Time’s a Tickin’ on the First-Time Home Buyer Federal Tax Credit

September 23, 2009 by Danilo Bogdanovic  
Filed under Buyer Resources

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If you would like to take advantage of the first-time home buyer Federal tax credit, you’ll need to act soon because time is running out. The tax credit expires December 1, 2009, which means that you have to settle on your new home no later than November 30, 2009.

What does this mean practically speaking?

Despite November 30 being the deadline, you should aim to settle by November 15th to help leave room for any delays on your or the sellers’ end. Also, settlement companies will be swamped with settlements the last two weeks of November and may be delayed themselves. And don’t forget that the Thanksgiving holiday takes away at least one, if not two business days at the end of November.

At this point, short-sales are pretty much out of the picture as far as settling in time to take advantage of the first-time home buyer federal tax credit. It takes an average of 90 days to get a response from a bank(s) on short-sale approval and then you will need another 3 to 4 weeks after that to settle. This puts you way past the November 30 deadline.

If you are a home buyer going after a traditional resale or foreclosure, you should ratify a contract no later than about October 1 to 15 depending on the type of financing (conventional vs FHA vs VA). Conventional financing takes about 30 days from date of ratification to process and fun. FHA financing takes 30 to 45 days. VA financing takes closer to 45 days. (These are general numbers – the lenders I work with closely are awesome and get everything done within 30 days no matter what type of financing you go with)

If you are a home buyer who wants to take advantage of the first-time home buyer federal tax credit, you need to start actively searching for a property to purchase immediately. This will give you about a month to search for a property, submit and ratify an offer with enough time to settle before the deadline.

Wondering how to get started in home buying process?

First - click here to read my post, “The Home Buying Timeline”

SecondClick here to contact me so we can chat more about your specific situation and see what’s best for you.

Related Articles

“Move fast to take advantage of first-time homebuyer federal tax credit” – Washington, DC Examiner

Information on first-time home buyer federal tax credit from the Internal Revenue Service (IRS)

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