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WA State & the $8000 First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit

Will Washington State be the first state in the nation to offer a program to first time buyers to use the $8000 home buyer credit towards a down payment for a home?

Here’s a memo from Barbara Lally of the Washington State Realtors Association explaining the program that is in the works:

OLYMPIA, Wash. – The Senate Ways and Means Committee last night (Thursday) unanimously approved a measure designed to help first-time home buyers come up with a down-payment.  The committee adopted the measure as an amendment to the proposed Senate biennial operating budget.

The proposal would make the $8000 federal tax credit for first-time home buyers available at the closing of a home sale instead of when a buyer files a tax return. Home buyers would repay the $8000 after filing for and receiving a tax refund. The amendment creates a Tax Credit Advance Loan Program and authorizes the State Treasurer to deposit $25 million in a financial institution giving it the ability to open a line of credit to the State Housing Finance Commission to provide the down payment loans. The deposit would not deplete state funds, but would provide liquidity for the financial Institution to lend its own funds.

The program is the first of its kind in the nation and would work as follows:

  • The State Treasurer’s Office would make an off-setting deposit in an FDIC-insured short-term
    account with a selected financial institution. The investment would earn a low interest rate to
    stay fully insured under federal guidelines.
  • Realtors and other stakeholders back the loans with funds to provide security against losses.
  • The financial institution provides the Washington State Housing Finance Commission a line of
    credit to advance up to $8000 to qualified first-time home buyers for a down-payment.
  • Buyers repay the advance loan after filing for and receiving the tax credit.

The amendment is the result of the efforts of the Washington REALTORS®, Washington State Treasurer’s office, and Washington State Housing Finance Commission. State Treasurer James McIntire wrote the budget proviso and is helping to advance the measure through the state legislature.

State Sen. Steve Hobbs (D-Lake Stevens), who offered the amendment, said that using the $8,000 tax credit to help first-time home buyer make down payments could help jump-start the economy. Hobbs noted that home purchases have a significant impact on the retail and banking sectors of the economy and on state and local coffers. “In this recession we need to find new and innovative ways to stimulate the economy. This proviso will slow the decline of our housing market and stimulate the economy,” Hobbs told the Senate Ways and Means Committee.

“Down-payment assistance to our first-time home buyers is the key we need to unlock economic activity throughout the state,” said Greg Wright, President of the Washington Realtors. “This tax credit is new money that we can put to work now to help the housing market and ignite economic action statewide.” According to a study by the Washington Research Council, each home sale by a first-time buyer generates $11,100 in state and local tax revenue. Every 1,000 home sales generate $126 million in general economic activity, supporting 711 jobs.

Home buyer tax credit fact sheet

Home buyer tax credit fact sheet

The goal of the program is to get the money to buyers efficiently and return the federal refund quickly so that the HFC can turn it around to provide more assistance.  The funds may revolve as many as three times before the tax credit expires, reaching up to 9000 first-time homebuyers.  These “bridge loans” would expire at the same time as the federal tax credit, on November 30, 2009.  All of the bridge loan funds return to the state system by early 2010 to use for capital projects in 2010-11.

“With homes at affordable prices and interest rates at historic lows the $8,000 tax credit opens a window of opportunity that may never be seen again,” said Wright, a Chelan Realtor. “The Senate’s budget helps bring that opportunity to families throughout our state.”

Lack of a down-payment is the only barrier to home ownership for up to 50 percent of first-time home buyers, according to J. Lennox Scott, Chairman and CEO of John L. Scott Real Estate.  A recent study by the Federal Reserve Board showed that home ownership for people 35 years and younger increased by as much as 43 percent when a primary mortgage was combined with a down-payment assistance loan.


“First-time home buyers are the most critical to the recovery of the housing market and our overall economy, because their purchases set off a chain reaction of buying and selling,” Scott explained.  ”The first step toward stimulating the state housing market is making the federal tax credit available at the closing table and increasing down-payment assistance.”



(REALTOR® is a federally registered collective membership mark which identifies a real estate professional who is a member of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® and subscribes to its strict Code of Ethics.)

