Posts Tagged ‘foeclosures’

Foreclosure Homes Bargains Lost In Taxes

Thursday, December 20th, 2007

Banks are in a hurry to sell off repossessed houses that are nothing but white elephants. In the process the buyer might be lucky to pick up a bargain at 30% to 40% less than the price of few years ago. But that gain is cancelled when the tax is calculated not at the rate of purchase but by its current market value.

Greg Smith is the assessor and conducts valuation with the help of his staff. He is on the alert when family members sell to each other. The market value determines the assessment and not the good will of selling easy to a favourite brother. In terms of hard cash a buyer who has paid $350,000 for a bank owned condo would have to pay taxes for the unit being valued at $450,000. So at the end of the story it does not turn out to be much of a bargain!

The assessors are a strict lot – determined to scrutinize the market and not emotions. But of late there is hardly any work. With foreclosures on the march there are more and more foreclosures and fewer buyers. So who will assess what? The workload of assessment offices has gone down by 10%.
On the other hand innumerable house owners have applied for reduction of property taxes because real estate value is falling. The result is that municipalities and state government collections boxes are sounding empty. There are no sales and values are falling in a superheated real estate market. The owners of houses are pressing the tax agencies to lower house taxes to allow them elbowroom. A house purchased for $700,000 a year ago is now worth $60,000. This means that in a year $1,000 should be saved in taxes. In many cases the loaned amount is more than the worth of the house. This is causing many investors to just walk away from the proverbial bad loan.

About 13,500 house owners in the county appealed between July and November for a review of property tax. Last year there had been 3,300 requests filed during the entire twelve months ranging from July 2006 to July 2007. These fresh appeals are exclusive of 11,500 units whose taxes have already been lowered. The question that pops up is that banks repossessed houses are going for a song but does it or does it not determine the parameter of valuation?

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