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How to Avoid Costly Housing Mistakes During and After a Divorce

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Divorce: What You Need to Know About Your House, Your Home Loan and Taxes

Divorce is a tough situation that opens many emotional and financial issues to be solved. One of the most important decisions is what to do about the house.

During the heavy emotional and financial turmoil, what you need most is some non-emotional, straightforward, specific answers. Once you know how a divorce affects your home, your mortgage, and taxes, critical decisions are easier. Neutral, third-party information can help you make logical, rather than emotional decisions.

The first decision you may make is whether you want to continue living in the house. Will the familiar surroundings bring you comfort and emotional security, or unpleasant memories? Do you want to minimize change by staying where you are, or selling your home and moving to a new place that offers a new start?

Only you can answer these questions, but there will almost certainly be some financial repercussions to your decision process. What can you afford? Can you manage the old house on your new budget? Is refinancing possible? Or is it better to sell and buy? How much house can you buy on your new budget?

The purpose of this report is to help you ask the right questions so you can make informed decisions that will be right for your situation.

4 Basic Housing Options:

1. Sell the house now and divide up the proceeds.

2. Buy out your spouse.

3. Have your spouse buy you out.

4. Retain your ownership.

Understanding the Outcomes of Your Decision:

Keeping these housing options in mind, it’s important for you to understand the financial implications of each of these scenarios.

Sell the House Now and Divide Up the Proceeds

Your primary consideration under these circumstances is to maximize your home’s selling price. We can help you avoid the common mistakes most homeowners make which compromise this outcome. As you work to get your financial affairs in order, make sure you understand what your net proceeds will be – i.e. after selling expenses, and after determining what your split of the proceeds will be. Note that the split may not be 50/50, but rather may depend on the divorce settlement, the source of the original downpayment, and the legislative property laws in your area.

Buy Out Your Spouse

If you intend to keep the house yourself, you’ll have to determine how you’ll continue to meet your monthly financial obligations, if you now only have one salary. If you used two incomes to qualify for the old loan, refinancing on your own might be a challenge.

Ready to dive deeper? Click HERE to continue reading and Get FREE Instant Access to find out how to make this part of your current situation less stressful.

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