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Re: Can Someone Explain CONDO PILOTS?
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Home away from home
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Thanks guys.
Posted on: 2009/9/9 11:42
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Re: Can Someone Explain CONDO PILOTS?
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Just can't stay away
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Thanks again, JCLAW.
Quick question. Since one of the benefits of having a pilot is being locked into your payment (right?), I assume it's correct that your payment can't be increased if you refinance your home (and the appraisal comes in higher than the original price) or if the Condo Association increases maintenance down the line. I know someone who posed this question to a person in the tax office and they were told that the pilot would go up. I told them they were misinformed, but I'd like to get your take.
Posted on: 2009/9/9 0:57
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Re: Can Someone Explain CONDO PILOTS?
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Just can't stay away
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It's
16% (plus city fees amounting to another 1.1 % so 16 really means 17.1%) x the sum of > annual mortgage principal and interest payment assuming a 20 year self liquidating loan at prevailing rates. + > annual condo association maintenance = TAXES So let's assume a $1mm condo of about 2,000 sq ft with $1500/month maintenance. Annual mortgage p+i at 5.75% rate is $85,423 and maintenance is $18,000 for a combined total $103,423. Take 17.1% of that for annual taxes of $17,685 or about 1.7% of purchase price. The higher interest rates and maintenance are at the time of purchase, the higher the taxes are.
Posted on: 2009/9/8 23:34
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Re: Can Someone Explain CONDO PILOTS?
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Home away from home
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Pilots (payment in lieu of taxes) are different than abatements. With abatements you essential get a discount on the assessed value of the property lowering your tax responsibility.
Sometimes these are graduated over a period of time. Ex: Assessor says your taxable property value is 100,000 your abatement might discount that amount by 25% for the first few years then 15% for several more by the end you may only get 5% before the abatement expires. Pilots are different and somewhat arbitrary because you are not subject to the increases that everyone including abated properties are because Pilots are not pegged to actual property value. This is why abated properties DID see there taxes increase along with everyone else in this past hike..because they increased the % of tax paid on assessed value even if that value is discounted..pilots were not subject to that increase. This is just some basic info I don't think it explains the situation with Crystal Point. Maybe someone else could help out there.
Posted on: 2009/9/8 23:26
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Re: Can Someone Explain CONDO PILOTS?
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Home away from home
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just think of it as 1.7% down to ~1.1% per year, and increase per their schedule as the years pass. This makes CP's deal sweeter, i kinda regret not buying CP, the building looks so nice...but the valet only parking still sucks, oh well.
Posted on: 2009/9/8 23:13
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Can Someone Explain CONDO PILOTS?
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Home away from home
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Quote:
On June 1, McCann asked the council to extend the length of Crystal Point's abatement from 20 to 30 years, and reduce the percentage of annual gross revenue paid to the city from 16 to 10 percent for the first five years, with 12 percent payments for the next five years, and 16 percent payments for the final 20 years.On June 1, McCann asked the council to extend the length of Crystal Point's abatement from 20 to 30 years, and reduce the percentage of annual gross revenue paid to the city from 16 to 10 percent for the first five years, with 12 percent payments for the next five years, and 16 percent payments for the final 20 years. This is the requested and the granted redo of the Pilot Payments in lieu of taxes. So now what does this mean for a condo? What are Gross Revenues for 20 or 30 years? I clearly understand how a RENTAL earns Gross Revenue, but in a very few years the developer has sold all his product and has no further ownership? So then what gross earnings are the condo owners taxes on or "In-lieu of taxed" for? So it's 16% of WHAT for the last 20 years? It CERTAINLY cannot be 16% of the original purchase price.
Posted on: 2009/9/8 21:48
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