Mortgage Interest Deduction (MID) could be reduced or eliminated

Thursday, November 18, 2010 – Article by Ryan Smith – PWR Government Affairs Director

Make sure that you pay careful attention to this… MID Has Boosted Homeownership. Chairs of the President’s Deficit Reduction Commission recently leaked a draft of suggestions for reducing the deficit. Among the many proposals are recommendations that would reduce or eliminate the Mortgage Interest Deduction. This could negatively impact real estate transactions. The leaked draft was intended to show that drastic changes are needed if the deficit is to be reduced. The leaked draft is NOT the Commission’s final recommendation. A formal report is expected on December 1. Recommendations in it will become formal only if 14 of the 18 commissioners vote in favor of the proposal. Etc.

Deficit Commission Chairs Release Draft MID Proposal

The concepts in the draft range from full repeal of the MID to other, various reductions. One proposal would reduce the cap on interest deductions from its current level of $1 million of mortgage debt to $500,000 of debt. The MID for home equity lines would be repealed, and the deduction for second homes would be repealed. Another version does not target MID specifically, but would rather reduce all itemized deductions by a fixed percentage. For example, if an individual’s combined MID, state and local taxes and charitable contributions were $15,000 and a 20% reduction was imposed, that individual would be permitted to deduct $12,000 ($15,000 x 0.8). A third group of proposal would retain the MID and some benefits for low-income families.

The revenues derived from cutting or eliminating the MID would facilitate the reduction of tax rates from its current 35% top rate to top rates of 23 – 26%, depending on the depth of the MID reduction. NAR and PWR will continue to monitor this situation as it develops and the full Committee report is released. We strongly oppose any changes to the MID or any plan that makes it more difficult for people to achieve the American dream of homeownership.

Your credit score is constantly changing

A great article that address quite a few relevant questions.

It also varies depending on which of the three main credit repositories you check. Each has a different scoring formula and different information in its files. – By Lew Sichelman – October 24, 2010 – Reporting from Washington —

Here is a scenario that happens all too frequently: A would-be home buyer applies online to obtain his all-important credit score. It comes back at a healthy 720, good enough to qualify for the best rate in the mortgage market. But then, when he applies for a loan with a local lender, his score is much lower. So low, in fact, that he might not qualify, even at less favorable terms.

What gives? How can your credit score be one number on one day and a different figure the next? And why does your score vary from one company to another?

A lot of things could be at play here. Let’s start with the basics.
A credit score is a three-digit number that is considered an accurate predictor of whether you will make your house payments on time every month. The higher the number, the safer the bet that you will repay.

But your score is based on the information contained in your credit record. And because what’s in your file is fluid, so is your score.

“Credit is dynamic information,” says Greg Holmes, national director of sales and marketing at Credit Plus, a Salisbury, Md., company that serves the mortgage business. “It’s constantly changing. It’s up and down and constantly moving.”

Your record changes every time the company that has your car loan reports an on-time payment — or more important, a missed payment that’s now more than 30 days late. It changes each time your credit card balance changes. It changes every time you apply for new credit. And it changes when an old bankruptcy finally falls into the abyss, never to be reported again.

Because a credit record is a moving target, shifting on a daily or even hourly basis, your credit score is nothing more than a numerical snapshot of your file at the moment it is calculated. As such it can change from one moment to the next.

“It depends on how much information is coming and going in and out of that credit report,” Holmes says. “It’s whatever time of day and month you pull the report. There’s even a difference between an account that’s less than six months old and one that’s older.”

If you asked someone to pull your credit score today, exactly six months and 29 days after you closed a department store account, for example, the number would be different than if you asked tomorrow, when it has been seven months since the account was shut down. Maybe not by much, but perhaps enough to alter your chances to obtain financing.

But there’s more to your score than what’s in it. Another big factor is what’s not in it. Not every creditor reports information to each of the three main credit repositories.

Say your auto lender is a local bank that reports only to Experian because Experian has a bigger presence in your state. In that case, neither TransUnion nor Equifax will know whether you are current on your car payments. They wouldn’t know about your car loan at all. As a result, a credit score based on your Experian file will be different from one based on the records maintained by the other two big bureaus.

