Monday, April 25, 2011

Home Sellers - Smart Fix Ups to Sell For Top Dollar Contact Nj Real Estate expert Bob Rose JR for a free Market Analysis on your Nj Home today! 908-295-1807



Your home is not in great shape, 30 years old and it looks every day of it. There are some things you must do just to get rid of it, why not do a little more and make some money on the deal? 7 fix ups to help you sell fast and get top dollar.
1) Curb Appeal - Dress up the landscape add mulch at all planting areas shape into curved borders, use to cover around all trees spread wide and cover bare areas. The mulch will help define the landscape, add flowers and shrubs, cut and edge lawn. Keep trim and turn mulch for fresh appearance.
2) Exterior Problems - Roof is way past its life span (the buyers home inspector or Bank appraiser will require it to be replaced, so why not do it before at a cost you can negotiate) replace roof use Architectural grade shingles costs more in material but the labor is the same. Replace any damaged or rotted wood including decks and porches. Repaint exterior siding, trim, windows and shutters.
3) Doors and Windows - Make sure every one is operating properly it is well worth the cost to have a contractor come in and make everything work. New window balances, locks, replace broken and fogged glass, adjust all doors, thresholds, and locksets. Patio sliders always are misaligned replace rollers for better operation, install new screen.
4) Appliances and Mechanical Systems - If your appliances are more than 10 years old replace them they don't work efficiently and are way out of style. No need to buy high end but they must be high style. Match all kitchen appliances pick a contemporary look. No doubt the mechanical systems are big ticket items a 30 year old a/c unit must go, air handler unit compare cost of refurbish versus replacement. Water heater should have been replaced 10 years earlier if not replace.
5) Kitchens and Baths - Your counter tops are beat up replace or refinish. Wood cabinets can be repainted or refinished, change out hardware new door handles and drawer pulls. Replace faucets with new contemporary look. Check light fixtures there are great low cost designer fixtures at the big box stores.
6) Flooring - Ceramic tile if in good condition consider cleaning and staining the grout for a new fresh look. Replace carpet and padding use good quality not high end. Vinyl flooring if not newer replace. Hardwood floors scratched dull no shine refinish.
7) Walls and Ceilings - Repaint every room paint walls and trim in complementary neutral 2-color. Paint ceilings white. Paint all doors both sides same as trim. Make house as fresh and new as possible.
Every item on this list will affect your listing agent their market analysis and suggested list price of your home. They each will affect the buyer and the buyer's agent in what the offer price will be. Even if they over look some items when the home inspector comes in they will nail every one of these repairs with an estimated cost of two to three times the actual cost you can negotiate. This home in 30 year old condition will sell at 20% below the market with these fix ups as a top condition home with warranties you can get 10% to 15% above the market. A 35% difference and a great part of that stays in your pocket.

Bob Rose JR is a Nj lic Realtor with 18 years of top Real Estate experience and knowledge. Please visit Bob's top rated NJ Real Estate site for all NJ Real Estate and beyond informationwww.bridgewaternjhomes.com or call Bob direct @ 908-295-1807.


First Time Home Buying Ideas. Contact Bob Rose for all your NJ Real Estate Needs! 908-295-1807 or visit Bob @ www.bridgewaternjhomes.com

The state agency created by the legislature in New Jersey to offer first time home buyer programs is the New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency. Here is a summary of the current first time home buyer programs that are offered:
First Time and Urban Target Area

A below-market, fixed interest rate is offered to first-time home buyers and urban area buyers. Down payments of as little as three percent are required and must come from the borrower's own assets. Loans are 30-year fixed rate. Certain closing costs can be gifted by family members, non-profit organizations or government agencies. Debt to income ratios are as high as 33 percent (housing debt, i.e., mortgage, taxes, insurance) and up to 38 percent (total monthly debt load). Please see the latest income and purchase price limits. Further detail is available by calling 1-800-NJ-HOUSE.
Smart Start

Accumulating the funds for down payment and closing costs is a common barrier to potential homeowners. The Smart Start Program helps families purchasing homes in Smart Growth areas by offering a second mortgage for down payment and/or closing costs. Borrowers earning less than 80% of HMFA's Home Buyer county income limits are eligible to receive 4% of the first mortgage amount. For more details, contact HMFA at 1-800-NJ-HOUSE.
Police and Fire Mortgage

Active members of the New Jersey Police and Firemen's Retirement System (PFRS) with one year of creditable service are eligible for this program. Members may buy a home (first-time or trade-up) or refinance an existing home. Maximum mortgage amount is $ 359,650. Interest rate is 30 year fixed. Program rates are set semi-annually in February and August. Further detail is available by calling 1-800-NJ-HOUSE.
Home Plus

