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Banks Home Foreclosure Article
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The Quality of the Neighborhood is an Important consideration when Purchasing a Foreclosure Home
from:When you are prospecting for a foreclosure, home the neighborhood should be taken into consideration. We all want to have a great home, but the neighborhood also plays a big part in the value of the foreclosure home purchase.
Investigate the area:
• What is the surrounding property like? Is it well kept or rundown? Is it a residential area exclusive to homeowners or is there a mixture of homes and rental units sandwiched together?
• Is the community stagnant, deteriorating, or being built up?
• Is there commercial property in the area? Are their retail stores and grocery chains either already in the neighborhood are considering coming into it?
• Will you have easy access to retail outlets without having to use your car each time you need a loaf of bread or and gallon of milk?
• Do you have access to buses and taxis, trains, subways or other public transportation?
• How many for sale and for rent signs are visible? From a foreclosure home purchase standpoint, it is always a more lucrative investment if there are more homeowners than renters or tenants in the immediate area. Property values are higher in an area that caters to homeowners.
• Not only is it important to consider the condition and age of the foreclosure home you are considering, it is also important to look at the age and maintenance level of all the homes in the area.
• Similarly, consider the age and quality of the cars in the area as well as the city maintenance of the roads and streets. Are there quiet residential streets or busy thoroughfares?
• Are the sidewalks clean and litter free, is there a good quality trash collection system, are the public parks well maintained?
• Are there community centers, schools, training centers, career opportunities in the area or close to the area in which you would like to buy foreclosure home?
• How good are the schools rated in the area?
• Consider the noise factor if you will purchase a foreclosure home in the vicinity of a industrial park, opposite an elementary or high school, or within the downtown core where there is traffic congestion, night clubs and various other night life activity.
• What is the level of security in the area? Are there hospitals, clinics, fire stations, and police stations? Is there a neighborhood watch?
• What is the crime rate in the area?
As you can see from the details provided above that purchasing a foreclosure home is more than merely living in a home, it is a community investment. For more tips on community living click on the site U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development
Banks Home Foreclosure News
Activists Protest Woodland Home’s Foreclosure
Activists from Occupy Sacramento and Woodland are going to battle this morning attempting to stop the eviction of Woodland family from their home after they say bank mistakes lead to foreclosure.
Read more...Florida foreclosure case could slam banks
NEW YORK (Reuters) - The Florida Supreme Court is set to hear oral arguments Thursday in a lawsuit that could undo hundreds of thousands of foreclosures and open up banks to severe financial liabilities in the state where they face the bulk of their foreclosure-fraud litigation. The court is deciding whether banks who used fraudulent documents to file foreclosure lawsuits can dismiss the cases ...
Read more...Oakland law would pressure banks over blight
The Oakland City Council unanimously expanded an aggressive blight program late Tuesday to include homes in the earliest stages of the foreclosure process. Banks would be required to register homes in a city blight...
Read more...Stay at Home Moms Face Credit Card Challenges
Credit in America has really changed since the banking crisis a few years ago. Gone are the days of practically free credit and rebuilding or establishing credit post-foreclosure, post-bankruptcy or even post-divorce is an entirely too common task.
Read more...Short-sale Aid Takes Shape
Banks might be coming around to the idea that helping people behind on their mortgages sell their properties might make more sense than foreclosing.
Read more...POLL: FORECLOSED HOUSES’ UPKEEP IS JOB OF BANKS
An idea that would force banks to register every city of San Diego home that’s in the foreclosure process is gaining traction.
Read more...Fewer U.S. Homes Seized By Banks in April
LOS ANGELES (AP) — National foreclosure trends took a positive turn in April, as the number of homes seized by banks declined and fewer properties entered into the foreclosure process.
Read more...US foreclosure trends improved April, but state-level data point to more repossessions ahead
National foreclosure trends took a positive turn in April, as the number of homes seized by banks declined and fewer properties entered into the foreclosure process.
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