Also, each repository has its own credit-scoring formula. A Minneapolis analytics company known as FICO (formerly Fair, Isaac and Co.), from which the term “FICO score” comes, created all the formulas. But the algorithm used by each credit bureau is slightly different based on factors that each believes to be a more or less important component of risk.

So not only is TransUnion’s score different from Equifax’s and Experian’s because it is based on information only in its records; it’s also different because it uses a different analytical model. And even if each depository maintained the same files, their scores would be different because they use different formulas.

Next, it’s important to know that the mortgage industry isn’t the only business to use credit scoring to rate potential borrowers. Actually, housing finance came somewhat late to the technique. The insurance business has been grading potential customers for decades, and now auto lenders, finance companies, banks, employers and dozens of others use credit scoring to make decisions.

The key is that each business has its own scoring formula. And a score that may be acceptable to, say, the finance company offering to lend you $5,000 for a new roof probably won’t be acceptable to a mortgage company trying to decide whether to lend you $500,000 to buy a new house.

So if you received your score from one of the Internet sites that provide a free score — but try to hook you into paying a monthly fee to monitor your credit file — it’s a safe bet that the number, accurate or not, won’t be worth much if you are in the market to buy a house.

If you’re buying a house, you’ll want an industry-specific mortgage score. No other score will do.

“Anybody can calculate a score,” Holmes says. “Who accepts it is what really matters. Even the scores used in the mortgage industry wouldn’t mean anything if Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac didn’t accept them. Or if JPMorgan Chase or Wells Fargo or Bank of America didn’t accept them.”

You can obtain a free copy of your credit record from each of the three major credit bureaus at http://www.annualcreditreport.com. The law entitles you to one free report every 12 months from each repository, but there’s nowhere I know of to obtain a free credit score.

Many outfits offer “free” credit scores, but in most cases, you have to sign up — for a monthly fee — for a credit-monitoring service. You usually can opt out of the service after a trial period. But the companies are hoping that you won’t, or that you’ll forget and won’t pay much attention to your credit card bill when it arrives in the mail.

But remember, not every score is acceptable to mortgage lenders. I’m aware of only one online service that fits the bill: http://www.myfico.com. But even then, you’ll have to sign up for the Score Watch monitoring service that FICO offers in conjunction with Equifax. You’ll just have to remember to cancel the service before the free trial period runs out.

Beyond that, would-be home buyers can obtain meaningful credit scores by applying for a mortgage, either directly with a lender or with a broker who deals with several lenders. Once you apply, lenders are obligated by law to share the score they used as a basis to decide whether you qualify.

And once you obtain a satisfactory credit score, make sure that you don’t do anything credit-wise that will change it, at least not until after the loan closes. Remember, a credit score is a moving target, so if you run out and buy new furniture using credit, your score will suffer, and you may no longer qualify for a mortgage to buy your house.

lsichelman@aol.com – Distributed by United Feature Syndicate. Copyright © 2010, Los Angeles Times

Hope you find this article helpful… have a great day and thank you for checking back in.

Conforming Loan Limits Stay at $729,950 Through September 2011!

jumbo conforming photo

This is great news for our buyer’s here in Southern California.

LOS ANGELES (Sept. 30) – The U.S. Congress late yesterday passed a continuing resolution that included a provision extending through fiscal year 2011 the current conforming loan limit of $729,750 for high-cost areas, including many in California. The same limits will also be extended to loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration. President Obama is expected to sign the resolution today, which is a short-term funding bill that will prevent a government shutdown in the absence of a budget.

The CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) and the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (NAR) have long advocated making permanent higher conforming loan limits. As a result of C.A.R.’s and NAR’s efforts, a provision of the Housing and Economic Recovery Act of 2008 included temporarily raising the conforming loan limits from $417,000 to $729,750 in high-cost areas and extending the limits through 2009. Yesterday’s actions effectively extend the higher conforming loan limits for Fannie, Freddie, and FHA loans through Sept. 30, 2011. They were set to expire at year’s end.