A fixed interest rate home mortgage to qualified first-time and urban area home buyers with immediate home improvement needs. Homeowners are allowed to finance up to $15,000 toward home repairs and improvements as part of the first mortgage. Improvements allowed include replacing a roof, painting, installing improved heating or air conditioning systems, renovating a kitchen or bath, renovating plumbing or electrical systems and enlarging rooms. Energy conservation and solar energy improvements are also eligible. Handicap accessibility improvements are also eligible repairs. Please see the latest income and purchase price limits. Further detail is available by calling 1-800-NJ-HOUSE.
HOPE Program

HOPE is an employer guaranteed loan program that offers no down payment, below-market, fixed rate mortgages to eligible employees without private mortgage insurance. Employers must be approved by the HMFA. The program adheres to the same mortgage program requirements as the Home Buyer Program. Any size company can participate. The employer can establish qualifications in addition to HMFA program restrictions. Please see the latest income and purchase price limits. Further detail is available by calling 1-800-NJ-HOUSE.
100% Financing

Provides no down payment, no mortgage insurance, mortgage loans at pre-approved new or rehabilitated single-family housing developments and for certain newly constructed units. Down payment and closing cost assistance may be available under this program. First-time and urban area buyers are eligible for 30-year fixed rate financing at the HMFA's prevailing interest rate. The program is subject to funding and housing availability.
 
For complete details on these first time home buyer programs available to New Jersey residents, visit the New Jersey Housing and Mortgage Finance Agency website.
It is highly recommend that you also visit the First Time Home Buyer Grants page for free  assistance with the down payment.

Best Lender For First Time Home Buyer Loans


Unfortunately, some lenders do not like to work with first time home buyers (due to not having a track record), and prefer instead to only provide mortgages to people who have previously owned a home. If you do not need help with the down payment and are not in need of any state program, search for a lender that has great rates, an easy online application, and welcome first time home buyers. Additionally find one that has not been as severely hurt by the subprime mortgage crisis and are still approving the majority of applications.

Women become a force in home buying Contact Bob Rose JR Your NJ Real Estate Specialist. Bridgewaternjhomes.com


Women become a force in home buying


Buying a homeThe antiquated notion that a "woman's place is in the home" now has a more modern twist.
Women are finding their places in homes, all right, and in record numbers. But this time, they're crossing the thresholds of single-family residences sans spouses.
In fact, single women have been out-muscling single men as first-time home buyers at a rate of about two to one over the past half decade, National Association of Realtors research indicates.
In 2002, approximately 18 percent of all first-home buyers in the U.S. were single women while just 9 percent were men, according to preliminary data from the National Association of Realtors' forthcoming Profile of Homebuyers and Sellers. Those numbers are up from 2001 tallies, when single women constituted 15 percent of the home-buying market and single men, 7 percent.
"Women need a sense of financial security and they obviously see a home as a sound investment," says Walter Malony, industry-trend specialist for the NAR. It's also far easier for single women to get a mortgage than two decades ago, he adds.
Setting the stage were several changes in lending standards, including a general relaxing of underwriting/down-payment requirements for home purchases and the FHA's push to allow single parents to count child support as income.
Protracted low interest rates and low down-payment programs also contribute to the trend, say analysts, as do chronically high divorce rates.  bridgewaternjhomes.com contact Your local NJ Real Estate Specialist  Bob Rose Jr. 908-295-1807

