- This topic has 45 replies, 6 voices, and was last updated 17 years, 9 months ago by
Raymond.
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March 12, 2008 at 8:27 PM #168696March 12, 2008 at 9:19 PM #168290
vagabondo
ParticipantCorrection – some states may assess annually while others vary. We moved from PA to CA in 2006. The last assessment in PA was 1999.
March 12, 2008 at 9:19 PM #168617vagabondo
ParticipantCorrection – some states may assess annually while others vary. We moved from PA to CA in 2006. The last assessment in PA was 1999.
March 12, 2008 at 9:19 PM #168620vagabondo
ParticipantCorrection – some states may assess annually while others vary. We moved from PA to CA in 2006. The last assessment in PA was 1999.
March 12, 2008 at 9:19 PM #168649vagabondo
ParticipantCorrection – some states may assess annually while others vary. We moved from PA to CA in 2006. The last assessment in PA was 1999.
March 12, 2008 at 9:19 PM #168723vagabondo
ParticipantCorrection – some states may assess annually while others vary. We moved from PA to CA in 2006. The last assessment in PA was 1999.
March 12, 2008 at 10:50 PM #168330SD Realtor
ParticipantAs Bugs said all you really need to do is look at the previous sales of each home. The first one was last sold in 1997 at a price of 177k. Without any reassessment this home was limited by prop13 for how much it could increase each year. Obviously this is the one with the 66k land assessment. The other one was sold back in 2005 for a price of 575k and the assessment is obviously much higher.
Again though, I would rent for awhile before buying.
SD Realtor
March 12, 2008 at 10:50 PM #168658SD Realtor
ParticipantAs Bugs said all you really need to do is look at the previous sales of each home. The first one was last sold in 1997 at a price of 177k. Without any reassessment this home was limited by prop13 for how much it could increase each year. Obviously this is the one with the 66k land assessment. The other one was sold back in 2005 for a price of 575k and the assessment is obviously much higher.
Again though, I would rent for awhile before buying.
SD Realtor
March 12, 2008 at 10:50 PM #168662SD Realtor
ParticipantAs Bugs said all you really need to do is look at the previous sales of each home. The first one was last sold in 1997 at a price of 177k. Without any reassessment this home was limited by prop13 for how much it could increase each year. Obviously this is the one with the 66k land assessment. The other one was sold back in 2005 for a price of 575k and the assessment is obviously much higher.
Again though, I would rent for awhile before buying.
SD Realtor
March 12, 2008 at 10:50 PM #168689SD Realtor
ParticipantAs Bugs said all you really need to do is look at the previous sales of each home. The first one was last sold in 1997 at a price of 177k. Without any reassessment this home was limited by prop13 for how much it could increase each year. Obviously this is the one with the 66k land assessment. The other one was sold back in 2005 for a price of 575k and the assessment is obviously much higher.
Again though, I would rent for awhile before buying.
SD Realtor
March 12, 2008 at 10:50 PM #168762SD Realtor
ParticipantAs Bugs said all you really need to do is look at the previous sales of each home. The first one was last sold in 1997 at a price of 177k. Without any reassessment this home was limited by prop13 for how much it could increase each year. Obviously this is the one with the 66k land assessment. The other one was sold back in 2005 for a price of 575k and the assessment is obviously much higher.
Again though, I would rent for awhile before buying.
SD Realtor
March 13, 2008 at 6:37 PM #169038Raymond
ParticipantThe tax assessment info was very helpful, thanks. I think that’s a better system than where I live now. Some here are taxed out of their homes they bought decades ago. The county takes an annual valuation average for a district then applies that rate to all homeowners in that district. And in today’s sky high valuations……you see the picture.
I used to live in the Monterey peninsula back in the 80’s and even then I liked San Diego’s location, people mix and weather. So the area would not be a complete unknown.
~Ray
March 13, 2008 at 6:37 PM #169366Raymond
ParticipantThe tax assessment info was very helpful, thanks. I think that’s a better system than where I live now. Some here are taxed out of their homes they bought decades ago. The county takes an annual valuation average for a district then applies that rate to all homeowners in that district. And in today’s sky high valuations……you see the picture.
I used to live in the Monterey peninsula back in the 80’s and even then I liked San Diego’s location, people mix and weather. So the area would not be a complete unknown.
~Ray
March 13, 2008 at 6:37 PM #169371Raymond
ParticipantThe tax assessment info was very helpful, thanks. I think that’s a better system than where I live now. Some here are taxed out of their homes they bought decades ago. The county takes an annual valuation average for a district then applies that rate to all homeowners in that district. And in today’s sky high valuations……you see the picture.
I used to live in the Monterey peninsula back in the 80’s and even then I liked San Diego’s location, people mix and weather. So the area would not be a complete unknown.
~Ray
March 13, 2008 at 6:37 PM #169395Raymond
ParticipantThe tax assessment info was very helpful, thanks. I think that’s a better system than where I live now. Some here are taxed out of their homes they bought decades ago. The county takes an annual valuation average for a district then applies that rate to all homeowners in that district. And in today’s sky high valuations……you see the picture.
I used to live in the Monterey peninsula back in the 80’s and even then I liked San Diego’s location, people mix and weather. So the area would not be a complete unknown.
~Ray
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