“C.A.R. applauds our congressional representatives for their actions to extend the higher loan limits through 2011,” said C.A.R. President Steve Goddard. “Without the extension of the higher loan limits, many California borrowers would have a harder time refinancing homes and obtaining financing for new home purchases,” he said.

The conforming loan limit determines the maximum size of a mortgage that government sponsored enterprises (GSEs) Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac can buy or “guarantee.” Non-conforming or “jumbo loans” typically carry higher mortgage interest rates than conforming loans, increasing monthly payments and hampering the ability of families in California to purchase homes by making them less affordable.

C.A.R. 2011 California Housing Market Forecast

FOR RELEASE – Monday, Oct. 4, 2010

CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® releases its California Housing Market Forecast for 2011:
Small increases projected in both home sales and median home price

LOS ANGELES (Oct. 4) – A weaker-than-expected economic recovery will result in a projected decline in California home sales for 2010, although home sales are expected to edge up slightly in 2011, according to the CALIFORNIA ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (C.A.R.) “2011 California Housing Market Forecast” released today.

California home sales for 2010 are forecast to decline 10 percent from the 2009 sales figure of 546,500 homes sold. Sales in 2011 are projected to increase a lackluster 2 percent to 502,000 units compared with 492,000 units (projected) in 2010. After two consecutive years of record-setting price declines, the median home price in California will climb 11.5 percent in 2010 to $306,500 and increase another 2 percent in 2011 to $312,500, according to the forecast.

“California’s housing market will see small increases in both home sales and the median price in 2011 as the housing market and general economy struggle to find their sea legs,” said C.A.R. President Steve Goddard. “The minor improvement in the housing market next year will be driven by the slow pace of recovery in the economy and modest job growth. Distressed properties will figure prominently in the market next year, but we also expect to see discretionary sellers play a larger role,” he said.

“As the U.S. economy continues its tepid recovery, we’ll see some improvement in California’s economy,” said C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young. “We expect a net jobs increase of approximately 1.4 million jobs in California for the year to come and an improvement in unemployment figures,” she said.

“The situation in the California housing market continues to be a tale of two housing markets,” said Goddard. The segment of the market under $500,000 has been driven by distressed sales, while higher-priced areas of the state have been constrained by restricted financing options, and increasingly have experienced an increase in the number of distressed properties. Sales in the low end have been constrained by a lack of inventory, putting upward pressure on prices. Multiple offers on lower-end homes have been very common, according to Goddard.

“A lean supply of available homes for sale will drive prices up at the low end, but larger inventories and limited, less attractive financing will cause continued softness at the high end,” said Appleton-Young. “There’s some indication that lenders will accelerate the number of foreclosures coming on market, further adding to the housing supply, but we do not anticipate that lenders will flood the market with distressed properties,” she said.

“The wild cards for 2011 include federal housing policies, actions of underwater homeowners, and the strength of the economic recovery,” said Appleton-Young. “What is certain is that favorable home prices and historically low interest rates will continue to make owning a home in California attractive for those who are in a position to buy,” she said.

An expanded forecast presentation will be presented Wednesday afternoon during the CALIFORNIA REALTOR® EXPO 2010 (http://expo.car.org/), running from Oct. 5-7 at the Anaheim Convention Center in Anaheim, Calif. The trade show attracts nearly 7,000 attendees and is the largest state real estate trade show in the nation.

Don’t miss “2010 Econ Panel: The Future of Real Estate Finance and Your Market in 2011” during CALIFORNIA REALTOR® EXPO 2010. C.A.R. Vice President and Chief Economist Leslie Appleton-Young will lead a panel of renowned economists as the experts share their predictions on what the changing economy means for real estate. Panelists include: Richard Green, professor and director of the USC Lusk Center for Real Estate; John Karevoll, housing analyst at Dataquick Information Systems; and Michael LaCour-Little, professor and director of the California State University, Fullerton Real Estate and Land Use Institute. The panel is scheduled to be held Thursday, Oct. 7, from 2 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. at the Anaheim Convention Center.