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The single-woman home buying phenomenon is not just a U.S. phenomenon. In Great Britain, the same segment is forsaking rental flats for self-owned homes at an even higher rate. More than 21 percent of first-time home buyers in the U.K. in 2002 were single women, according to Her Mortgage, which specializes in women home-buyer services.
The rise in single female buyers
Back in the states, some of the country's top residential real estate firms have seen their customer base of single women buyer grow sharply in recent years, including Pittsburgh-based Howard Hanna Real Estate Services, which has 65 offices in Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and New York.
Single women now comprise about 20 percent of the operation's first-time buyers system wide, said its president, Helen Hanna Casey.
"We see more families encouraging their daughters to own homes -- and not just be content to wait until they get married," she said. "Women are making more money and they are exerting more control over their destinies."
Single men, on the other hand, don't show the same nesting instinct, she said. "And their parents don't seem to be as concerned about the same type of security for them."
Women are also no longer bound by the notion that they must buy a house for life, so they are less apprehensive about buying a lower-cost abode because they realize they can sell with relative ease in this more transient, move-up society as their lives change, Casey said.
"We have women who might have rented for 20 to 25 years who are now buying in new (suburban) communities for a different lifestyle. Then we see a lot of young people who have moved back here from Washington, New York or Boston. They are buying new homes instead of moving back with their parents."
Casey said the single-woman home-buyer push began in earnest about eight years ago and has not abated.
Steven Lowenstein, a Realtor with Coletta & Associates of Cincinnati, said he too has seen an increase in the segment.
Women shop harder for homes
Lowenstein notes a distinct difference in the house-hunting habits of women which may contribute to the trend. "Women will go out and look at homes all day long, eight days a week," he said. "Men? Well, you have to just about drag them out."
He suggests that first-time women home buyers seek out a woman mortgage banker if possible. "Like a woman doctor, they may be more sensitive to a woman's needs," he said. It's odd, he notes, that while residential real estate is dominated by women, its chief funding instrument, mortgage banking, is still largely male dominated. That's slowly changing, but there are still be plenty of career opportunities for women in the mortgage business, said Lowenstein, who pens a regular local real estate column.
Lowenstein suggests that all first-time buyers get pre-qualified for a loan before starting their search, so they'll have a realistic price range to work with from the beginning and use their hunting time more efficiently.
"Single home buyers might give a little more thought to condominiums and townhomes because there will be other singles around, and a variety of community services such as exercise facilities," he added.
The National Association of Realtors estimates that 47 percent of condominium owners are single women.
Easing the intimidation factor
Doug Perry, first vice president of Countrywide Home Loans, said the home-buying process can be intimidating to first-timers of either sex. He said they should not hesitate to get free expert advice from lenders, either via phone or Web sites. "It shouldn't cost you a thing until you sign (for the loan)," he said.
Countrywide has seen an increase in first-time women buyers, in part due to low down-payment programs and other products that make buying easier, Perry said. "It helps buyers keep up with those rapidly rising home prices."
Perry has also seen women's earning and home buying power grow significantly in recent years.
Brian Sullivan, spokesman for the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development, said there is no gender-specific program available for first-time women home buyers, but HUD's American Dream Down Payment Initiative, plus its home-buying Housing Counseling program, as well as a proliferation of low down- payment programs are assisting new home buyers in unprecedented numbers.
"The down payment is the single greatest obstacle facing first-time buyers," said Sullivan. "But today, more Americans own their homes than at any time in the past."
Lenders notice the shift
Muriel Siebert, founder of the Women's Financial Network at Siebert, said banks are starting to cater more to female home buyers. "They know they're good customers, and we're seeing more people at these institutions who are tuned into women home buyers, and to women business owners."
Siebert's organization, which provides financial advice for women, cites a Long Island University study that says a woman's standard of living drops from 27 to 45 percent in the year following a divorce, while a man's rises 10 percent or more -- factors that obviously can make it tougher for the woman to buy and sustain a home.
"We have more women working today who are the key supporters of their family and they want to give themselves and their family stability," said Siebert, who was formerly banking superintendent of the state of New York and the first woman to own a seat on the New York Stock Exchange.
Women can face unique life-changing events, and may be more prone to drop out of the workforce to raise children or care for an aging parent. And that can drop pension and retirement benefits precipitously, said Siebert.
"Because women are living longer, their need for future financial stability is even more of a concern. Owning a home gives them that stability."

Saturday, April 16, 2011

Suburb of the week, Watchung NJ. Brought to you by Bob Rose Jr 908-295-1807 or bridgewaternjhomes.com

Robert Rose Jr is a NJ Real Estate expert with listing and selling NJ Real Estate visit bob below at his top website

Home Values and Rental Rates

2010 Homeowner Statistics and Home ValuesWatchung, NJNew JerseyUnited States
Owner Occupied Units1,7932,155,69280,110,230
Owner Households, With Mortgage Any64.25%72.07%70.65%
Owner Households, With No Mortgage35.75%27.93%29.35%
Median Value Owner Households$632,500$250,242$177,046
Valued Less than $20,0000.00%0.29%1.98%
Valued $20,000-$39,9990.00%0.63%3.31%
Valued $40,000-$59,9990.00%1.27%5.64%
Valued $60,000-$79,9990.00%1.38%4.79%
Valued $80,000-$99,9990.06%3.70%8.96%
Valued $100,000-$124,9990.06%5.37%8.79%
Valued $125,000-$149,9990.00%6.44%7.92%
Valued $150,000-$174,9990.00%8.24%7.94%
Valued $175,000-$199,9990.22%10.97%8.11%
Valued $200,000-$249,9990.61%11.63%7.66%
Valued $250,000-$299,9993.57%13.17%8.72%
Valued $300,000-$399,9997.98%12.83%8.63%
Valued $400,000-$499,99918.29%9.64%6.36%
Valued $500,000-$749,99936.25%9.11%6.34%
Valued $750,000-$999,99920.25%3.70%3.01%
Valued More than $1,000,00012.72%1.63%1.84%
2010 Housing Rental RatesWatchung, NJNew JerseyUnited States
Renter Occupied Units4211,089,42938,291,913
Median Rent$1,152$1,116$950
Rent Less than $2500.00%1.76%3.11%
Rent $250-$4990.24%2.83%6.19%
Rent $500-$7490.00%2.66%18.33%
Rent $750-$9995.23%21.91%24.67%
Rent $1,000-$1,24973.40%41.26%24.03%
Rent $1,250-$1,49918.53%11.60%7.13%
Rent $1,500-$1,9990.48%9.34%7.07%
Rent $2,000+2.14%5.35%4.19%
No Cash Rent0.00%3.29%5.28%
Information is deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Demographic Information FAQ