How to save for a down payment
Owning your own home has a lot of payoffs, especially
these days when mortgage rates are still among the lowest in 30 years.
There are also many housing options available in a wide range of prices.
Simply put, you can carry a home of your own for no
more than what you would pay in rent. And, unlike renting, your payments
go toward increasing the equity in your home.
So, what’s stopping you? For most people who have
never owned a home before, it’s the initial down payment and the
ability to keep up with the monthly financial obligations (mortgage
payment, insurance, utilities, maintenance).
The effort to save for and buy a home may require you
to make significant changes in your way of life. For most people, it
means changing their spending and lifestyle habits to support the
additional costs of saving for, paying for, and maintaining a home.
One of the best ways of saving for a down payment is
to take advantage of government programs available to first-time home
buyers. A real estate professional can help you understand how these
programs work and ensure that you get the maximum benefit possible.
RRSP Home Buyers’ Plan
Contribute to a Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)
regularly and to the maximum allowed. The federal government’s RRSP
Home Buyers’ Plan enables eligible taxpayers to withdraw up to $20,000
tax free from their plan to buy or build a qualifying home. The amount
of money withdrawn must be repaid within 15 years.
If you buy the qualifying home together with your
spouse or other individuals, each person can withdraw up to $20,000 tax
free. A government form must be completed for each withdrawal.
Generally, an RRSP holder can participate in the Home
Buyers’ Plan only once in a lifetime. The pamphlet, Home Buyers’
Plan (HBP) is available from Canada Customs and Revenue Agency and
will help you determine if you are considered a first-time home buyer.
A qualifying home is a housing unit located in
Canada. Those participating in have to buy or build a home before Oct. 1
of the year after the year of withdrawal. You must also agree to occupy
the home as your principle residence no later than one year after buying
or building it. Once you occupy the home, there is no minimum period of
time that you have to live there.
For more information on the Home Buyers Plan please
go here:
HBP
CMHC five per cent down
While Canada Mortgage and Housing Corporation’s (CMHC)
five per cent down option program doesn’t help you save for the down
payment, it sure eases the way to home ownership.
With as little as five per cent down, all home owners
now have access to CMHC mortgage insurance. This means CMHC may insure
the mortgage on your home (against default in payments) for up to 95 per
cent of the lending value of the home. This helps make home ownership a
reality for many Canadians who can afford monthly mortgage payments but
would have trouble saving for a larger down payment.
Previously available only to first-time home buyers,
the program was expanded earlier this year to include all home buyers.
Eligible borrowers include anyone who buys a home in Canada and occupies
it as a principle residence. The mortgage insurance premium in 2006 is
about 2.75% to 2.90% of the mortgage loan and can be added to the
mortgage or paid on a monthly basis.