2011 FORECAST FACT SHEET

 

2005

2006

2007

2008

2009

2010f

2011f

SFH Resales (000s)

  625.0

   477.5

346.9

439.8

546.5

492.0

502.0

% Change

0.03%

-23.6%

-27.3%

26.8%

24.3%

-10.0%

2.0%

Median Price ($000s)

$522.7

$556.4

$560.3

$346.4

$275.0

$306.5

$312.5

% Change

16.0%

6.5%

0.7%

-38.2%

-20.6%

11.5%

2.0%

30-Yr FRM

5.9%

6.4%

6.3%

6.0%

5.1%

4.7%

5.1%

 1-Yr ARM

4.5%

5.5%

5.6%

5.2%

4.7%

3.9%

4.1%

The C.A.R. Expo is this week at Anaheim Convention Center… Make sure you check out REBarCamp and Tech Tuesday! I’m sure these will be well worth your time! On a side note… what do you think as far as the projections and information presented above? I would love to hear your thoughts… simply send me a comment below.

Forensic Mortgage Loan Audit Scams: A New Twist on Foreclosure Rescue Fraud

A great article just released by the Federal Trade Commission. Worth a few minutes to read as this is pertinent and valuable information in today’s challenging economy.

Fraudulent foreclosure “rescue” professionals use half-truths and outright lies to sell services that promise relief to homeowners in distress. According to the Federal Trade Commission (FTC), the nation’s consumer protection agency, the latest foreclosure rescue scam to exploit financially strapped homeowners pitches forensic mortgage loan audits.

In exchange for an upfront fee of several hundred dollars, so-called forensic loan auditors, mortgage loan auditors, or foreclosure prevention auditors backed by forensic attorneys offer to review your mortgage loan documents to determine whether your lender complied with state and federal mortgage lending laws. The “auditors” say you can use the audit report to avoid foreclosure, accelerate the loan modification process, reduce your loan principal, or even cancel your loan.

Nothing could be further from the truth. According to the FTC and its law enforcement partners:

  • there is no evidence that forensic loan audits will help you get a loan modification or any
    other foreclosure relief, even if they’re conducted by a licensed, legitimate and trained auditor,
    mortgage professional or lawyer.
  • some federal laws allow you to sue your lender based on errors in your loan documents. But even if you sue and win, your lender is not required to modify your loan simply to make your payments more affordable.
  • if you cancel your loan, you will have to return the borrowed money, which may result in you losing your home.

If you are in default on your mortgage or facing foreclosure, you may be targeted by a foreclosure rescue scam. The FTC wants you to know how to recognize the telltale signs and report them. If you are faced with foreclosure, the FTC says legitimate options are available to help you save your home.

Spotting a Scam

If you’re looking for foreclosure prevention help, avoid any business that:

  • guarantees to stop the foreclosure process – no matter what your circumstances are
  • instructs you not to contact your lender, lawyer or credit or housing counselor
  • collects a fee before providing any services accepts payment only by cashier’s check or wire transfer
  • encourages you to lease your home so you can buy it back over time
  • recommends that you make your mortgage payments directly to it, rather than your lender
  • urges you to transfer your property deed or title to it
  • offers to buy your house for cash at a fixed price that is inappropriate for the housing market
  • pressures you to sign papers you haven’t had a chance to read thoroughly or that you don’t understand.
Finding Legitimate Help

Housing experts say that when you’re behind on your mortgage payments, maintaining communication with your lender is the most important thing you can do. Contact your lender or servicer immediately if you’re having trouble paying your mortgage or you have received a foreclosure notice. You may be able to negotiate a new repayment schedule.

Call 1-888-995-HOPE for free personalized advice from housing counseling agencies certified by the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD). This national hotline – open 24/7 – is operated by the Homeownership Preservation Foundation, a nonprofit member of the HOPE NOW Alliance of mortgage industry members and HUD-certified counseling agencies. For free guidance online, visit www.hopenow.com. For free information on the President’s plan to help homeowners, visit www.makinghomeaffordable.gov.

To learn more about home mortgages and other credit-related issues, visit www.ftc.gov/ MoneyMatters. This site offers short, practical tips, videos, and links to reliable sources on a variety of topics from credit repair, debt collection, job hunting and job scams to vehicle repossession, managing mortgage payments and avoiding foreclosure rescue scams.

