Tag Archives: Deadlines

Winding Down the Home Buyer Tax Credit Blog

We’ve been delighted to run the Home Buyer Tax Credit information site and this blog, where we’ve answered about 300 questions about the tax credit.  We hope that people found the site and this blog helpful, and we will leave it up to provide information to people who might have questions about the home buyer tax credit.

But given that the application and closing deadlines have passed, we expect that interest in the program will diminish until tax season in 2012 (for the 2010 tax returns), when people might have questions about filing issues.  At that point, we might come back to make some posts about paperwork requires.  As always, of course, we direct you to the sound advice of your accountants…..

My Work Here is Done (?)

For the last six months, we’ve tried to establish a helpful consumer-oriented site to help people understand and keep up to date with the Home Buyer Tax Credit. We created what we think is the most comprehensive set of resources explaining the intricacies of the credit on the internet, created the only fully-featured eligibility test to tell you whether you’re eligible, provided links to the actual legislation and IRS rulings, created video tutorials, kept a running news feed, provided up-to-date commentary on this Blog, and answered hundreds of reader questions about eligibility.  We even tried (unsuccessfully, unfortunately) to spark a legislative campaign to eliminate a freakish “marriage penalty” in the tax credit.

For the most part, though, the work is done. We’re well past the initial contract deadline of April 30th, and the closing deadline of June 30th.  Although the closing deadline has been extended until the end of September, which is a great thing for both buyers and the industry, our expectation is that most buyers will not have difficulty closing on time if they were in contract by April. Four months is a good lengthy period of time to get your closing set up. We don’t expect to see a lot of traffic on the site, or get a lot of questions that have not already been answered.

All this is by way of saying that we will not be keeping this blog as active as we’ve been for the past six months.  We’ll check in occasionally if there’s an interesting piece of news or we get a novel question, but otherwise we’ll be focusing our efforts on other things.  So if you do have a question, try to find the answer in our FAQ, our Eligibility Test, this blog, or in the 300 or so questions we’ve already answered in the questions section.

My apologies if you post a question and don’t get a response, but at this point we feel that we’ve covered the full range of possibilities that are out there.  At some point, we’ll do another pass at all the questions, particularly if something new comes up.

My thanks to everyone who has participated on the site, and who has been reading the blog.  We look forward to our next project, and hope that you found the site and the blog helpful.

Thanks,

JR

Home Buyer Tax Credit Closing Deadline Extended through June 30th

On Wednesday night, Congress overwhelmingly passed a standalone bill that would extend the closing deadline for the Home Buyer Tax Credit to September 30th. The extension will apply ONLY to buyers who were in contract by the in-contract deadline of April 30th, but those buyers will now get an additional three months to close beyond the original June 30th closing deadline.  As of this writing, the bill still needs to be signed by President Obama, but that is expected sometime today.

UPDATE: President Obama signed the legislation on Friday, the extension is now law.

The prospects for the extension had fluctuated in the past few weeks.  Although there was overwhelming support to give relief to the estimated 180,000 buyers who would not be able to meet the June 30th deadline, the extension had been tied to a much more controversial bill that would also extend unemployment benefits, which was opposed by Republicans out of concerns for its effect on the deficit.  Fortunately, from the perspective of real estate industry professionals and affected home buyers (and sellers whose transactions might have been canceled without the extension), Congress separated the tax credit extension from the more contentious provisions, allowing for its passage this week.

This is indeed good news, for a couple of reasons.

First, and most importantly, the extension recognizes that thousands of home buyers and sellers would have been unfairly impacted by the unrealistic June 30th deadline.  When Congress set up the deadlines back in November 2009, it could not have anticipated the inherent delays in the transaction process caused by more stringent financing requirements by banks and the higher percentage of sales that involve “short sales” that require a lengthy approval process.  Moreover, no one anticipated how many home buyers worked to the April 30th deadline, delaying their purchases until the very end of the eligibility period and further exacerbating the inherent sluggishness in the system.  Through no fault of their own, thousands of buyers would have missed the June 30th deadline, even potentially canceling their contracts and putting their sellers back on the market.

Second, even if you are concerned about the effect on the deficit, the extension is only allowing the tax credit to work the way it was supposed to.  When Congress set up the Home Buyer Tax Credit, it anticipated a certain number of buyers being able to claim the credit, without considering how difficult it might be to close by June 30th given the expected surge of transactions, financing delays, and the impact of short sale processes. Essentially, Congress fixed a problem with the initial legislation.  This was not an expansion of the tax credit, just a needed repair that allowed the credit to have its intended effect.  As such, it should not increase the expense of the program beyond what was initially projected.

