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Countrywide Foreclosure Article
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Free Estimates for Fixing up Your Foreclosure Properties Can Yield a significant Savings in Your Overall Budget
from:No doubt you are planning on investing in foreclosure properties because you will want to take advantage of the downward slope in the US real estate market at this time. You will be able to purchase properties at well below market value and that is a consider feather in your financial cap so to speak. Your work does not end after obtaining the loan for financing and paying the closing fees on the foreclosure properties.
Though you may be able to rent out the foreclosure properties as is, especially if you were shrewd enough to purchase only the most quality foreclosure properties in good areas. You will no doubt have to do some fixing up. You want your foreclosure properties to continuously appreciate so that you can get maximum dollar value in the future should you decide to resell.
What you need to do from the start is get an estimate from a qualified professional on how much the repair and renovations will cost on your foreclosure properties before you even buy them. If not then, right after the purchase so that you can avoid damage and deteriorations on foreclosure properties from escalating beyond your financial control.
Actually, you can get free estimates on the cost of fixing up your foreclosure properties and that will help save you money when you are planning your own financial budget.
You will get to see most of the foreclosure properties before purchasing. The banks will let you see properties and so will government owned properties in many states offered by the HUD and VA programs. There may be a little more difficulty viewing properties put up at auctions but it is not entirely impossible to see them either. Inquire with state laws what your rights are in this manner.
How Many Free Estimates are Needed?
• Get several estimates upon the same property and same work to be done on that property. Do not just accept the first bid for the job.
• Get estimates over the telephone, to insure that you do not have to pay for the cost of your estimate.
• Make it clear to the prospective contractors that you are looking for free estimates at this time.
Compare prices
• Do not invite each professional at the same time, talk to them individually ask as many questions about the work as you need: What work needs to be done, how will it be done, how long will it take to do it, what are the labor costs, and how much will it cost up front and at the end of the contract.
• Ask about the refurbishing costs (bringing property up to standards) and how long the existing appliances or things like the electrical and plumbing systems should last in their existing state.
• Ask about the replacement costs for parts.
• Take the initiate to go to the hardware stores and price these items to see if the contractor is being honest or overcharging you for the pieces.
• Use online cost estimates on fixing up properties, such as the Home Remodel and Cost Guide by Marshall & Swift, this guide is widely used through the Industry.
• Get an estimate from the hardware or home improvement center before soliciting professional contractor estimates.
Wherever possible do your own repair work in order to cut down on fixer upper costs. Use your own people, before contracting to a private company. However if a professional team can get material at discount and you need quite a bit of material to fix up your foreclosure properties, you will have to weight the material cost against labor cost to see which direction will yield the highest savings for you.
Countrywide Foreclosure News
Foreclosure Prevention Event to Be Held Thursday
A group of mortgage lenders and nonprofit housing organizations will hold a free foreclosure prevention event in Milwaukee on Thursday.
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...Foreclosure sales May 21-25, 2012
The Volusia County Clerk of Court conducts its foreclosure sales at 11 a.m. in conference room D-251 of the Volusia County Courthouse at 101 N. Alabama Ave., DeLand. The Flagler County Clerk of Court conducts sales at 11 a.m. on...
Read more...First Person: 2012 Foreclosure Complaint Deadline Extended
The Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC) extended the deadline for filing a complaint about a foreclosure. In December, 2011 the agency sent letters to homeowners affected by foreclosure that may have suffered financial injury as a result of errors, misrepresentations, or other deficiencies in foreclosure proceedings. The OCC regulates and supervises national banks and Federal Savings ...
Read more...2 More Reasons to Sell Bank of America
The following video is part of our "Motley Fool Conversations" series, in which financial and economics sector head Ilan Moscovitz and consumer-goods editor and analyst Austin Smith discuss topics around the investing world.
Read more...Foreclosure sales May 14-18, 2012
The Volusia County Clerk of Court conducts foreclosure sales at 11 a.m. in conference room D-251 of the Courthouse at 101 N. Alabama Ave., DeLand. The Flagler County Clerk of Court conducts sales at 11 a.m. on the second floor...
Read more...Gazette.Net: Bowie hosts free foreclosure workshop Wednesday
Homeowners struggling with foreclosures and mortgages can learn more about possibly applying for financial relief and other assistance at a free Homeowner Relief and Foreclosure Prevention Workshop scheduled from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesday at the Kenhill Center in Bowie.
Read more...BofA hiking relocation aid for troubled homeowners
(Reuters) - Bank of America Corp said on Tuesday it had launched a nationwide program that offers increased relocation payments to delinquent mortgage customers who complete qualifying short sales. The second-largest U.S. bank said the program, tested in Florida last year, offers payments of between $2,500 and $30,000 to help homeowners move out of their homes. A short sale is when a lender ...
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