Real
Estate News
3 Ways Parents Can Help Their Children Buy Homes
RISMEDIA, Feb. 26, 2008-(MCT)-With today’s turmoil in the
housing market, hitting up mom and dad for a down payment may be
a young buyer’s best route to homeownership. It’s hard
for the younger generation to become first-time home buyers today
as they try to juggle numerous financial responsibilities, experts
say.”Stakes are higher,” says Carrie Schwab Pomerantz,
chief strategist of consumer education with Charles Schwab & Co. “Today,
young people are solely responsible for their retirement. A lot of
young people are coming out of college with high levels of debt.”
Here are three ways parents can help their children buy homes:
1. Cash is Clean and Easy: Experts say simply
giving adult children cash for a down payment is one of the smoothest
ways to help them buy a home. For parents with the means, gifting
can avoid intergenerational squabbles and misunderstandings.
“Helping with cash is pretty clean, pretty easy,” says Jack Guttentag,
an emeritus finance professor at the Wharton School of the University
of Pennsylvania.
Guttentag helped his adult son buy a house in Venice Beach, Calif.,
about 15 years ago. Prices were high, so Guttentag ponied up for
the down payment, while his son had enough income to carry the mortgage.
“It turned out well,” Guttentag says.
To avoid triggering a taxable event, Guttentag spaced out his gift
over two years. An individual can give $12,000 a year to a recipient
without having to pay a tax on the gift. Therefore, a couple could
give an adult child and the child’s
spouse a total of $48,000 in one year.
Yet gifting can become complicated when lender institutions have
rules that limit the size of a gift. From a lender’s point
of view, a debt obligation-even a gift from parent to child-could
weaken the security of the mortgage, Guttentag says.
“When lenders assess someone’s qualification for carrying a mortgage,
they take into account their other debt payments,” he says.
Some lenders can be concerned that reported gifts aren’t really
gifts at all, and may require borrowers and parents to sign an affidavit
that no repayment is expected, Guttentag says. To avoid too much
scrutiny by a lender, Guttentag suggests giving your adult child
a down payment well in advance of applying for a mortgage.
2. Cosign a Loan or Invest in a House:
Some parents may have limited resources as home equity
has come under pressure. Others may need their investments
for retirement.
Yet they can still help their adult children by cosigning a loan.
Cosigning can help make a lender feel more comfortable with extending
a mortgage to an adult child, says Adele Brady Bolson, a certified
public accountant in Washington state.
However, if payments aren’t made, the mortgage company will go back to
the parents, she says. And the parents’ credit can be affected.
Investing in a home can also work for parents that want to be paid
back.
Families must be careful planners and good record keepers over
time to avoid confusion and intergenerational quarrels. All parties
should understand how their respective shares in the equity of the
house would be divided and change over time. As children make the
mortgage payments, their share of the equity in the house will increase.
“The investment has the potential for conflict because of changes that
occur over time,” Guttentag says. “If both parties agree on what
the rules are and keep accurate records, there isn’t going
to be any conflict.”
And parents may face hard choices if they invest in a child’s
home through a loan or by co-signing a mortgage.
“I’ve seen all sorts of really unfortunate things happen,” Bolson
says. “Don’t make promises that you cannot keep. Whatever promises
you’ve made should be put down in writing.”
3. The Gift of Knowledge: Schwab Pomerantz
says the “gift
of knowledge” is a good option for parents without the means to contribute
cash or invest in a child’s home.
“Very few families have frequent conversations about money and investing,” she
says. “So you’re already starting at a deficit in terms
of families who talk about finances.”
The lack of conversation is not a socioeconomic issue-families
across the wealth spectrum are missing out on these important talks,
Schwab Pomerantz says. She suggests “helping kids weed through the
various mortgage alternatives to avoid these scandalous offerings
that are inappropriate for them.”
Adult children should understand the importance of borrowing within
the limit of what they can actually afford, rather than becoming
overly indebted to a home.
“It’s never worth it to be house poor. … It limits you from
doing so many other things,” Schwab Pomerantz says.
Current turmoil in the mortgage market magnifies the importance
of ensuring that all parties understand the terms of a mortgage before
buying a home, says Bolson.
“If I’m going to be giving money to my child I need to make sure
that my husband is OK with it,” she says. “All parties
need to agree.”
Bolson also recommends that a first home for adult children should
cost no more that the average for the community, especially when
parents are helping financially.
“You want to be cautious about whether this is just the beginning of kids
wanting parents to buy what they themselves can’t afford,” she says.
She added that in most circumstances parents “should only help
with the first home. When (adult children) are ready for the dream
home they can trade up to it.” |