Third, the extension will allow an orderly processing of transactions by the industry.  It would have been nice to get the extension two weeks ago, before thousands of mortgage lenders, title processors, lawyers, and settlement agents scurried to get deals closed by June 30th, but we’ll at least be able to see an orderly and normal transactional process for the next three months. 

Remember that the extension only applies to buyers who were in contract by June 30th — the extension does not open up the credit to new buyers.  As such, it was a good decision by Congress, recognizing the impact of the unreasonable June 30th deadline on thousands of buyers and sellers, and allowing people who expected the credit to receive it.

Deadline Update: June 30th is still the closing deadline for the Home Buyer Tax Credit

Yesterday, Senate Republicans defeated a bill that would have extended unemployment benefits, provided aid to local and state governments, and also would have extended the home buyer tax credit closing deadline through September 30th. Senators voted 57-41 for the measure, but needed 60 votes to defeat the Republic filibuster based on GOP concerns of the effect of continued extensions of unemployment benefits on the federal budget deficit.

So for now, there’s no extension of the June 30 closing deadline coming up next week.  As we’ve discussed before, all real estate professionals will be working diligently to close “tax credit” deals by the end of the week, but we’re all concerned that it will be physically impossible to get everyone closed on time. 

What happens if a buyer planning on claiming the credit cannot close on time?  Can the buyer just opt out of the contract, since she won’t be getting the tax credit that she counted on?  It depends.  In some cases, she can get out, but in most cases, I don’t know that the failure to meet the deadline will be a material fact allowing for an unwinding of the contract of sale.

1.  What if the buyer has a contingency that she has to close by June 30?

If the contract is specifically conditioned on the buyer closing by the June 30th deadline, then the buyer could use that contingency to break the contract (just like a mortgage contingency).  If they have an out, then they are free to take it and unwind the contract.  Of course, they could also use the threat of exercising the condition to get a price change on the purchase, and sellers might be likely to be negotiable given the slowdown in the market the past two post-tax credit months.

2.  What if the contract is silent?

I would be surprised if many buyers had negotiated a pure contingency.  Most likely, the buyer and seller might have negotiated a change in price if they can’t close on June 30th, or the contract, like most contracts, has an “on or about” date on June 30th that is not binding on either party.  In that case, the buyer really cannot get out of the deal just because she lost the tax credit.

3.  What if the buyer tries to break the contract anyway.

A buyer trying to break a binding sales contract on the ground that she missed the tax credit deadline would be no different from a buyer trying to break  a contract because she lost $8,000 in the stock market.  In other words, it’s not a valid ground to break a contract. If they try, I’d be surprised if any seller’s attorney let them out.

We’ll keep you posted.

Why Extending the Home Buyer Tax Credit Closing Deadline Makes Sense

It looks like a deal might be in the works to extend the closing deadline for the Home Buyer Tax Credit.  Multiple sources reported that Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid expressed his support for an extension, and had some bipartisan support.  Although it’s not a sure thing, especially since any extension is going to be tacked on as an amendment to a fairly controversial jobs bill, it’s certainly good news to know that a number of Senators have publicly backed the extension.

As we argued earlier this week, an extension would be a good thing:

  1. It’s simply not possible to close the number of deals that went into contract in the past few months by the June 30th deadline. The real estate settlement  industry — lenders, settlement agents, attorneys — are simply not equipped to close the number of deals that are in the pipeline by the June 30th deadline.  They don’t have the personnel, and no one is going to hire and train a bunch of new employees to handle what will be a short-term staffing problem.  Moreover, transactions generally have taken longer to close in the past year or so anyway, simply because of tighter lending guidelines and requirements and the prevalence of foreclosure and short-sale purchases that require longer approval times. (Diana Olick’s excellent Reality Check housing blog on CNBC reports that Reid actually cited the short sale issue as the driving factor for the decision).
  2. This means that a lot of buyers who legitimately played by the rules will be unable to claim the credit unless the deadline is expected. This won’t be through any fault of their own, just the reality that going from contract to closing takes longer than it used to.  These people did everything they need to do to claim the credit, but they’ll be victims of the overload on the industry if they don’t get an extension.
  3. Finally, the extension won’t dramatically change the expected cost of the Home Buyer Tax Credit. When Congress scored (i.e., estimated the cost) the bill, they assumed that people who got into contract would be able to close within the two months between the contract deadline of April 30 and the closing deadline of June 30th.  But the credit did not really generate the business we all expected until April, with buyers basically waiting to the last minute.  Now, all those under-the-wire buyers have created a huge pipeline of transactions in such a short time that they cannot possibly all close by the deadline.  But it doesn’t seem to be more transactions overall than anyone expected when they priced out the bill, so extending the closing deadline will not dramatically increase the cost to the Treasury.

