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How To Get A Better Deal On Kit Home Mortgages

By: Chairman

There are several forms of real-estate investment.
Generally, undeveloped land, containing no or minimal
structures (unlike cottage or farm property), provides the
best growth potential, but it also carries greater risk.
Developed land, holding residential and/or commercial
buildings, offers less risk. Developed land with rental
property can, of course, provide you with steady income
from the rents.

Real estate as an investment often suffers from a lack of
liquidity and marketability compared with other forms of
investment. Such a comparison may seem totally irrelevant
when considering your home, but during a financial crisis,
the liquidity and marketability of your investment can be
crucial.

Owning a Kit home is becoming one of life's traditional
goals. That's natural, since people would rather see those
monthly payments go into their own property than into
someone else's. Kit Home ownership is a good financial
goal, it's a good investment, and it can help you from a
tax standpoint.

But if you are a Kit Homeowner, or inspire to be one,
you've got to know how to handle the mortgage. You can save
enormous sums of money by getting the right mortgage and
paying it off fast. Remember, the more money you can save
in one area of your personal financial portfolio, the more
money you can make in another.

To help you understand this important subject, put yourself
in the following:

What if you're shopping for a mortgage? The manager at your
bank wants your business and offers you a 25-year loan at 8
percent. He/she have been helpful to you in the past, and
you like to deal with them. But on the way to your car, you
pass another bank with a sign in the window promoting
25-year mortgages at 7.5 percent.

Do you forget about the second bank and stay with your
bank? Or walk in and sign a deal with the second bank? Or
look for other alternatives? None of those answers is
wrong, but, as is usual in life, some are better than
others. For instance, you may decide that because of your
past relationship with your bank, you'd rather place your
mortgage there. That may be the right course, but before
you make up your mind, take time to calculate what that
loyalty is going to cost.

Assume that you want to borrow $70,000. At 8 percent,
amortized over 25 years, your monthly payment would be
$540.27; at 7.5 percent, you'd pay $517.29. That's a
difference of only $22.98.

But the argument for switching becomes a bit more
compelling when you multiply the monthly difference by 12
and realize you've given your 8-percent mortgage lender an
unnecessary $275.76 over a year. While that's not a vast
sum, it's a credit that would look better on your personal
balance sheet than it would in the bank's annual report.

Now, take a look at just how astonishing those numbers
really get. You're looking at a 25-year term for your Kit
Home mortgage. So over that time, you'll pay $6,894 more by
taking your bank's mortgage. If you signed with the second
bank, you could put that money aside.

Now that you've seen the difference just half a point can
make, look at some even more amazing numbers. Mortgages are
set up in such a way that for the first several years, most
of the money you pay is interest. Very little goes toward
reducing your principal.

What this means is, simply that any additional payments you
can make in the early stages of a Kit Home mortgage will
have an almost unbelievable impact on the total interest
you'll have to pay to make your Kit Home your own. Current
federal-tax laws allow you to deduct Kit Home mortgage
interest you pay. So, you will have to take that into
consideration when you determine the net savings after you
find a cheaper rate of interest.

Article Source: http://www.europe-property.org/articles

Steven is the senior project manager for All Kit Homes, Inc Covering national and international home construction, commercial and industrial facilities. Contact at: 877-620-7951 www.allkithomes.com

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