San Diego County Property Tax Important Dates

Important Dates to Remember

July 1 – Beginning of fiscal year.

January 1 - Unsecured bills mailed out; Lien date for unsecured taxes.

August 31 – Unsecured deadline. A 10% penalty is added.

September – Treasurer-Tax Collector mails out original secured property tax bills.

November 1 – First installment is due (Secured Property Tax) and delinquent Unsecured accounts are changed additional penalties of 1½% until paid.

December 10 – First installment payment deadline. A 10% penalty is added to payments made after this date.*

February 1 – Second installment due (Secured Property Tax).

April 10 - Second installment payment deadline. A 10% penalty plus $10.00 cost is added to payments made after this date.*

May – Treasurer-Tax Collector mails delinquent notices for any unpaid, regular current taxes.

June 30 - End of fiscal year.

July 1 - Delinquent Secured accounts are transferred to delinquent tax roll and additional penalties added at 1- ½% per month on any unpaid tax amounts, plus $15.00 redemption fee.

* If a delinquent date falls on a weekend or holiday, the delinquent date is the next business day.

Read more on the  San Diego County website

 

Time Change Reminder: It’s Fall Back Time

Daylight Saving Time is ending so it’s “Fall Back” time.  Turn your clock back one hour before going to bed on Saturday evening.

It’s even more important to use the semi-annual time change as a reminder to 
test your smoke detectors
.  Do the test twice annually during “Spring Forward” and “Fall Back” and change to a fresh battery if needed.

Also drive extra safe on our freeways as the evening commute will be significantly less light with the time change.

 

Help for Homeowner’s Facing Foreclosure

Do You Know a Homeowner Facing Foreclosure? Here’s A Way Out.

 

short sale and foreclosure process

Headlines today are filled with stories about homeowners in financial distress—people who face a lender’s foreclosure on their home.

 

Millions of American home owners are wondering what to do.

Like most crises, this one has produced its share of rumors and misinformation. One of the biggest ones is “just let it happen.” Why fight back, this line of thinking goes. It’s too emotionally draining, and the government’s loan modifications aren’t helping many people. Well, that’s only partly true.

While government loan modification programs have fallen short of the mark so far, there is another solid, sensible option for homeowners. It’s called a short sale—a sale to a buyer where the seller’s lender agrees to accept less than the full amount owned.

Why not be foreclosed? Why sell short? Agents who have closed hundreds of these transactions provide this list of reasons:

  • Avoid the foreclosure stigma – Homeowners will always have to disclose that they had a foreclosure on any mortgage application and (many job applications) that they submit in the future. This can have an adverse affect on their future mortgage rates. Foreclosure is asked about specifically in credit inquiries. There is no seven-year time limit on this item.
  • Protect credit score – Credit scores will be lowered by 300-plus points (per loan) by foreclosure. The impact of a short sale—about half that much.
  • Improve eligibility for a government insured loan – The homeowner will be ineligible for a government insured loan for 5-7 years (only two years in a short sale). A foreclosure is the one credit report item that is almost impossible to have repaired.
  • Avoid a deficiency judgment – Lenders can seek a deficiency judgment against the homeowner and collect any amount they do not recover at sale.
  • Protect employment prospects – Many employers run credit checks on prospective employees. Foreclosure is one of the top items that will put a potential new hire, or even current employment, in jeopardy.

These are the top reasons, but there are more. An expert short sale specialist agent can give a full picture of the options.

One more tip. Don’t believe everything you read about how long short sales take and how few get finalized. Short sale timelines, while still longer than normal, are shrinking as lenders get their paperwork act together. Find out who the top short sale agents are in your market. These pros are closing 70 to 90 percent of the short sales they represent—more than three times the national average. They know where to find buyers, and how to negotiate the buyer’s offer effectively with lenders and get the deal closed—so the homeowner can move on with life and recover.

Lookup Realty can help you short sale your san diego home.

 

Carbon Monoxide Detectors Now Required

California Senate Bill 183 was signed into law to regulate installation of Carbon Monoxide Detectors. Apparently 34 other states have similar laws at this point.

The Carbon Monoxide Poisoning Prevention Act says that all single-family homes with “an attached garage or a fossil fuel source” will need to have a CO-alarm in place by July 1, according to Senate Bill 183.

If you’re looking for some beach reading take a look at the entire Bill.