Note that no one is discussing re-opening the eligibility for the tax credit — that is, the April 30 deadline for going into contract is almost certainly to stay in place as a cutoff for eligibility.  All that’s being discussed is giving buyers more time to close their transactions.

We’ll keep you posted.

Last Minute Advice for Making the June 30th Home Buyer Tax Credit Closing Deadline

I was interviewed last week by Amy Hoak of the Wall Street Journal Marketwatch about the looming deadlines for the Home Buyer Tax Credit.  As you know, eligible buyers must be closed by June 30th in order to claim the credit.  Her article is a terrific overview, so I recommend you take a look at it.

We’ve written about this issue before in this space, but we wanted to review some of the finer points of making sure you can get closed by June 30th.

The biggest problem home buyers are going to face is simply the difficult in creating a sense of urgency in the industry professionals involved.  Why?  Because in the vast majority of real estate closings, the parties do not have a “hard” deadline for closing.  In fact, most industry pros are used to last-minute delays in closings, which are generally not a big deal.  If we can’t close on Tuesday, we’ll close on Thursday; if not this week, we can close next week.  Most real estate contracts have a closing date stated in the contract, but that date is an “on or about” date and is generally subject to extension for any reason.

So most real estate professionals – lenders, real estate agents, title closers, settlement agents, attorneys, etc. – are not used to dealing with a hard deadline. They have a mindset that “close to” the date is good enough.  In this case, though, it’s not good enough.  If you’re not closed by June 30th, you don’t get the credit.

In talking with Amy, I came up with a list of the types of things that could delay your closing:

  • Communication of Urgency.  Can’t stress this enough.  Make sure EVERYONE involved in the transaction knows you have to close by June 30th.  Ensure they make your closing a priority.

 

  • Lender Documentation. Since the biggest source of last-minute closing delays come from lender requests, contact your mortgage lender and brainstorm about any potential documents or information they might need to get you clear to close.  Ask what kinds of things come up at the last minute, to get you a head start on tracking them down.

 

  • Late Review of Title Reports. Make sure your attorney or settlement agent reviews your title report as soon as possible.  Usually, a title report is ordered around the time of contract signing, and is produced within a few weeks afterwards, but in a lot of cases the attorney or settlement agent won’t review that report until the week of the closing.  Make sure your attorney or settlement reviews the title as soon as it comes in, in case a problem crops up.  Those problems can usually be resolved, but they take time.

 

  • Open Permits.  A major stumbling block to closing comes when the seller turns out to have done some work on the home without completing a final engineering inspection and closing out building permits.  This might be a deck, a bathroom, or any other remodeling project.  Usually, it’s not illegal work, just work that was done legally, but no one bothered to file the final paperwork.  Not a problem, unless you discover it on June 28th, the day before your closing.

 

  • Short sales.  In some areas of the country, almost half of the transactions involve short sales, which essentially require approval not of the seller but of the bank that has to approve taking a short on the mortgage.  Getting approval for short sales has become easier in the past year or so, and particularly in the last six months, but bank loan mitigation departments are not necessarily responsive to requests to close on particular dates unless the parties in the transaction are very aggressive and competent in responding to bank requests.  This is particularly troublesome because the seller is the one in the relationship with the bank, not the buyer, and a lot of sellers in those situations have a low level of urgency since they are not getting any equity out of the transaction.  It’s even tougher dealing with banks than with sellers if you’re trying to get a deal closed by the deadline.

 

  • Last minute judgments.  Sellers who are in some sort of distress often have stopped paying their mortgage as well as some other debts, and it is not unusual for creditors to put last-minute liens on a property between the time of the initial title search and the “continuation search” that is conducted on the eve of the closing. For example, sellers in short sale situations might get approval for the short from the bank, only to discover the day before the closing that a creditor has put another judgment lien on the property that now requires a re-negotiation of the terms.

