How to Buy a Second HomeBy
Holden Lewis Bankrate.com Not
long ago, Frank Kwok
moved from a 900-square-foot townhouse on the North
Shore of Oahu "because
we wanted our own home with a yard and everything."
So he bought a 2,500-square-foot
home in what he calls the "bustling suburb"
of Kapolei, not far from
Honolulu. He
kept the tiny
townhouse in the beach town of Haleiwa. It's now his
family's second home: "We
go back there whenever we don't want to be bothered by neighbors." Kwok
did it backward -- turning the first home into the
getaway home -- but he
did something that many Americans do or dream of doing: He bought a second home. Buying
a second home isn't much different from buying a primary
residence. If
you don't rent it out regularly, so it's not considered
an investment property,
you can get the same mortgage rate that you would get
on your primary house. Depending
on circumstances, you might be able to deduct the mortgage
interest from income
taxes. When
you shop for a second or vacation home, you have
two friends: time and your primary home's equity. "If
they look for a second home, people need to be patient,"
Kwok says. "Don't
rush into it. They already have a place to live. Weigh
the pros and cons of each
place." Bob
Walters, vice president of Quicken
Mortgage, delivers the same advice. "Don't make
any rash decisions,"
he says. "There's no reason you have to buy it
right now. If you find a place
and love the place, stew on it a couple of months. It'll still be there." The
cooling-off period During
your self-imposed
cooling-off period, think long and hard about how often
you will visit and how
much time you will spend. Are you the type of person
who buys a 12-month health-club
membership, then stops going after a few weeks? If
you are, what makes you think
you will treat the vacation home differently? Even
if you
feel positive that you will spend sufficient time at
the second home, you must
decide whether it's worth the money. "I think
second homes, more so than
primary residences, have to be treated as an investment,"
Walters says. And
he's not talking about investment properties that are rented out. "You
have to view it with a cold and calculated eye," Walters says. How
much time will you spend there? What will be the price
appreciation -- realistically?
How much will you have to pay every year for landscaping,
association dues, garbage
collection and taxes? "They
gotta do the
math," Walters says. "Calculate how much
it will cost them annually.
Calculate their financial return." And
don't try to time the purchase to get a better
price. That tactic rarely works, says Diane Saatchi,
a real estate agent who sells
homes in the Hamptons on Long Island. Buyers sometimes
think they'll get a better
deal on a home in the Hamptons in the winter, or on
a home in Florida in the summer.
But sellers are savvy, and home values don't fluctuate by season. "What
I tell people all the time is that the best time to
buy a house is when you want
a house," Saatchi says. Ease your doubts She
also recommends that you request photos of the property
taken during
different seasons. If you go house-hunting in the Hamptons
during the winter,
neighboring houses might seem too close because of
the lack of leaves on the trees.
A picture taken during the summer, when you'll spend
most of your time there,
can allay your fears of being crowded by your neighbors. Saatchi
adds that
you should ask around for a trustworthy real estate
agent to show you around --
someone who will tell you about the all-night parties
that are often held on a
particular stretch of beach, or about the next-door
neighbors who plan to build
a tennis court just a few feet from your bedroom. Finally,
she
says, make sure you can get the insurance you need,
particularly if you want to
buy a home near the beach. "That's a good thing
to know -- the availability
and cost of insurance -- before you pay for legal fees
and inspections,"
she says. Financing
the deal OK,
you have done the math, looked at year-round photos
of
the property, and thought it over for a while. You
have decided that, yes, you
want to buy that cabin in the mountains or that condo
on the beach. If you don't
have the cash to pay for it outright, the next step
is to find a mortgage. The
lender or broker who handled the mortgage on your primary
home is an excellent
place to start if you were satisfied with the service you got. But
you might have to shop around. Different lenders have
different standards
when it comes to mortgages on vacation homes, as Bill
Andrus of Denver has discovered.
He owns two condos in major ski areas, and rents them out as much as possible. "Some
lenders won't touch second or third homes, others
solicit them, and yet others offer normal rates without
the investor penalties,
as long as we occupy them sometimes," Andrus says. Walters
says that the loan standards for primary and secondary
homes are virtually
identical, especially for conventional loans -- in
other words, loans for amounts
under the jumbo limit (in 2005, that's $359,650). Rates
are about the same, unless
the lender considers the house an investment property.
In that case, expect to
pay an interest rate about 1.5 to 2 percentage points
higher. As Andrus points
out, some lenders might grant a lot of leeway when
deciding whether a vacation
home is an investment property. When
it's time to make a down
payment on your second home, you can use the equity
in your primary home. You
can either extract the equity by doing a "cash-out"
refinance, or by
getting a home equity loan or an equity line of credit.
You can use that equity
to make all or some of the down payment on the second home. There
are complex tax implications to borrowing to buy a
second home. Generally
speaking, the interest is deductible from federal income
taxes. But if you borrow
from the equity on your first home to make a down payment
on the second home,
you can write off the interest on only the first $100,000 of equity debt. If
you rent out the second home, you have to spend a certain
amount of time in
the home every year to be able to deduct the interest.
Your best bet is to read
IRS Publication 936, Home Mortgage Interest Deduction
and Publication
527, Residential Rental Property. Once those have confused
you, consult an
accountant. Back
to Your Money: Buying a Second Home. |