Reporting Fraud

If you think you’ve been dealing with a foreclosure fraudster, contact:

The FTC works to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace
and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or get free
information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. Watch a new video, How to File a Complaint, at ftc.gov/video to learn more. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.

The FTC works to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or get free information on consumer issues, visit ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. Watch a new video, How to File a Complaint, at ftc.gov/video to learn more. The FTC enters consumer complaints into the Consumer Sentinel Network, a secure online database and investigative tool used by hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad.

March 2010

Foreclosure Trends Report from Realty Trac

This is the most recent update available directly from Realty Trac… please feel comfortable giving me a call should you have any questions about the market or if you would like a simply interpretation of the data and what it means to you!

RealtyTrac™ Logo

Nationwide Agent Network

Agent Photo
Jeffrey Simons
181 S. Old Springs Rd.,
Anaheim Hills,
CA
92808
I am available to assist you in purchasing a foreclosure property or another property best suited to your needs. Buying or selling, I am here to act as your local real estate specialist.
Phone: 714-746-8103
Email: jeff@jeffreysimons.com
September 2010
Vol 4 Issue 18
6 month California Foreclosure Trends
NOD
NTS
NFS
LIS
REO

Search for Investment Properties>

California Foreclosure Activity Slows Down in July

Foreclosure activity in California decreased 3 percent in July to 66,910 properties with foreclosure filings, 38 percent below the level reported in July 2009, according to the latest RealtyTrac® U.S. Foreclosure Market Report.

“It is easy to understand why California continues to dominate in total foreclosures even while foreclosure activity as a whole continues to decline on both a monthly and yearly basis when you consider that the state has the largest population and the most housing units in the country,” said James J. Saccacio, chief executive officer of RealtyTrac.
Complete Story

Cash Flow Crazy: A Real Estate Investor Story

By Daren Blomquist

Minneapolis-area resident Mark Kozikowski sold his business three years ago and started investing in real estate full time. He specializes in buying distressed buildings at a discount so he can renovate them and then rent them out for the long-haul with a nice monthly cash flow. Kozikowski uses RealtyTrac as his primary source for finding the distressed properties he purchases.

“A lot of people think I’m crazy when I tell them what I do, and I actually think I got into this at a good time,” he said. “Because I’m buying more toward the bottom and finding a lot of good deals on distressed properties.”
Complete Story

Here are some of the most recent Investment opportunities in the area.


Pre-Foreclosure
S Larkwood St
Anaheim,
CA 92808
  • Market Value
  • Default Amount
  • $480,342
  • $12,263
  • Beds/Bath
  • Sq. FT
  • 3/1
  • 0

Property Type Address Market Value Default Sq. Ft.  
Bank-Owned
S Glenhurst Dr,
Anaheim, CA 92808
$248,772 N/A 1,061

GET DETAILS
Auction
Auction Date: 11/15/10
E Margaret Ct,
Anaheim, CA 92808
$346,046 N/A 1,546

GET DETAILS
View more properties in Orange County

Is Mortgage Relief In Your Future?

There’s a little voice you might have heard, the one which says it’s great that the government is trying to help people facing foreclosure but what about you and me?

In July the typical borrower helped by the Making Home Affordable program was paying $513 less for their mortgage, a 36 percent decline. That’s good, and yet there’s that little voice. As much as I like my fellow citizens, why can’t the government help you and me save some mortgage money each month?

In fact, such an idea is now on the table.


Complete Story

Foreclosure Trends : June, 2010
National California Orange CTY
NODs 38,033 25,068 1,543
NTSs 93,328 31,045 1,868
NFSs 38,761 0 0
LISs 58,194 0 0
REOs 85,527 13,001 501
Search for Investment Properties
Foreclosure Terms
Notice of Default (NOD)

A non-judicial document filed by a trustee that starts the foreclosure process. More about NOD

Lis Penden (LIS)

Notification of pending lawsuit. A judicial document filed by an attorney or trustee that starts the foreclosure process. More about LIS

Auction / Notice of Trustee’s Sale (NTS)

A filing by notice announcing a public auction. More about NTS

Notice (Judgment) of Foreclosure Sale (NFS)

An order signed by a judge directing to sell the property at public auction. More about NFS

Real Estate Owned (REO)

The final step in foreclosure process in which property ownership returns to lender. More about REOs




30 yr fixed mtg 4.37% 15 yr fixed mtg 3.82% 5/1 ARM 3.54%

VA Loans Getting Harder To Get!

