| Why
Buying a Home is a Good Idea
Income
Tax Savings
Because of
income tax deductions, the government is subsidizing your
purchase of a home. All of the interest and property taxes
you pay in a given year can be deducted from your gross
income to reduce your taxable income.
For example,
assume your initial loan balance is $150,000 with an interest
rate of eight percent. During the first year you would
pay $9969.27 in interest. If your first payment is January
1st, your taxable income would be almost $10,000
less – due to the IRS interest rate deduction.
Property
taxes are deductible, too. Whatever property taxes you
pay in a given year may also be deducted from your gross
income, lowering your tax obligation.
Stable
Monthly Housing Costs
When you
rent a place to live, you can certainly expect your rent
to increase each year – or even more often. If you get
a fixed rate mortgage when you buy a home, you have the
same monthly payment amount for thirty years. Even if
you get an adjustable rate mortgage, your payment will
stay within a certain range for the entire life of the
mortgage – and interest rates aren’t as volatile now as
they were in the late seventies and early eighties.
Imagine how
much rent might be ten, fifteen, or even thirty years
from now? Which makes more sense?
Forced Savings
Some people
are just lousy at saving money, and a house is an automatic
savings account. You accumulate savings in two ways. Every
month, a portion of your payment goes toward the principal.
Admittedly, in the early years of the mortgage, this is
not much. Over time, however, it accelerates.
Second, your
home appreciates. Average appreciation on a home is approximately
five percent, though it will vary from year to year, and
in some years may even depreciate.. Over time, history
has shown that owning a home is one of the very best financial
investments.
copyright
2000 by Terry Light and RealEstate ABC, revised 2002
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