If there was a time to transfer , this could be it
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In our area days on the market are typically around a month. To me that's a healthy amount of time for a decision on a major purchase.Now that people are using the Recession word, interest rates are holding and more job insecurity seems to be around , this market will see a big dip . The days of put a sign on the lawn and interview buyers is past .
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This is what we're thinking.If there was a time to transfer , this could be it
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They may be psychologically screwed into dumping the Aldershot place. Unless they have a secret game plan they probably lost equity on both properties and are paying an expensive waiting game that will show as a steep cliff on their net worth chart regardless of where they end up.Acquaintance in Aldershot is now one yr on market , I don’t know if they listed on the moon , but if nobody wants it in a year something ain’t right . Meanwhile they bought a huge house in Ganonoque a year ago at the inflated prices , and they own it now .
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Holding 2 high value properties at the same time cuts into your personal exemption. Can be costly, in the long term.They may be psychologically screwed into dumping the Aldershot place. Unless they have a secret game plan they probably lost equity on both properties and are paying an expensive waiting game that will show as a steep cliff on their net worth chart regardless of where they end up.
If they dump the new place it will seriously bruise egos if they end up at the original place but with less money.
They will be out the same amount of money in the new place but will at least have something new.
When we bought our house, we looked at another nearby. The owners of that house had bought a second house nearby and listed the first. When the first wasn't selling at quickly as they hoped, they listed the second house too. The second house sold first and they moved back into the first house. That was an expensive few years for them. RE commissions, LTT, moving, interest, mortgage penalties all to end up where they started.They may be psychologically screwed into dumping the Aldershot place. Unless they have a secret game plan they probably lost equity on both properties and are paying an expensive waiting game that will show as a steep cliff on their net worth chart regardless of where they end up.
If they dump the new place it will seriously bruise egos if they end up at the original place but with less money.
They will be out the same amount of money in the new place but will at least have something new.
Anyone that hasn't kept up with CRA rules on principal residence status might get a serious wake up call. There was a big change in late 2016 and more to come.Holding 2 high value properties at the same time cuts into your personal exemption. Can be costly, in the long term.
At least those expenses are tax deductible, not that it makes things good, just eases the pain a bit.When we bought our house, we looked at another nearby. The owners of that house had bought a second house nearby and listed the first. When the first wasn't selling at quickly as they hoped, they listed the second house too. The second house sold first and they moved back into the first house. That was an expensive few years for them. RE commissions, LTT, moving, interest, mortgage penalties all to end up where they started.
Assuming you had a capital gain to offset. As neither was rented, I don't think you can write off any of those against normal income.At least those expenses are tax deductible, not that it makes things good, just eases the pain a bit.
Save that appraisal till you’re near certain you’ll do the deal. Realtors will have a close valuation, that costs nothing.This is what we're thinking.
First appraiser was a ridiculously demanding person:
- I don't do this, that or the other
- must be b/w xam -> ypm only and nothing else matters
Second one seems better so I'm thinking of going with them.
Both came in at $550+HST which was half of what I was expecting.
You can claim operating expenses (mortgage, how, insurance, property tax, maintenance) against income if you claim the property was an investment for income. Capital items, ltt , sales commissions, and the capital loss claimed as an offset against capital gains 3 years back and indefinitely forward.Assuming you had a capital gain to offset. As neither was rented, I don't think you can write off any of those against normal income.
Thanks. We’re not selling. Just taking it from parents as they don’t want it any longer.Save that appraisal till you’re near certain you’ll do the deal. Realtors will have a close valuation, that costs nothing.
If you do the evaluation just before selling, it becomes a legit selling cost item that reduces capital gains. Doing it now is an operating expense, only deductible if it’s a rental income property.