FINANCIAL REASONS TO BUY A HOME

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Eric Belsky is Managing Director of the Joint Center of Housing Studies at Harvard University. He also currently serves on the editorial board of the Journal of Housing Research and Housing Policy Debate. This year he released a new paper on homeownership - The Dream Lives On: the Future of Homeownership in America. In his paper, Belsky reveals six financial reasons people should consider buying Home or an Ingleside Terrace Homes.

Here are the six reasons, each followed by an excerpt from the study:

1.) Housing is typically the one leveraged investment available.

Few households are interested in borrowing money to buy stocks and bonds and few lenders are willing to lend them the money. As a result, homeownership allows households to amplify any appreciation on the value of their homes by a leverage factor. Even a hefty 20 percent down payment results in a leverage factor of five so that every percentage point rise in the value of the home is a 5 percent return on their equity. With many buyers putting 10 percent or less down, their leverage factor is 10 or more.

2.) You’re paying for housing whether you own or rent.

Homeowners pay debt service to pay down their own principal while households that rent pay down the principal of a landlord.

3.) Owning is usually a form of forced savings.

Since many people have trouble saving and have to make a housing payment one way or the other, owning a Ingleside Terrace Homes home can overcome people tendency to defer savings to another day.

4.) There are substantial tax benefits to owning.

Homeowners are able to deduct mortgage interest and property taxes from income...On top of all this, capital gains up to $250,000 are excluded from income for single filers and up to $500,000 for married couples if they sell their homes for a gain.”

5.) Owning is a hedge against inflation.

Housing costs and rents have tended over most time periods to go up at or higher than the rate of inflation, making owning an attractive proposition.

6.) Homeownerships impact on net worth

Over the last five years, homeownership has lost some of its allure as a financial investment. As home owners suffered through the housing bust, more and more began to question whether owning an Ingleside Terrace Homes was truly a good way to build wealth. A recent study by the Federal Reserve formally answered this question.

Two of the findings revealed in their report:

A homeowner’s net worth is over thirty times greater than that of a renter.

The average homeowner has a net worth of $174,500 while the average net worth of a renter is $5,100.

Bottom Line

The Fed study found that homeownership is still a great way for a family to build wealth in America. We realize that homeownership makes sense for many Americans for many social and family reasons. It also makes sense financially.

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