Whether you are buying or selling Real Estate, information about the current market is important for you to make the Right decision.
Char McPherson, Realtor, provides information that impacts your Home Buying and Selling position.

Oct 30, 2009

Straight from Washington:

Senators reached a compromise to extend the $8,000 tax credit for first-time home buyers, a boost the housing industry expects will help it pull out of its two-year-old downturn.

Lawmakers in Washington also added a $6,500 tax credit for other primary-home purchasers and raised the qualifying income limits to $125,000 for single taxpayers and $225,000 for joint taxpayers, housing-industry sources said.

Under the Senate compromise, buyers must have sales agreements in hand by April 30, but they will have until June 30 to go to settlement, the sources said. The measure still faces votes in the full Senate and the House.


The tax credit is no longer only for first time home buyers. Homeowners can now "move up" to a larger home and receive a tax credit. Nice...Really Nice!