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Old 06-29-2007, 12:32 PM
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LuxLiving LuxLiving is offline
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OMG, I freaked when mine went up $18! ...and pulled us out of the mortgage company's hands as this was simply an 'estimated' adjustment w/no merits in fact.

At $142 I'd faint and fall back in it!

Last edited by LuxLiving : 06-29-2007 at 12:45 PM.
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Old 06-29-2007, 12:40 PM
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It is my understanding that escrow accounts are frequently mishandled.

Are there any set guidelines for when you get out of escrow and handle the taxes and insurance yourself or is it up to the mortgage company and your mortgage terms?

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Old 06-29-2007, 01:28 PM
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Another good reason to pay your own taxes and insurance...

Clark Howard addressed escrow accounts a few weeks ago, saying that if your bank fails to pay insurance or taxes on time (by oversight or whatever) then YOU are responsible, not the bank. Seems unfair!
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Old 06-29-2007, 01:40 PM
FrugalFish FrugalFish is offline
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Gosh, that is a pretty big increase. I've heard about what those of you in NJ deal with in regard to property taxes and auto insurance. Like someone else mentioned, the new amount probably compensates to repay a shortfall, and pay the new rate. Next year you may see a drop in the escrow amount- this has happened to us a couple of times.

I am in CA where prop 13 limits property value increases to 2% per year (not the 7.5 someone else mentioned earlier). If not for that control, we would not be able to stay in the house- which is why prop 13 was passed in the first place. Someone who bought a house identical to ours today would pay 4 times the property taxes that we do, which is good incentive to stay put (golden prisons as they are called in CA- great profits if you want to sell, but you can't afford the property taxes in a different CA house). I don't know how some people manage to do it.

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Old 06-29-2007, 08:12 PM
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Quote:
Are there any set guidelines for when you get out of escrow and handle the taxes and insurance yourself or is it up to the mortgage company and your mortgage terms?
I can't remember exactly, but I think I had to have a certain amount of equity before I could get out of the escrow. So, I think there are terms in the agreement.
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Old 06-30-2007, 02:06 PM
frugalfarmwife frugalfarmwife is offline
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Quote:
Originally Posted by jIM_Ohio View Post
raising taxes is a great way to get rid of rif raf. I am not talking about a 100 mile move. I could move 2 miles and drop my taxes by around $3000-$4000. We pay $5250/year and our schools lick rocks. The town over has not good schools either with lower taxes.

But I prefer being around a higher class of people (educated people) as opposed to midwest rednecks. Shallow, sure.

There are seniors in my town which make some complaints... and I tell them no one is forcing you to live in this town. One town over has some nice secluded neighborhoods, lower taxes and rednecks.

take the good with the bad

And we just might not want you in our areas either It's when "your type" move into our farming communities and then complain about the noise/smell/dust etc from farming and try to change our zoning that we have problems, oh and yep, your moving out here and wanting more of your "civilization" raises my taxes and annoys me and raises our land prices through the roof so young people can't afford to get into farming at all.

BTW, when you sit down to a meal today take a moment and thank those "Red necked lower class people" that are honest enough to put in a hard days work to feed even those that aren't even thankful for it

KJ
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