New Homes and New


New Homes and Home Builders - iNest Search for New Homes and New Home Builders Get a 1% Cash Back Coupon Search for New Homes and New Home Builders iNest is the easy way to search and compare new homes from leading home builders and get a 1% Cash Back Rebate . That's $2,000 on the purchase of a $200,000 home! Find out more. iNest is the leader in providing cash back to new home buyers Rebates: $27,239,686 Sales: $2,742,000,000 Home Buyers: 12,900 Communities: 10,538 SEARCH BY STATE: -- Choose a State -- Alabama Alaska Arizona Arkansas California Colorado Connecticut Delaware Florida Georgia Hawaii Idaho Illinois Indiana Iowa Kansas Kentucky Louisiana Maine Maryland Massachusetts Michigan Minnesota Mississippi Missouri Montana Nebraska Nevada New Hampshire New Jersey New Mexico New York North Carolina North Dakota Ohio Oklahoma Oregon Pennsylvania Rhode Island South Carolina South Dakota Tennessee Texas Utah Vermont Virginia Washington West Virginia Wisconsin Wyoming Browse through our listing of leading home builders. Search for New Homes by Metro Area: • Albuquerque New Homes • Atlanta New Homes • Austin New Homes • Baltimore New Homes • Boise New Homes • Charleston New Homes • Charlotte New Homes • Chicago New Homes • Cincinnati New Homes • Cleveland New Homes • Colorado Springs New Homes • Columbus New Homes • Dallas New Homes • Dayton New Homes • Denver New Homes • Des Moines New Homes • Detroit New Homes • Durham New Homes • Fort Collins/Loveland New Homes • Fort Myers New Homes • Fort Wayne New Homes • Fort Worth New Homes • Grand Rapids New Homes • Greensboro New Homes • Greenville-Spartanburg New Homes • Hampton Roads New Homes • Houston New Homes • Indianapolis New Homes • Jacksonville New Homes • Knoxville New Homes • Kokomo New Homes • Lafayette New Homes • Las Vegas New Homes • McAllen New Homes • Memphis New Homes • Milwaukee New Homes • Minneapolis New Homes • Nashville New Homes • Omaha New Homes • Orlando New Homes • Phoenix New Homes • Philadelphia New Homes • Pittsburgh New Homes • Portland New Homes • Raleigh New Homes • Richmond New Homes • Salt Lake City New Homes • San Antonio New Homes • Sarasota New Homes • Seattle New Homes • St. Louis New Homes • Stockton New Homes • Tampa New Homes • Washington D.C. New Homes • Winston-Salem New Homes Testimonials | In the News | Privacy | About Us | Home Builders Only | Hablamos Espanol The iNest Web site is a service of iNest Realty Inc., Bloomingdale, IL. Phone: (800) 541-8562. E-mail © 1997 - 2005 iNest Realty Inc. All rights reserved worldwide. iNest processes and technology are patented under US Patent No. 6,578,011. Terms and Conditions - Security - Affiliated Business Disclosure Partner sites: RealEstate.com | LendingTree | ServiceMagic



