The government's First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit expires December 1, 2009.
If you expect to use the program in conjunction with a home purchase, therefore, you may want to consider yourself officially "on the clock".
Assuming a 60-day window between contract and closing, there are now 77 days left to find a home and go under contract for it.
The First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit refunds up to $8,000 at Tax Time for qualified home buyers. A few of the program's qualification criteria include:
The tax credit itself is limited to $8,000 or 10% of the purchase price, whichever is less.
Remember, though: The refund is a true tax credit -- not a deduction. This means that a taxpayer owing $8,000 to the IRS and claiming the $8,000 First-Time Home Buyer Tax Credit would owe the IRS nothing on April 15, 2010.
The complete list of qualifying criteria is posted on the IRS website.
http://www.ncnocostmortgage.com

For the fourth consecutive month, the country's foreclosure activity was dominated by a small number of states.
As reported by RealtyTrac.com, more than 50 percent of the country's foreclosure-related actions in June concentrated in just 3 states:
The states rounding out the Top 10 include Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Texas, Ohio, Illinois and Colorado.
Meanwhile, June's reported foreclosure figures are consistent with the data from earlier this year, suggesting that the foreclosure remedy plans put forth by the government and by lenders can barely keep pace with the national default rate.
Foreclosure-related actions nationwide are up 5 percent from May.
The silver lining in data this negative is that foreclosures are creating tremendous buying opportunities for the right buyers. Because foreclosed homes tend to sell at a discount versus non-foreclosed homes and because mortgage rates are low, home sales are showing strength in a multitude of markets because of ample supply at relatively cheap prices.
Distressed homes accounted for one-third of all existing home sales in May.
Search the complete June 2009 foreclosure report for yourself, including foreclosure heat maps and other trends on the RealtyTrac website.
Mortgage markets worsened for the third straight Tuesday after the government reported June's Retail Sales report came in slightly better than expected.
Since falling to near 5.000 percent last week, 30-year fixed conforming mortgage rates have risen by almost 3/8.
It's a similar mortgage rate pattern to what we've seen over the last 10 months -- rates drift down to near their "all-time lows", and then surge higher over just a few days time.
This week's movement, in particular, is vexing home buyers and would-be refinancers.
Many people thought mortgage rates would break below the 5.000 percent threshold. The markets, however, had other ideas.
In addition to the unexpectedly strong Retail Sales data, last month's Producer Price Index reported higher than expectations, too.
A rising PPI is important to rate shoppers because the figure is akin to the Cost of Living measurement for household, but for American businesses instead. The thought goes that if business costs are rising, consumer costs will eventually rise, too, as businesses share their expenses with American households.
This is inflationary, of course, and inflation is awful for mortgage rates. It's part of the reason why mortgage rates closed higher again Tuesday.
All year long, mortgage rates have been jumpy and unpredictable. This past week has been no different and it's why you shouldn't necessarily try to time for a market bottom with mortgage rates.
If an interest rate looks good to you today and the payment is manageable, consider locking it in. There's no guarantee rates will ever fall back toward 5.
ActiveRain Corp. is not responsible for the accuracy of the site's content (which is written by members of the ActiveRain Real Estate Network) and does not endorse the views of the real estate agents, mortgage brokers, and others listed here.
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