What’s The Difference Between a Town House, Row Home and a Condo?

October 13th, 2008 --> Category - The Lakeman Blog | No Comments »

If you own real estate or are considering buying real estate, then you’ve probably run across terms such as single-family home, town house, row house, and condominium. What do these terms mean and is it better to own one type of property over another?

Bailey Bridge Town HomesLet’s begin by clarifying these terms. The confusion surrounding these terms has to do with the distinction of how people legally own property vs. the type of property owned. While there are many ways to legally own property, the two most common methods are Fee Simple (sometimes called Fee Simple Absolute) and Condominium.

A brief definition of Fee Simple is having an unqualified ownership interest in a property or other real estate. In most cases, people who own a home in Fee Simple not only own the home’s interior and exterior, but they also own the land beneath, and in front and back of the property, as well as having some rights to the air space above the property. In contrast, people who own property as a Condominium, only own the inside of the unit itself. The land below the property, the air space above the property, the front and back yards (if any), the exterior of the unit, the stairs and grass areas outside of the unit (if any), are all owned collectively by all the unit owners within the condominium development.

So now that we’ve discussed how property is typically owned, let’s review briefly the various property types. The most common type of property in the United States is a single-family home (SFH). SFH’s are usually detached structures that have one or two levels, a front and back yard, and are designed to meet the needs of a single family. SFH’s are typically sold as Fee Simple, although you will run across SFH’s that are sold as condominiums.

Waterford Condominiums

A condominium, condo for short, is a single unit that is usually attached to other units within a larger complex. Condo owners only own the inside of an individual unit. Collectively, all unit owners within a development own all the structures and land outside of the individual units. Condos usually share common walls with the units above, below, and to either side, and all owners share the costs of maintaining the structures and land external to the units. You might be interested to know that many buildings that look like apartment complexes are actually individually-owned condos. However, not all condominiums are attached units. In fact, more and more detached homes are now being sold as condominium ownership.

Lakewoods Town Homes

The terms town home, row house, and townhouse are often used interchangeably. These terms describe a consecutive series of similar residential units that may or may not share common walls with the adjacent units. These properties usually have two or more levels, may or may not sit on individual lots, and may or may not have front or backyards. These types of properties could be sold Fee Simple, Condominium, or some other type of ownership method, so it’s important to know what you’re getting.

The confusion then lies in what term is being used in what way. A town house, town home, row, single-family home could be either Fee Simple, Condominium, or something else. If a property is advertised as a condo, then the method of ownership is readily obvious–condominium ownership.

Duncan Bridge Condominiums

Each of the ownership methods and property types above have advantages and disadvantages. If you’re considering buying real estate, be sure to talk to your Real Estate Agent, legal advisor, and/or financial advisor about the pros and cons of various ownership methods and different property types before making any purchase decisions.

To sum it up, here are some very basic definitions as found on multiple web sources as well as examples:

  • Town House – A dwelling  unit, generally having 2 or more floors and attached to other similar units via party walls. Town houses are often used in planned unit developments and condominium  developments, which provide for clustered or attached housing and common open space.
  • Row House – Single-family dwelling units attached to one another by common walls, generally with a common facade.
  • Condominium – A system of ownership of individual units in a multi-unit structure, combined with joint ownership of commonly used property (sidewalks, hallways, stairs, etc.).

Buying a condo, town or row house? Search here!

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Buying a Second Home – Tax Tips from TurboTax

July 28th, 2010 --> Category - The Lakeman Blog | No Comments »

Buying a Second Home at Lewis Smith Lake in AlabamaTax breaks encourage buying second homes

Now you can trade down to a less expensive house and use the profit from the sale of the larger place as a down payment on a second home. Here’s a quick look at the tax rules that apply to second homes.

Mortgage interest

If you use the place as a second home—rather than renting it out—interest on the mortgage is deductible within the same limits as the interest on the mortgage on your first home.

You can write off 100 percent of the interest you pay on up to $1.1 million of debt secured by your first and second homes and used to acquire or improve the properties. (That’s a total of $1.1 million of debt, not $1.1 million on each home.) The rules that apply if you rent out the place are discussed later.

Property taxes

You can deduct property taxes on your second home, too. In fact, unlike the mortgage interest rule, you can deduct property taxes paid on any number of homes you own.

If you rent out the place

Lots of second-home buyers rent out the property part of the year to get others to help pay the bills. Very different tax rules apply depending on the breakdown between personal and rental use.

If you rent the place out for 14 or fewer days during the year, you can pocket the rental income tax-free. Even if you’re charging $5,000 a week, the IRS doesn’t want to hear about it. The house is considered a personal residence, so you deduct mortgage interest and property taxes under the standard rules for a second home.