Interestingly, a private company in a suburb of Atlanta is proposing the same thing.  The article from NuWire Investor did not have positive things to say about the program

What do you think about the possibility of using the tax credit as part of the down payment for a first time buyer?




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  • http://www.debrasinick.com Debra Sinick

    •Here’s the very latest from the state legislature: Housing Tax Credit Advance Loan Program: The Legislature passed the state budget with a provision authorizing the State Treasurer to invest $25 million in a Tax Credit Advance Loan Program. There are still details to be worked out, but the program would allow first-time home buyers to utilize the tax credit as down payment when closing the sale of their first home

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  • Bonnie Cannon

    I really believe that this program should go through. My husband and I got approved for FHA loan and are only reason we have not purchased yet is due to lack of money for down payment. I am a stay at home mom now looking for work to come up with extra cash, just for the down payment of the house. I am sure there are a lot of families here in Washington and in other states in the same situation.

  • http://www.debrasinick.com Debra Sinick

    Hi Bonnie,

    I agree with you. It would be great to get this program rolling. If a someone can afford the monthly payments and has good credit and a job, this is a good way to get more people into the housing market.

    Good luck and I hope you are able to buy a home. When I find out more about the program, I will write about it on this blog.

  • http://financialstabilitytrust.org/ Imee

    Nearly a month after this post, I’m glad people are still talking about this program… For me this first time home buyer tax credit has been quite unnoticed, and I think it deserves the attention since the housing sector is one of the worst affected by the recession.

  • http://www.debrasinick.com Debra Sinick

    Hi Imee,

    I agree with you. This post is getting a terrific number of hits each day. It tells me potential buyers really want to know about this.

    Today I learned this from the Washington State Housing Authority:

    “The state legislature passed a bill allowing us to administer a program. However, the program is not up and running. There are a number of issues that need to be addressed before a viable program can be released. We currently do not have a time table.”

    I am hoping they figure things out soon, since the tax incentive goes away in November. It would be a shame to miss this opportunity.

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  • Ashley Dashiell

    I think that is so great. My husband and I are also looking to buy a house and like others just need to save up for a down payment. I have only two questions. I have heard somethings and want to see if they are true. First off will there be interest charged on the 8,000.00? If so do we know how much interest? My second question is I heard that if you borrow the money you can not sell your house until after you have lived there for 10 years. This would not be a problem except for that in a few years my husband might get a job offer that would make us have to move. Thanks for listening.
    Ashley Dashiell

  • http://www.debrasinick.com Debra Sinick

    Hi Ashley,

    You ask some great questions and just this week, there is more good news. Apparently, this program is going to be available all over the country.

    http://www.realtor.org/press_room/news_releases/2009/05
    /re_summit?lid=ronav0019

    There is no interest charge that I have heard of anywhere. The program does require you to keep your home for 3 years, not 10 years. This is a good thing as it will help to keep people in their houses and treating them like homes.

    Thanks for checking in and good luck with your home search. There are some great homes out there right now. Check in from time to time. As I learn more about these programs, I will post the information here.

  • Ashley Dashiell

    I forgot to ask. Do you know of a time frame of when this will be available?

  • http://www.debrasinick.com Debra Sinick

    Ashley,

    I would talk with a lender to find out how the program is being implemented. I do know that the tax incentive applies only to homes purchased before December 1st, 2009. If you are planning to apply for this incentive, I would purchase a home by the end of October, so you are prepared to close by the end of November.

  • Ashley Dashiell

    I mean is the $8,000 available right now? We found a house we would like to get we just need the money down.

  • Ashley Dashiell

    I don’t know if this matters but I live in Spokane, WA.

    • http://www.debrasinick.com Debra Sinick

      Hi Ashley,

      sorry for the late response, but I’ve been out enjoying the sun. I would talk with a lender, since as of last week, the program is to apply to first time buyers all over the country. I think the program is pretty unclear right as to how things will be handled, but lenders will be the first to know. Again, if I find out anything new, I’ll report it here.

      Good luck and I hope you get your house!


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