- This topic has 180 replies, 18 voices, and was last updated 15 years, 5 months ago by
scaredyclassic.
-
AuthorPosts
-
March 23, 2010 at 11:39 AM #530637March 23, 2010 at 11:42 AM #529711
scaredyclassic
Participantthat is a fantasy. i felt the same way but I am gradually coming to terms with the fact that that is simply not a reasonable request.
March 23, 2010 at 11:42 AM #529840scaredyclassic
Participantthat is a fantasy. i felt the same way but I am gradually coming to terms with the fact that that is simply not a reasonable request.
March 23, 2010 at 11:42 AM #530289scaredyclassic
Participantthat is a fantasy. i felt the same way but I am gradually coming to terms with the fact that that is simply not a reasonable request.
March 23, 2010 at 11:42 AM #530388scaredyclassic
Participantthat is a fantasy. i felt the same way but I am gradually coming to terms with the fact that that is simply not a reasonable request.
March 23, 2010 at 11:42 AM #530647scaredyclassic
Participantthat is a fantasy. i felt the same way but I am gradually coming to terms with the fact that that is simply not a reasonable request.
March 23, 2010 at 1:08 PM #529791treehugger
Participantwell if I can’t have “normal” I want in on all the goodies….question is this even worthwhile? Unlike the federal program that is a reimbursement this is a tax credit of $3333 per year over 3 years. I don’t owe the state of Ca very much anyway, so how much does this really help me and is it worth delaying my closing 2 weeks and potentially paying fees to get the bank to agree to delay closing?
Any tax experts out there that could explain how this would work for those of us not paying huge tax bills to the state?
March 23, 2010 at 1:08 PM #529920treehugger
Participantwell if I can’t have “normal” I want in on all the goodies….question is this even worthwhile? Unlike the federal program that is a reimbursement this is a tax credit of $3333 per year over 3 years. I don’t owe the state of Ca very much anyway, so how much does this really help me and is it worth delaying my closing 2 weeks and potentially paying fees to get the bank to agree to delay closing?
Any tax experts out there that could explain how this would work for those of us not paying huge tax bills to the state?
March 23, 2010 at 1:08 PM #530369treehugger
Participantwell if I can’t have “normal” I want in on all the goodies….question is this even worthwhile? Unlike the federal program that is a reimbursement this is a tax credit of $3333 per year over 3 years. I don’t owe the state of Ca very much anyway, so how much does this really help me and is it worth delaying my closing 2 weeks and potentially paying fees to get the bank to agree to delay closing?
Any tax experts out there that could explain how this would work for those of us not paying huge tax bills to the state?
March 23, 2010 at 1:08 PM #530468treehugger
Participantwell if I can’t have “normal” I want in on all the goodies….question is this even worthwhile? Unlike the federal program that is a reimbursement this is a tax credit of $3333 per year over 3 years. I don’t owe the state of Ca very much anyway, so how much does this really help me and is it worth delaying my closing 2 weeks and potentially paying fees to get the bank to agree to delay closing?
Any tax experts out there that could explain how this would work for those of us not paying huge tax bills to the state?
March 23, 2010 at 1:08 PM #530727treehugger
Participantwell if I can’t have “normal” I want in on all the goodies….question is this even worthwhile? Unlike the federal program that is a reimbursement this is a tax credit of $3333 per year over 3 years. I don’t owe the state of Ca very much anyway, so how much does this really help me and is it worth delaying my closing 2 weeks and potentially paying fees to get the bank to agree to delay closing?
Any tax experts out there that could explain how this would work for those of us not paying huge tax bills to the state?
March 24, 2010 at 12:17 AM #530211ybitz
ParticipantBuyers must close escrow or reserve a credit on or after May 1 and before or on Dec. 31 to qualify.
If the California credit only specifies close escrow and not offer acceptance date, you could get both federal and california credits by getting an offer accepted before end of April and close before 5/1 and before end of June, right?
March 24, 2010 at 12:17 AM #530340ybitz
ParticipantBuyers must close escrow or reserve a credit on or after May 1 and before or on Dec. 31 to qualify.
If the California credit only specifies close escrow and not offer acceptance date, you could get both federal and california credits by getting an offer accepted before end of April and close before 5/1 and before end of June, right?
March 24, 2010 at 12:17 AM #530790ybitz
ParticipantBuyers must close escrow or reserve a credit on or after May 1 and before or on Dec. 31 to qualify.
If the California credit only specifies close escrow and not offer acceptance date, you could get both federal and california credits by getting an offer accepted before end of April and close before 5/1 and before end of June, right?
March 24, 2010 at 12:17 AM #530888ybitz
ParticipantBuyers must close escrow or reserve a credit on or after May 1 and before or on Dec. 31 to qualify.
If the California credit only specifies close escrow and not offer acceptance date, you could get both federal and california credits by getting an offer accepted before end of April and close before 5/1 and before end of June, right?
-
AuthorPosts
- You must be logged in to reply to this topic.