Longer rentals mean different rules

Rent for more than 14 days and you must report all rental income. You also get to deduct rental expenses, and that gets complicated because you need to allocate costs between the time the property is used for personal purposes, and the time it is rented.

Consider this example

If you and your family use a beach house for 30 days during the year and it’s rented for 120 days, 80 percent (120 divided by 150) of your mortgage interest and property taxes, insurance premiums, utilities and other costs would be rental expenses. The entire amount you pay a property manager would be deductible, too. And you could claim depreciation deductions based on 80 percent of the value of the house. If a house is worth $200,000 (not counting the value of the land) and you’re depreciating 80 percent, a full year’s depreciation deduction would be about $5,800.

You can always deduct expenses up to the level of rental income you report. But what if costs exceed what you take in? Whether a loss can shelter other income depends on two things: how much you use the property yourself and how high your income is.

Your use can be limited

If you use the place more than 14 days, or more than 10 percent of the number of days it is rented—whichever is more—it is considered a personal residence and the rental loss can’t be deducted. (But because it is a personal residence, the interest that doesn’t count as a rental expense—20 percent in our example—can be deducted as a personal expense.)

Why maintenance pays

If you limit personal use to 14 days or 10 percent, the vacation home is considered a rental property and up to $25,000 in losses might be deductible each year. That’s why lots of vacation homeowners hold down leisure use and spend lots of time “maintaining” the property.

Fix-up days don’t count as personal use. The tax savings from the loss (up to $7,000 a year if you’re in the 28 percent tax bracket) helps pay for the vacation home. Unfortunately, holding down personal use means you have to forfeit the write-off for the portion of mortgage interest that does not qualify as either a rental or personal-residence expense.

Passive losses

We say such losses might be deductible because real estate losses are considered “passive losses” by the tax law. And passive losses are generally not deductible. But there’s an exception that might protect you.

If your Adjusted Gross Income (AGI) is less than $100,000, up to $25,000 of such losses can be deducted each year to offset income such as your salary. (AGI is basically income before subtracting your exemptions and deductions.) As income rises between $100,000 and $150,000, however, that $25,000 allowance disappears. Passive losses you can’t deduct can be stored up and used to offset taxable profit when you ultimately sell the vacation house.

Tax-free profits

Although the rule that allows home sellers to take up to $500,000 of profit tax-free (up to $250,000 if you’re unmarried) applies only to a sale of your principal residence, there is a way to extend the break to your second home: make it your principal residence before you sell. That’s not as wacky as it might sound. Some retirees, for example, are selling the big family home and moving full-time into what had been their vacation home.

Once you live in that home for two years, up to $500,000 (or $250,000) of profit can be tax-free. Any profit attributable to depreciation while you rented the place, though, would be taxable. Depreciation reduces your tax basis in the property and, therefore, increases profit dollar-for-dollar. Also, due to a recent change in the law, if you use the property after 2008 for purposes other than your principal residence, part of the eventual gain on sale won’t be eligible for the $500,000/$250,000 exclusion.

TurboTax Deluxe Edition makes it easy to maximize the tax benefits of mortgage interest, property taxes, owning rental property, tax-free profits and more.

Updated for tax year 2009

Source – TurboTax Website

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Protected: 12th Ave Jasper Preview – $239,900

July 15th, 2010 --> Category - Previews (Password Area) | Enter your password to view comments

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Protected: Christy Lane Jasper Preview – $186,900

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Protected: 75 Christy Lane Jasper Preview – $179,500

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Protected: Gulf Crest Preview – Smith Lake Jasper – $175,900

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Wildlife at Lewis Smith Lake, Alabama

July 3rd, 2010 --> Category - Smith Lake Videos | 2 Comments »

This page is a series of videos I’ve shot while out looking at property at Smith Lake. Leave a comment at the bottom of the page if you enjoy them!

Fawn at The Ridge at Rock Creek Subdivision in Arley

My son and I were leaving The Ridge after showing some lake lots and this little fawn kept coming into the road. It looked as if it was lost. Such a beautiful sight!

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Hidden Falls Subdivision at Lewis Smith Lake, Alabama

July 3rd, 2010 --> Category - Archives | No Comments »

Hidden Falls is located on the banks of Smith Lake’s Clear Creek just off Fall City Road in Jasper as you’re headed toward Clear Creek Park Recreation Area. This is a gated subdivision so you will need an appointment to enter.

Contact me for lot availability or more information on Hidden Falls at Smith Lake.

