Is Usually Jingle Mail Box Your Answer ?

Filed in Articles Leave a comment

It won’t go away. Jingle mail is a lingering phenomena in the United States, which is a direct result of the foreclosure crisis.

Some home owners, terrified of pending foreclosure, decide to mail their house keys to the lender and move out. They call it “jingle mail” because the keys make a jingle-bell sound when picking up the key-stuffed envelope. The term has become a euphemism for walking away from your home. I imagine most buyers would tape the keys to a card — providing they possess a bit of common sense — so the keys don’t really jingle.

Here are a few questions you might want to ask yourself. How do you know that the lender will actually receive the keys or even wants the keys? And why would an owner move out while the home is in foreclosure? Typically, owners can stay in the home, payment free, until the lender evicts them. Eviction happens after the foreclosure is final and could take anywhere from three months to a year, depending on the way foreclosures are handled in your state

. . . read more about Jingle Mail.

More Articles by Elizabeth Weintraub, click below:
How Foreclosures Work
Three Stages of Foreclosure
Ways to Stop Foreclosure

?Big Stock Photo

Technorati tag: Jingle MailAt the time of writing, Elizabeth Weintraub, DRE # 00697006, is a Broker-Associate at Lyon

Is Usually Jingle Mail Box Your Answer ?

The Worst Weekday To Shut On Your House

Filed in Articles Comments Off

Sometimes, trying to avoid the worst day to buy a home is simply impossible.

Home buyers don’t set out, as an ordinary rule, to buy a home on the worst day. Much of the time it’s bad luck that lands them in that predicament. If buyers could pick the best day, it would be when nobody else is closing on a home, and that’s not the worst day, by any stretch.

For some reason, and maybe it’s just my bad timing, I manage to buy homes in the fall, either when it’s snowing or raining cats and dogs. This means when I’m moving, I’m typically soaked to the bone by the elements. As I slosh through rain puddles, you might hear me mutter that this is the worst day to buy a home, but that’s just me grumbling.

What would be worse is if I never closed at all

. . . read more about Worst Day to Buy a Home.

More Articles by Elizabeth Weintraub:
Before Buying Your First Home
The Best Day to Buy a Home
Location, Location, Location

?Big Stock Photo

Technorati tag: worst day buy homeAt the time of writing, Elizabeth Weintraub, DRE # 00697006, is a Broker-Associate

The Worst Weekday To Shut On Your House

Abandon Arbor I & II – Phoenix Az Apts

Filed in Articles Comments Off

Desert Arbor I & II Phoenix AZ

If you‘re looking for a nice apartment in Phoenix, AZ take a look at Desert Arbor I & II. Check out our rating to confirm it is recommended by other people. Located at 726 W HATCHER RD in Phoenix, check out Desert Arbor I & II  for yourself.

CONTACT INFO:
 
Address: 726 W HATCHER RD
City: Phoenix
State: AZ
Website: www.

If you have had experience with Desert Arbor I & II please leave your review down

Abandon Arbor I & II – Phoenix Az Apts

Go Walking Out — Should You ?

Filed in Articles Comments Off

When home values fall, a home owner might start to think about whether it makes sense to walk away from a home.

The scenario goes something like this: It’s 2005. Dick and Jane have not saved any money for a down payment, but because market conditions are hot, and all their friends are using 100% financing, they decide to make the leap into home ownership. They find the perfect home to buy for $300,000. The back yard might be a sea of sand, but that’s OK, they can get by without landscaping for a while.

Several years ago by. Dick and Jane still haven’t put in a lawn. So, they go to the bank to get a home equity loan to help pay for the landscaping. The bank appraises their home and declines the loan because the home is now worth $200,000. Well, that’s no surprise, says, Jane, after all, bank-owned signs are popping up like dandelions in their neighbor’s yards.

To heck with owning a home, Dick and Jane say. Let’s give the this worthless piece of crap to the bank. They figure: What’s the worst that can happen?

Go Walking Out — Should You ?

TOP