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Tax credit money available UP FRONT — right here in Pinellas County
I’ve written on the blog several times about the $8,000 federal tax credit. Now, the federal government has tinkered with it to make that $8,000 more useable in the form of cash that can be used up-front for down payments.
The tax credit, which is available to first-time homebuyers through Nov. 30, provides up to $8,000. The money becomes available in the following year, when the buyer files his or her tax return.
And that has been the problem. Most buyers need the $8,000 for the down payment or other up-front costs, but the money actually arrives later, not sooner.
Some states (including Florida) have taken the initiative to provide money that can be advanced or borrowed in time to use it for the down payment, then paid back later when the federal dollars actually arrive. The Florida Legislature just did that, providing a pool of a little more than $30 million that first-time homeowners can draw on in anticipation of the federal tax credit money.
Well, now the federal government has woken up to this issue. First time homebuyers who apply for financing that is insured by the Federal Housing Administration may be able to get cash advances or loans that will provide the tax credit money up front, in time to use for the down payment or closing costs.
Housing and Urban Development Secretary Shaun Donovan says the idea is to “monetize” the tax credit, meaning that the government policy will now change to turn the tax credit into immediate cash money. That’s important, because the government estimates that half of all first-time home buyers, and maybe more than that, don’t possess enough money to cover the down payment on their new home; making that money available up-front could double the number of people able to buy a new home, according to the National Association of Homebuilders.
Here is how the FHA plan will work:
Approved lenders (that is, those lenders who have been approved to do business with the FHA) get authorized by the FHA to provide bridge loans at closing. Those bridge loans are secured
only by the tax credit. And government agencies and nonprofits will be authorized to offer bridge loans or second mortgages, financing that is secured by the value in the property being purchased.
Visit the HUD site at www.hud.gov to learn more. And get in touch with me at 727-643-7100 or at beth@bethfrederick.com – I can provide good professional counsel and advice on how to get and leverage the tax credit to your best advantage. It’s a good idea to stop back frequently at www.pinellasnewsboy.com, also — as new tax credit developments happen, I’ll post them here.