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The Ridge at Rock Creek Smith Lake Lots

July 1st, 2010 --> Category - Smith Lake BARGAINS!, The Lakeman Blog | 1 Comment »

The Ridge at Rock Creek is the single best lot buying opportunity that I have seen on Lewis Smith Lake this year! This subdivision is located just north of the city of Arley in the northern part of Rock Creek where the water is still deep and the channel wide.The Ridge at Rock Creek

The Ridge is surrounded by 900 acres of farmland, beautiful hemlocks, hardwoods, and rock formations. The terrain of the lots in this subdivision is quite picturesque. When standing on the building area of these lots, a look in front of you gives you a beautiful main channel view of Smith Lake while looking behind you gives you a fantastic view of high rock bluffs and woods. You really feel you’re in a private setting that’s filled with natural beauty.

These are top-quality lots and they are selling for cheap-cheap-cheap! Why? Here’s the scoop – This subdivision hit the market in 2007. The price was high and so was inventory here at the lake when it came to lots. Take those factors and the looming crash of the economy and you get a buying freeze. That’s not a good combination of factors when launching a new subdivision. I don’t think they sold any. In 2008 the subdivision was listed with a different company but the prices were left the same despite economic factors. Again, I don’t think they sold any.

Let’s fast forward to now – 2010. Unfortunately, this subdivision has fallen victim to the economic times. These lots have been reduced to liquidation prices. The developers loss of profit is your gain! Just compare the old prices with the new – this is astounding! These just went into liquidation a few weeks ago and many have already sold. Buy one, or two if you can! This is your chance to own a nice piece of Smith Lake!

Contact me for a tour of The Ridge at Rock Creek or with questions – Brian – 205-388-2019

Here’s a short video I shot of a baby fawn at The Ridge at Rock Creek.

Below are the lots currently available (subject to change)

Contact me for a tour of The Ridge at Rock Creek or with questions – Brian – 205-388-2019

Lot # Waterfront
Footage +/-
Original Price Sale Price Availability
4 101 179,900 49,900
5 133 179,900 49,900
6 155 179,900 59,900
7 119 179,900 39,900
8 121 179,900 59,900
9 142 179,900 59,900
10 132 179,900 69,900
11 150 159,900 69,900
12 128 189,900 69,900
13 112 209,900 69,900
14 142 189,900 79,900
15 142 199,900 39,900 SOLD
16 107 189,900 69,900
17 104 199,900 69,900
18 109 189,900 69,900
19 115 189,900 69,900 SOLD
20 220 209,900 99,900
21 242 179,900 99,900
22 124 189,900 59,900
23 120 179,900 59,900
24 120 189,900 59,900
25 114 189,900 49,900
26 129 169,900 59,900
27 115 119,900 39,900
34 119 179,900 49,900
35 111 159,900 49,900
36 113 179,900 49,900
37 116 179,900 49,900 SOLD
38 116 179,900 59,900
39 116 179,900 69,900
40 133 169,900 79,900
41 112 179,900 49,900
42 110 169,900 49,900
44 197 169,900 59,900
45 196 209,900 59,900
46 211 209,900 69,900
47 198 179,900 89,900
48 111 199,900 89,900
49 135 229,900 89,900 SOLD
50 148 269,900 99,900 SOLD
51 143 289,900 109,900 SOLD
52 306 299,900 139,900
53 150 249,900 99,900
54 195 259,900 119,900
55 224 285,900 89,900

Contact me for a tour of The Ridge at Rock Creek or with questions – Brian – 205-388-2019

Brokered by: H2

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Smith Lake Foreclosure on Rock Creek in Arley, AL

June 29th, 2010 --> Category - Smith Lake BARGAINS!, Smith Lake Foreclosures, The Lakeman Blog | No Comments »

Smith Lake Foreclosure - Water Side

Here we go folks! Another buying opportunity on Smith Lake. This time it’s a large home with a great view on Rock Creek.

Here are some details -

  • Previous Price – $549,000
    NOW – $349,000!
  • Located in Arley
  • 3 bedrooms/2 baths
  • Bonus room loft
  • 136′ waterfront
  • Very nice views of Rock Creek
  • Approx 2750 sq ft total
  • 1230 sq ft finished walkout basement
  • Upper and lower water view decks
  • Hardwood and tile floors
  • 2 fireplaces
  • 1/2 acre lot
  • No boathouse included
  • Home needs some finishing and repair

Call or email me to see this property or for more information
205-388-2019

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Offered by AllFour

Call or email me to see this property or for more information
205-388-2019

Sign up for the SLH newsletter and get updated!

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SmithLakeHomes.com Newsletter

June 12th, 2010 --> Category - Search Tools, The Lakeman Blog | 1 Comment »
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