2 Capital Journal Building- Section, Friday, March 10, 1950 THE HOUSE YOU CAM AFFORD Key to Monthly Costs Is Your Toke-Home Pay How much of a home can a family afford? In the last analysis it depends on the family. If your family Is thrifty and willing to sacrifice for a home, that is one story. But it you are accustomed to luxuries, resent budgeting your expenses, frequently fail to make ends meet and resort to bor rowing before payday, look out.- Then again, it depends on what you start with your own savings, or a legacy, or other money easily come by. For the average family, start ing virtually from scratch and in dead earnest on owning a home there are some rules, even though the best rule is to fig ure it out yourself. It used to be figured that a house priced between one-and- a-half and two-and-a-half times your annual income was a safe buy. But prices for houses, the cost of living and higher income taxes have changed this. The reason is that under such a rule a man earning $60 a week would have been given the go ahead signal on a house costing from $4,680 to $7,800. Today he'd have a merry time finding a suitable house to meet the min imum figure and he'd have to have on unusually thrifty fam ily in order to make ends meet under the maximum figure. That rule would also permit man earning $100 a week to buy a house costing $7,700 to $13,000, and he'd probably have some trouble in swinging the maximum deal. Then there was another rule that monthly payments, like rent, should not exceed one week's pay or 25 per cent of monthly income. Since monthly carrying charges on a 20-ycar mortgage, plus real estate taxes, water charges and fire insur ance, could be figured roughly to amount to 1 per cent of the amount of the mortgage, this rule made it easy to say that the $60-a-wcck man could carry a $6,000 mortgage. But those monthly payments did not cover heat, or upkeep, utilities, travel to and from work and other fixed charges. So when food, fuel and income taxes went up, and interest rates began to stiffen, this picture also changed. A conservative banker re cently said that when arrang ing mortgage loans he advises the average home buyer not to exceed 20 per cent of his month ly take-home pay when figuring what monthly payments he can afford comfortably. The cost of fuel, gas, electricity, telephone, commutation and other fixed extras prompt this 20 per cent rule. Take-home pay Is the only realistic basis on which to fig urc. There are so many deduc tions made from most pay checks, and they vary so widely, that each family must figure this out individually. The $60-a week man, who has a wife and two children, may have a take- home pay of $57.90, if his in come tax is the only deduction The $100-a-wcek man with the same size family may take home $91.30 after income taxes. But 11 nospuauzation, pension con tributions, group insurance, un ion dues and other deductions are made, the amount to figure on for home buying is much less. Fireplace Flue A fireplace requires a separ ate flue with cross-section area no less than one-tenth the area of the fireplace opening. Illinois produces most of the redtop seed crop in the United States. Budgeting your home pur chase in terms of take-home pay, or actual net income, is sounder than trying any rule to fit a total house price to your annual income. If a $60-a-week man has a take-home pay of $55, his monthly net income runs around $238 and 20 per cent of this is $47.60. According to the old rule of thumb, with this amount representing 1 per cent of the face of the mortgage. t indicates far less than a $6,000 mortgage. But the amount a man can pay in cash is what throws off all rules of fitting prices to an nual income. Also the more you can pay in cash, the more you save in carrying charges. The best policy, in figuring your home buying budget, is to make ample allowances for all extras not only incidentals di rectly connected with the deal, such as legal fees, title search. surveys, and other charges, but also additional furniture, cur tains, accessories and equip ment not included a refriger ator, kitchen range, washing machine, etc. If you budget yourself too closely it may mean no movies, or it may mean real hardship in the event of unforeseen medical expenses. The Veterans Administration warns GIs that because of ex tras, their mortgage payments may represent only 50 to 65 per cent of the total monthly cost of owning and running a home. Home Payments Must Be Prompt If you buy a home on monthly mortgage payments, do not ex pect leniency on collections on the part of the bank or savings association holding your mort gage. Chances arc you will not be billed for payment. You are ex pected to remember and make the payment before the 10th of each month, or whatever date is agreed upon. If you slip up, you can be charged interest not only on the outstanding balance, but also on the interest already charged and payable on the first of Uic month. FLAME MAY BURST FROZEN WATER PIPE In thawing frozen water pipes a steady flame like that of a blowtorch in one spot is likely to burst the pipe. Burlap wrapped around the pipe and repeatedly soaked with boiling water will thaw the ice without danger. If a pipe has already burst, the water supply should be shut off, all faucets opened and islumber called. How Gf Can Buy Without Cash Down World War II veterans can usually buy a house with no cash payment required. This also goes for WACs, WAVEs, SPARs and women marines. The Veterans' Administration will guarantee up to 50 per cent of a home loan, or up to $4,000, whichever is less. Or in com bination with an FHA insured loan on a more expensive house, the VA will guarantee a second loan covering the cash payment needed up to 20 per cent, or $4,000 or the purchase price. The VA guarantee is made to lending institutions to encour age them to make loans to vet erans on favorable terms. The VA does not make the loan. These loans can be applied for through banks and savings as sociations at any time up to 10 years after the end of the war. Interest on the GI portion of the loan Is 4 per cent on