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Monday, March 24, 2008

GOOD NEWS - Your Home's Value is Falling! (huh?)

The rapid decline in housing values has been a bit shocking for many folks and has resulted in a lot of lost wealth (did we ever really have that money to begin with)? According to Standard and Poor's Case-Shiller index, home prices have dropped an average of 14% since March 2007 and more than 30-40% from the peak in some areas (viva Las Vegas condo living). But, there is a silver lining in all of this morass - your property taxes should be falling, too! In Florida, for example, property taxes have soared along with home prices. A $500,000 home in Tampa, Orlando or Miami, which is a 3-4 bedroom home in a reasonably nice area (hardly a mansion) will set you back some $10,000 in taxes per year (yes, you are renting your home from the government despite being told you are a "homeowner" - but that's another posting)! That same house would have cost you $200,000 and $4,000 per year in taxes a recently as 2002 and is now worth $400,000 or less (if you can find a buyer).

But, there is a catch! It's not the "true value" of your home that matters when it comes to taxes, it's the assessed value. This is where it gets tricky - places like California have wierd laws such as Proposition 13 and Proposition 8, which serve to confuse the heck out of homeowners. I have a friend that had to take his local property appraiser to court TWICE! in order to get his property taxes reduced. He won on both occasions, but it was not without a fight. In this time of strapped municipal budgets and a slowing economy, I would encourage you to do your homework and be sure that your property is assessed at the proper value since your government is more likely to leave your values too high. With prices expected to continue to fall over the next 1-2 years (especially in once hot markets like Florida, Las Vegas, California, etc.), now is a good time to make sure you aren't paying your local government too much of your hard-earned money.

If you'd like to learn more about your state's property tax system, go grab a six-pack and get hammered because you must be crazy...just kidding. You can visit http://www.assessor.com, which offers quite a bit of information on this topic as well as links to many local property appraiser offices. If your office is not on this page, head to www.P2P-Loans.com and use the Google search box at the bottom of the page. Enter "'your county name' property appraiser website" and you will most likely see your local site pop up.

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