| 6LV.com Home | Business Articles Index |
Shopper Favorites
Personal Search Portal
MALL.ShopperFavorites .com
Over 1,500,000 Products and Growing!
Hot Searches @ Shopper Favorites
  • fantasy football free league pick
  • credit card processors
  • outdoor recreation
  • nfl football weekly pick
  • legal help louisiana
  • website design
  • check credit for cards
  • New Jersey Lawye
  • nfl football game
  • computer graphics

  • Real Estate: Financial Considerations $$$  

    by Dan Auito

    You have permission to publish this article electronically
    or in print, free of charge, as long as the bylines are
    included. A courtesy copy of your publication would be
    appreciated - send to: magicbullets@alaska.com


    Real Estate: Financial Considerations $$$


    Raw land as opposed to improved property is much more difficult
    to finance through traditional lenders. The main reasons are that
    it generates very little income, development costs can be
    expensive, there are no buildings or improvements that can be
    used as collateral, and it is often considered speculative.

    For those reasons mentioned we find that sellers are often our
    first choice regarding financing. It is typical for a seller of
    raw land to accept 10 percent down and the rest to be paid over time at
    a specified (below market) interest rate. This would be an
    example of an installment land contract. Other forms are contract
    for deed, mortgage and note and purchase money mortgages. In
    these cases, a real estate attorney usually drafts these
    contracts and a bank will act as an escrow agent to facilitate
    verifiable records of payments received. The seller often retains
    the deed until the property is paid for in full.

    If you want to investigate bank financing, then you may start out
    by offering 30 percent down with a seven-year mortgage, with the bank
    getting an extra percentage point over and above the current
    interest rates for standard loans. This may not be accepted, but
    it does give you a starting point to see just what they may be
    willing to do.

    If you plan on building on your land, then having a development
    plan with an appraised set of blue prints for the project will
    help the lender in justifying your loan. If you can use equity
    from other property, then paying substantial down payments may
    also be an option.

    Final words of caution here are to know values and don’t
    overpay. Always offer less when possible and research recent
    sales of comparable properties. The larger a parcel is, the
    cheaper it tends to get per acre. Ask an agent what an acre of
    land tends to go for in the area that you are considering; try to
    buy more than one acre.

    When buying residential lots, builders try to keep raw land costs
    down to 10 percent of the overall value of the project. If streets and
    utilities are already in place, then they will use 25 percent as their
    guideline. If you can combine or assemble parcels or achieve
    zoning changes with property, you have a good chance of
    immediately increasing its value.

    Always physically inspect the property and do your research before
    obligating yourself to buy it. And try using contracts with contingencies
    put in to protect yourself. In essence, these are really options that
    let you control the deal while you investigate and research the land’s
    potential to satisfy your objectives. Happy Hunting and buy the
    high grounds!


    About the Author

    By Dan Auito, magicbullets@alaska.com , http://www.magicbullets.com/home.php
    Dan has been a real estate investor for the past fifteen
    years & has bought, sold, and rented seventeen properties to date,
    totaling more than $1.3 million - all on a blue-collar salary
    before the age of forty.







    | Take me to the Home Page | Business Articles Index |






    © 6LV .Com - Views, opinions and stated facts are those of their respective author and not necessarily 6LV .Com.
    Articles have been republished, with permission, for your reading enjoyment.