montana.

• Another couple who got lucky and sold their home at a yard sale.

• Plus, some recent home sellers explain how they sold their home in the current market.

 Subscribe in a reader

Housing Market Analysis in Charleston as of 9/6/07

September 6th, 2007 by George

Here is a summary of the number of homes for sale in the Tri-County market as of September 6, 2007…

Housing Market Analysis
As of September 6, 2007

ACTIVE TOTAL ACTIVE AVERAGE ACTIVE MEDIAN
[77] BER-Daniel Island 426 $693,434 $507,500
[73] BER-G.Creek/M.Corner Hwy.17a to Hwy.52 306 $227,015 $189,900
[72] BER-G.Creek/M.Corner Hwy.52-Cooper Riv 321 $214,886 $173,500
[71] BER-Hanahan Area 231 $275,964 $229,000
[74] BER-Jedburg Rd-Black Tom-Hwy.17a-Col.Pk. 329 $407,355 $166,999
[76] BER-Moncks Corner/Pinopolis Area 218 $220,694 $172,495
[75] BER-Rural: Cross/St.Stephens/Bonneau 394 $252,605 $139,950
[78] BER-Wando/Cainhoy Area 365 $679,997 $265,000
[47] CHS-Awendaw/McClellanville Area 229 $587,358 $360,000
[46] CHS-Dewees Island 32 $956,030 $542,500
[22] CHS-Folly Beach Area to Battery Island 366 $799,887 $642,500
[44] CHS-Isle of Palms 324 $1,468,784 $1,097,000
[21] CHS-James Island 671 $378,308 $284,500
[23] CHS-Johns Island 618 $470,847 $270,340
[25] CHS-Kiawah & Seabrook Islands 391 $985,172 $629,000
[41] CHS-Mt.Pleasant North of Hwy.41 753 $511,022 $377,338
[42] CHS-Mt.Pleasant South of Hwy.41 1512 $540,423 $385,500
[31] CHS-N.Charleston Area inside I-526 254 $198,043 $129,900
[32] CHS-N.Chas./Summerville outside I-526 544 $203,045 $162,950
[51] CHS-Peninsula Chas. inside of crosstown 599 $948,928 $665,000
[52] CHS-Peninsula Chas. outside of crosstown 233 $461,538 $329,000
[13] CHS-Rural W.Ashley-Ravenel/Hollywood/Meg 371 $451,145 $264,900
[43] CHS-Sullivan’s Island 66 $2,169,741 $1,912,500
[11] CHS-W.Ashley inside I-526 to Ashley Rive 408 $420,056 $285,000
[12] CHS-W.Ashley outside I-526 to Rantowles 679 $284,984 $239,000
[24] CHS-Wadmalaw Island 78 $688,901 $499,000
[45] CHS-Wild Dunes 272 $1,163,005 $877,500
[26] CHS/CLN-Edisto Island 175 $496,021 $279,000
[82] CLN-Colleton County 454 $252,111 $119,450
[27] CLN-Edisto Beach 209 $640,701 $499,000
[88] CLR-Lake Marion Area 19 $223,447 $159,000
[87] CLR-North of Summerton 2 $1,984,950 $1,984,950
[61] DOR-N.Chas/Summerville/Ladson Area 698 $259,558 $216,450
[64] DOR-St.George/Harleyville/Reevesville 147 $377,451 $125,000
[62] DOR-Summerville/Ladson Area to Hwy.165 492 $235,088 $178,945
[63] DOR-Summerville/Ridgeville Area 1091 $246,395 $194,990
[84] ORG-Lake Marion Area 32 $291,508 $264,500
[83] ORG-Orangeburg County 73 $270,567 $159,900
[81] Out of Area 312 $611,520 $295,000

 Subscribe in a reader