 

  • Verification of Employment.  The biggest last minute hold up is verification of current employment, which can’t be done until the loan is cleared to close (i.e., the bank wants to verify employment right at the last minute, before the loan is issued).  So make sure you can get that verification, and that your employer is available to give it, within the few days prior to your closing.

 

  • PMI approval.  If you are getting PMI, you’ll need to be aware that PMI companies don’t give approval until the first mortgage bank clears the file, so PMI approval necessarily comes at the last minute.

 

  • Last minute credit documentation.  A lot of times, the lender needs last-minute credit reports, pay stubs, and other credit documents.  Lenders usually run credit and collect credit documents when they take the loan, but those documents are only good for about 60-90 days.  Given how long it generally takes to close, by the time of the closing, those documents might be considered out of date, and new credit reports (and new bank statements, and new pay stubs) have to be collected. 

 

  • Credit Impact. Another delay can be caused if the buyer has done something in the past few months, since they made the application, that affects their credit rating (such as buy a car, open a new credit line, anything at all).  Most lenders caution buyers to be very careful about doing anything that might affect credit, but that last-minute credit check might show a change in credit status that can delay (or kill) a loan.

 

We hope this helps.  Good luck!

Should the Home Buyer Tax Credit Closing Deadline Be Extended?

The Wall Street Journal reported this week that the National Association of Realtors is pushing for an extension of the June 30th Home Buyer Tax Credit closing deadline in order to ensure that otherwise eligible home buyers are able to claim their credit.

This is absolutely a good idea, and Congress should indeed extend the deadline.  This has nothing to do with enlarging the pool of eligible home buyers, since the contract deadline has already passed. Rather, it’s simply a recognition of the difficulty many qualified home buyers are going to face in getting closed by the end of the month.

Anyone in the real estate business can tell you about the challenges in meeting a closing deadline, and the potential last minute hiccups that can derail a closing.  Most significantly, very few real estate transactions involve a “hard” deadline in which the parties absolutely HAVE to close by a particular date. Although parties can insist on a “time of the essence” clause in a contract to require closing on a particular date, few people actually utilize such clauses. 

Why?  Because the ability to meet a closing deadline is usually out of the hands of most buyers and sellers. Instead, your ability to meet a closing deadline can depend on last minute lender requirements (“oh, we now need your paystubs from 2005…”) or late-discovered problems with the title (last minute liens placed on the property, open building permits).  Usually, these are not problems that buyers and sellers can anticipate.

Moreover, in the market we’ve had over the past few years, a large percentage of home sales involve short sales, in which the seller is not really the determining factor anyway.  Instead, there’s a loan mitigation department at the owner’s mortgage bank that has to decide whether to give final approval to a sale that will leave the bank short.

Finally, I would love to see an extension of the credit simply to take the pressure off the industry. The June 30th deadline is certainly a lot better than the November 30th deadline from last year, which would have fallen on the Monday after Thanksgiving and ruined a lot of holidays.  But any summer deadline is going to be complicated by vacations, particularly by the fact that the Independence Day holiday is but a few days after the deadline.  It would be nice if people in the real estate industry who will be consumed with getting deals closed by June 30th could get a break, and be able to maybe take a vacation.  That might be a little self-serving, but everyone is better off if the industry can close this huge pipeline of transactions in an orderly process over the next few months.

Getting Closed by June 30th — the Hard Deadline

Okay, the tax credit boom is over, with April 30th slamming shut the window for prospective purchasers to get into contract.  We saw an enormous boom in business in April as the credit wound down — at our real estate company, we had the biggest month in the 25-year history of the company, transacting three times the number of homes as April 2009.  We expect that companies across the country had the same types of results.

Now, the question becomes what you need to do to get closed by June 30th if you want to claim the credit.  One of the complications of all this is that real estate agents, at least in my area, are simply not used to juggling this many open (i.e., in contract) transactions and trying to get them all closed at once.  Five years ago, they were more practiced at that, but most of them have not had the luxury of having multiple deals at a time during the slowdown in the market.  So let’s make sure these contracts get to closing on time.

