California South Bay Blogs

Living and Working in Southern California, U.S.A.

Archive for the ‘Living in California Southbay’ Category

I reduced our property tax assessment by at least $91,000

without comments

I wrote recently about filing our own property tax reduction appeal, after receiving tons of junk mail and scam mail from “companies” offering to do this, and after getting a huge tax bill.

The “catch” if you let other people do it for you was that you have to pay a few hundred bucks up front, but there is no guarantee that you’d get your property tax reduced, because whether or not you get your property tax reduced was up to the Los Angeles County Assessor.

I can see why people wanted to get help doing these forms, though, because the instructions and the form itself can scare the heck outta ya.

cut taxes! I also didn’t realize at first that the “short” form – the 1 pager – wasn’t the true important form that you have to file. The real important form is the one page form with text so small you need a magnifying glass to read it – the one with 3 columns squeezed on a sheet of paper. If the form you’re looking at isn’t giving you a headache or gripping your throat with a deep sense of fear, then you’re not looking at the right one.

Anyway, as can be expected, the LA county folks take a looooooooooooong time to respond. I got a couple of mails after that saying they’ve received it. Of course by then I’d have paid my overinflated property taxes already because I didn’t want to get penalized.

FINALLY, this week I got a letter in the mail with my copy of the appeal I filed. Good. It meant they got my appeal.

TODAY I got a letter in the mail saying “notice of assessed value change”!

Now, the assessed value change wasn’t as low as I had appealed for – even though I based my appeal on the comparable properties sold between Jan 2008 and Mar 2008 as instructed by the forms. STILL, it is a heck of a lot lower – more than $91,000 lower – and while the value is still overinflated, it’s a bit easier to stomach.

Anyone out there “do it yourself” and get a successful property tax reduction appeal? I suspect that if you fill out the form, you’ll surely get approved for a lower tax bill, but you just gotta bear the intimidating forms.

Written by Southbayblogs.com

January 8th, 2009 at 6:07 pm

Good Time to Refinance? Not For Jumbo Loans!

without comments

The feds cutting interest rates can mean only one thing: mortgage lenders are jumping at the opportunity to persuade you to refinance your loan!

There’s just one catch: if you happen to be a responsible and conscientious borrower who locked in a jumbo loan at a 30-year fixed rate mortgage, your rates are probably better than what is being offered right now on the market.

At least, that’s what I’ve found: our jumbo loan 30 year fixed rate is 6.0% and as of today, most of the interest rates for jumbo loans hover in the low 6% but generally above 6.0%. I’ve seen some as high as over 7%! It is the non-jumbo 30 year fixed rate mortgages that have the attractive high 5% rates.

Unless you’ve lived in California for decades or traded “up” a house using the equity of your first house during the housing boom, you’re likely to be paying a jumbo mortgage, which is a loan exceeding $417,000.

Written by Southbayblogs.com

June 1st, 2008 at 10:24 am

California Needs a Fiscal Makeover

without comments

Well, the time has come. Gas prices are hitting and exceeding $4 a gallon, and even the ARCO stations that are cheaper than others are going to $4 or more per gallon of unleaded plus.

This morning on the radio I heard that Governor Arnold is trying to borrow against the lottery sales for the budget deficit. What happened to him? I thought he was going to fix the state, or at least not put it in a worse situation.

Then I heard that the politicians are calling for higher taxes instead – and proposing to increase it 1% more. Hello! We already pay 8.25% in taxes. If I’m going to start paying 9.25% in taxes I’m going to make plans to move out of this state. It is ridiculous. How does Texas survive with no sales taxes? And why can’t California do the same thing?

Written by Southbayblogs.com

May 15th, 2008 at 3:35 pm