Va Loans

This is truly frustrating in my opinion… VA Buyers are finally back in the game and it’s becoming harder for them to get financing.

Va Loans

MILITARY veterans have long been accustomed to a relatively easy mortgage process. Even borrowers with no down payment or a low credit score were usually granted V.A. loans, in large part because the Department of Veterans Affairs insures a quarter of the loan amount.

But about two years ago, lenders began limiting the conditions under which they would offer these mortgages, and industry executives say that since the start of the year, all the nation’s major lenders have followed suit.

“It’s been a tightening across the board,” said Nathan Long, the chief executive of VAMortgageCenter.com, an online broker of V.A. mortgages.

Lenders will still offer V.A. loans with no down payment, he said, but “if you have a credit score of 610, the best thing to do is work on your credit and try again in a couple of months, because you don’t really have any options.”

Mr. Long says major lenders like Bank of America, Citigroup and JPMorgan Chase, typically will not offer V.A. loans to borrowers with credit scores below 610. Debora Blume, a spokeswoman for Wells Fargo, said the cutoff score for her bank’s V.A.-insured loans was 600.

The tighter credit policies also extend to the Streamline Refinance program, which allows borrowers with V.A. loans to refinance into another V.A. loan with very little paperwork and, until recently, no appraisal.

Mr. Long and V.A. representatives say that lenders are now requiring borrowers to pay for an appraisal, which can cost $300 or more depending on a home’s location. If the new loan amount is more than the value of the home, they will most likely reject the application.

Not surprisingly, V.A. loan volume has fallen so far this year. William White, the acting assistant director for loan policy at Veterans Affairs, said his agency was on pace to insure about 300,000 mortgages this fiscal year, which ends Sept. 30, versus 325,000 in 2009. The nation’s overall loan volume rose about 19 percent during the same period, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association, to $1.92 trillion from $1.62 trillion. (The trade group tracks only total dollar amount.)

Mr. White said he understood why lenders might be restricting the loans, as the V.A. insurance only covers 25 percent of the loan amount. But he added that borrowers of V.A. loans generally had a lower default rate than prime borrowers over all — 2.6 percent versus 3.4 percent, according to the Mortgage Bankers Association — despite the fact that their credit scores were typically lower.

V.A. mortgage borrowers tend to “show some discipline,” Mr. White said, offering one explanation, “and we think they try real hard to make their payments.”

The average credit score for a V.A. borrower last year was just over 700, while the average credit score for all borrowers was 750, according to the Federal Housing Finance Agency, which oversees Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac, the government-sponsored companies that establish underwriting standards.

Mr. Long noted that V.A. loans remain competitive with other loan products. Borrowers who qualify — they must prove 24 months of continuous active military duty, and cannot have experienced a dishonorable discharge, among other things — can secure rates of 4.75 percent on 30-year fixed-rate loans, he said. That is the case even for borrowers with 620 credit scores, he added. The average rate nationwide for all 30-year fixed-rate loans is around 4.70 percent.

There is a one-time insurance fee that varies according to the size of the loan and the borrower’s credit profile, but the average is about 1.75 percent of the loan amount. On a $200,000 mortgage the cost would be $3,500. About a quarter of applicants — disabled or retired veterans, for instance — qualify for exemptions from that payment.
A version of this article appeared in print on June 27, 2010, on page RE7 of the New York edition.

Incredible Fountain Valley Lease – $1975.00/Month

Please take a minute to check out this great property that I just listed in Fountain Valley.  this great home offers 3 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, a great family room, formal dining room and remodeled kitchen. There are tons of upgrades and the association amenities are just fantastic with a great tot-lot, pool, tennis court and clubhouse.

The owners are looking for a 12 Month Lease at $1975.00/Month.