Here’s what you need to do:

  1. Communicate your situation. Make sure that everyone on your team — your agent, lender, attorney/escrow agent, engineer, and even the seller knows about your June 30th deadline.  I would send out a blast email to everyone reminding them of everything that needs to be done by that time, and making sure they know you’re on a true hard deadline.
  2. Get Organized. Take out a piece of paper.  Write down everything that has to be done to get you to close.  Indeed, call all your professionals helping you and ask what they need to do, and when they need to do it, to get you to close.  I’m a big believer in “checklists” as a means of ensuring attention to detail.  This is the perfect time to execute a checklist of all the things that you need to do to get closed.  Turn your checklist into a project plan that you’ll send to each of your professionals, and then stay on top of them to make sure they’re complying.
  3. Give yourself wiggle room.  Don’t plan a closing the last two weeks of June.  Try to schedule before that, so that you don’t end up losing your tax credit due to a last minute screwup.  No matter how prepared you are, you’re going to run into problems somewhere along the line.  So give yourself wiggle room

One way to avoid those types of last minute problems is to ask each of your professionals to identify things that could go wrong, so that you’re aware of them.  If there are documents that sometimes are required at the last minute, go get them now.  For example, it’s a great idea to gather all those old pay stubs, contact info for past employers, and everything else that your lender might be asking from you at the last minute.

If anyone else has other suggestions, I’d love to hear them.

Last week for the Home Buyer Tax Credit: What does it mean to get into “Contract”

With the impending expiration of the Home Buyer Tax Credit, we had a few questions this week about what it means to be “in contract” for purposes of eligibility for the credit. The legislation revised in November requires that eligible home buyer be in contract by April 30, and closed by June 30th, which was actually the first time that Congress put a dual-deadline approach to the credit.

That is, in previous versions of the credit, Congress only set out a closing deadline, which is a much easier demarcation.  Everyone knows what it means to be “closed,” particularly because a “closing” is a fairly formal procedure involving all sorts of legal documents, including bank documents.  As such, it’s very difficult to “fake” a closing date to purposes of claiming a tax credit to which you’re not entitled — you would need not only your settlement service (and attorneys) to be on board, but you’d also need the banks to sign off on loan documents with an inaccurate date.  Good luck with that — another word for changing dates on a federally insured loan document is fraud, and it’s a good way to end up in jail.

But the question now becomes what constitutes a “contract” for purposes of the tax credit, and whether the IRS has any rules about what a “contract” means.  In some parts of the country, buyers make offers on properties through their agents, and sign a “purchase offer” that is akin to a contract, particularly if that offer is then signed by the seller.  That signed document might then be submitted to attorneys, or it might actually be the formal contract of sale.  In other parts of the country (such as downstate New York), agents simply present informal offers, which are then turned into a binding contract of sale prepared by attorneys.

So we expect that in parts of the country that do agent contracts, buyers are going to be able to claim the credit right up to the Friday deadline.  In other parts of the country, such as where we have our brokerage in the Hudson Valley of New York State, buyers might have difficulty getting into contract by Friday if they don’t already have attorneys working on them.  For buyers in those areas, we would suggest that they use a signed purchase offer as the “contract,” since a signed agreement with the sellers, even if it is subject to attorney approval, would probably satisfy the IRS requirement of a contract by April 30th.

No April Fools Joke: Only 30 days left to get into contract and claim the Home Buyer Tax Credit

Okay, so this is now the home stretch — 30 days left to get into contract to claim the Home Buyer Tax Credit. If you’ve not already done so, you should take our Eligibility Test to see if you qualify for the credit.

And if you do qualify, and want to claim the credit, you need to make home buying a priority in the next month. We would be shocked if the tax credit were extended again, so don’t sit back and hope for a “snow day.”

How can you get into contract in one month?

  • If you’re not already working with a really good real estate agent, then find one today.  How do you find one?  Do some research: look online, call your friends, ask your colleagues.  If none of that works, and you want us to hook you up with someone great (and accountable to us) in your local area, let us know.
  • Make sure the agent knows you need to be in contract by April 30th, so your agent knows your priorities.
  • Contact a mortgage person and get prequalified for a loan amount.
  • If you’re in an attorney state, call an attorney and hire one TODAY.  Don’t wait until you found your dream house, get your attorney on call for you so that when the seller prepares a contract, your attorney can turn it around in 24 hours.
  • Clear your weekends — you’re going to be visiting open houses and going out with your agent and doing all real estate stuff this month.

Can you get into contract from a standing start in one month?  Yes, absolutely.  Every agent I know has a story about someone who went from “hey, honey, let’s go look at some open houses today, as a lark” to “where do I sign” within two weeks.  So it’s not too late.  But home buying has to be your priority for the next month.

Good luck, and happy April Fool’s Day!