an FHA mortgage it is 4 lz per cent plus of 1 per cent FHA mortgage insurance premium. IX a new home is appraised by the FHA at more than $0,000, the FHA will insure a loan up to 90 per cent of the first $6,000 of value, plus 80 per cent on the balance between $6,000 and $10,000. If the house is not new, the FHA will insure a loan up to 80 per cent of the appraised value. In either case, a loan guaran teed by the Veterans' Adminis tration may go as high as $4,000 or 20 per cent of the purchase price, whichever is less. Special Life Insurance Covers Home Mortgages Statistics show that one out of every eight home buyers dies before his home is paid for. Furthermore, the average home buyer seldom has enough life insurance to cover the mortgage on his house. The life insurance a man may have is usually regarded as a nest egg for emergency to$ support his widow and children until other means of support may be arranged by them. If this fund must be used to con tinue payments on their home, it will dwindle all the more ra- pidly. If the payments are not continued, the widow and chil dren arc homeless. To solve this problem and au tomatically pay off a mortgage in the event of a home buyer's death, special low-cost insur ance has been worked out. It covers only that part of mort gage debt still outstanding at any given date. It is low in cost because it runs for a compara tively short term and decreases in amount in proportion with the mortgage. It is usually called diminishing term life insurance. i 77- i - 1 Savings on Income Tax Worth While The amount of income tax you can save in buying a home is well worth figuring. It is actual cash saving, not an abstract amount that accrues to your benefit in the distant future. If your income tax is withheld from your salary or wages, you get the money in the form of a rebate check. If you're in business Sfor yourself your just keep this Monthly Payment Time Table Monthly payments required for each $1,000 of mortgage loan, covering interest and pay ment on principal, for various interest rates follow: Monthly Payments At At At 4 & ft M.r trace Term 25 Yrs. 20 Yrs. ts Yrs. 10 Yrs. 5 Yrs. $5.28 $5.50 6.06 6.33 $6.60 $7.17 7.40 7.65 7.91 8.44 10.13 10.37 10.61 11.11 18.88 19.34 No bank or other lending in stitution will compel you to buy it, because the value of your hou.se protects the mortgage loan. If payments lapse, the house is merely foreclosed and resold to cover the mortgage debt. But conscientious bankers will advise you to have such a policy for the protection of your family. Several insurance companies write these policies. There are two major ways to pay for them. One calls for a single premium, which once paid can be forgot ten about. This single premium can be financed in 24 monthly payments. Another system carries year ly premium payments for the entire term of the mortgage, with each payment growing smaller along with the diminish ing debt. Examples of rates for each $1,000 of initial mortgage debt on a 20-year monthly payment mortgage are as follows for a man 30 years old: Single payment $72.42, or $3.50 monthly for 24 months. Reducing payment plan $8.30 per $1,000 for the first year. $7.40 for the fifth year, $6.23 for the tenth year, and $1.11 for the 20th year. Rates for older or younger men run higher and lower in accordance with their ages. to Owners money in your pocket and item ize, the deduction when filing your return. Since the average family bud get will stand only so much of an allowance for housing, whe ther in rent or in payments on a home, the income tax sav ing of a home buyer is a real advantage over the renter. ... Take an example of a man making $5,000 a year, and hav ing a wife and two children. If he had a mortgage of $12,500 his first year's carrying charges would be $562.50 at 4 14 per cent interest. Assuming his real es tate tax to be $175, he would be entitled to deductions of $737.50 on this score. Then assuming that his family had normal deductions for church and charity, contribu tions, other taxes, losses, medi cal expenses, etc., amounting to 500, his total deductions would be 1,237.50. On a joint return his income tax would amount to $226.18. If this family rented, its total deductions would be only $500. The share of their rent that went toward the landlord's taxes and interest would not he deductible to them. Their in come tax would amount to $348.60. This means a saving of $122. 42 for the home owner, or $10.20 per month. If the same families had an nual incomes of $8,000 the in come tax saving for the homo owner would amount to $143.78. ... The attractive part of Income tax savings in home buying is that they are greater right now in the early years of ownership. For example, a 15-year mort gage at 5 per cent calls for monthly payments of $7.91 to cover interest and amortization on every $1,000 of loan. In the first year an average of $3.98 out of those $7.91 payments goes for interest and $3.93 toward paying off the principal. By the fifth year the average monthly interest payment is down to $3.11 and the principal payment is up to $4.80. In the tenth year the division will be $1.74 for interest and $6.17 for amortization. So income tax deductions for interest are most noticeable when needed the most. There are nearly 150,000 ra dio stations of some 40 catego ries in the U. S., of which only 4000 are classed as broadcast units. Expansion Attic: Is It Worth While? It may pay to think twice before planning a house with an expansion attic. Will you ever finish off ex tra rooms upstairs, or will that prove to be just a dream while you pay $3 or $4 every month on your mortgage pay ments because of that extra space? Architects have figured that to be the cost of carrying the additional cubage re quired over a low pitched roof with mere storage space under the rafters. The Dime Savings Bank of Brooklyn, N.Y., made a sam ple check of 139 home buyers in a pre-war Long Island de velopment and found that 42 per cent made no use of ex pansion possibilities. Only 31 per cent added two rooms, and 18 per cent expanded merely by adding a garage.