home equity to pay

MSN Money - The hazards of some home-equity loans MSN Home Hotmail My MSN Sign In Money S earch MSN Money: Help Home News Banking Investing Planning Taxes My Money Portfolio Loans Insurance Banking Home My Accounts Bill Pay Mortgages/Loans Services Credit Reports Financial Tools Track your bills Resources Decision Centers Home Buying Guide Home Financing Your Credit Rating Financial Privacy Better Banking Credit Card Smarts Bankruptcy Guide Commentary Index Related Links Manage Debt More on Budgeting Print-friendly version Send this to a friend See where rates stand Calculate your debt burden here Find a home-equity loan Find books on home buying Find It! Article Index Finance Q&A Tools Index Site Map Don't get fooled by the "special programs" offer mentioned in advertisements. Today's homeowners have forgotten -- or never learned -- the lessons of their grandparents. Recent articles by Terry Savage: • How to limit divorce's financial sting , 1/5/2003 • 5 financial steps to help your aging parents , 1/5/2003 • Prepare for the unthinkable: long-term care , 1/5/2003 More... The Basics The hazards of some home-equity loans advertisement What looks like an easy way out of debt could one day put your family out on the street. Get the facts behind those enticing ads for 125% home-equity loans before you put your home on the line. By Terry Savage What looks like a great deal, but could turn out to be the most devastating financial decision of your life? It's when you consolidate credit-card debt by taking out home-equity loans for more than the value of your house, sometimes for up to 125% of the home's value. Unlike traditional home-equity loans that rely on the equity you've built up in your home, these loans aren't tax deductible and usually carry higher interest rates. Find a loan that's right for you at the Loan Center By television, direct mail and now by e-mail, lenders are pushing you to consolidate your credit-card debt by borrowing on your home. Here's the text of an actual e-mail I received recently: Consolidate Debt, Refinance Your Home or Put Cash In Your Pocket! We Have Special Programs with rates starting as low as 2.5% APR 7.22% Special Programs for Self-Employed Borrowers Previous Bankruptcies or Foreclosures OK!! Debt Consolidation - pay off high-interest debts and get the cash you need Second Mortgages - get 125% of your home's value. The television commercials make it look easy and enticing. A top athlete, like quarterback Dan Marino, offers you the chance to cut your monthly payments, pay off your credit cards and take out extra cash to remodel your kitchen or go on a vacation. But think twice. It's important to understand the risks, as well as the attraction, of those lower monthly payments. For some, this is the way to go For many people, a home-equity loan is indeed the smart way to borrow. The interest rate is typically lower, and the interest is tax deductible. Plus, home-equity loans are amortized over about 15 years vs. about four years for credit cards. That means the monthly payment on a home-equity loan is far lower than a minimum required credit-card payment. For example, if you owe $10,000 on your credit card at 15%, you'll probably have a monthly payment of $278. But the same amount owed at 15% on a home-equity loan that's amortized over 15 years results in a monthly payment of only $140. The more you owe, the more enticing a home-equity loan looks. At $20,000 in debt in the same scenario, the home-equity loan costs $280 a month, while the credit card and/or auto debt requires a $557 monthly payment. The trouble comes when people borrow all their home equity to pay off their debts, but they haven't learned how to manage their money well enough to avoid running up credit-card debts and auto-loan debts again. In fact, the lenders have a name for this process: It's called "reloading." Then, if the economy slows or one of the breadwinners loses a job, the next time you get into credit-card trouble, you could actually lose your house. Statistics from the Mortgage Bankers Association underscore the problem. The percentage of homes foreclosed in 1998 was 1.16%, about double the rate of the terrible recession years of the early 1980s, when 0.59% of homes were in foreclosure. The rising foreclosure rate comes even as bankruptcy rates remain high, with 1.2 million filings in 1999. But as people try to avoid bankruptcy, they're increasingly taking out home-equity loans to pay off their other bills. As a result of those home-equity loans (and new mortgage programs designed to help people buy homes with down payments of less than 5%), Americans have a lower percentage of equity in their homes than at any time in history. Essentially, an unsecured loan The real kicker comes if you borrow past the value of your home. Unlike home-equity loans, these loans usually are not considered tax deductible. The law says that all interest on a first mortgage (of up to $1 million) is deductible. And interest on up to $100,000 of a second mortgage or home-equity loan also is deductible. By law, interest on any part of a loan that exceeds 100% of the value of your home is not deductible. In addition, lenders typically charge higher rates, because you've essentially taken out an unsecured loan. An unsecured loan means there is no collateral in case you default on the loan. A mortgage for up to the value of your home is "secured" by the home itself. Many lenders charge interest rates seven or eight percentage points higher than traditional mortgages. In some cases, that's twice what you'd pay for a regular mortgage or home-equity loan. Don't get fooled by the "special programs" offer mentioned in advertisements like the one I mentioned earlier, either. They're either introductory loans, which require large "balloon payments" several years later, or adjustable rate loans in which the rates -- and the payments -- can increase every year. As long as the loan is repaid, it's very profitable. And the lenders know that paying off mortgage or home-equity loans takes a high priority in a consumer's mind, so the default rate is far lower than on unsecured credit-card lending. SMR Research, a financial industry market-research firm, reports that about 30% of all home-equity loans are sub-prime. That is, these are loans made to borrowers who are considered a poor credit risk -- the very people most likely to be caught in the crunch when the economy turns down. Bankruptcy: the only escape The greatest danger for those who fall for this pitch is the fact that they've put their home on the line. If they fail to make the payments, the lender can force the home to be sold in a foreclosure proceeding. The grantor of the original mortgage must be paid off first; then the home equity lender collects what's left from the sale price. And if there's not enough equity to repay the home equity lender, a default judgment will be entered against the borrower for the difference. The only escape is bankruptcy. The generation that went through the Great Depression of the 1930s learned the hard way not to borrow against the family home. So many people lost their homes that by 1935, banks categorized 20% of all mortgages as "real-estate owned" -- that is, foreclosed. But today's homeowners have forgotten -- or never learned -- the lessons of their grandparents. Rising home prices have tempted homeowners to count home equity as a source of ready cash. But that kind of home equity borrowing should only be done as part of an overall financial plan and a disciplined approach to money management. Otherwise, today's easy way out of debt could one day put your family out on the street. Editors' choice Don't get scammed by your mover Safeguard your Social Security number 5 ways to tap into the onshore drilling boom Your checkbook just became obsolete Turn $1 a day into $67,815 Readers' choice Ratings Top 5 Articles 9.30 Zombie debt collectors dig up your old mistakes 9.24 Keep thieves out of your bank account 9.22 Credit reports now free for entire U.S. 9.19 10 ways to avoid outrageous hospital overcharges 9.17 Tax breaks for Katrina victims -- and all of us View all top rated articles More Resources · E-mail us your comments on this article · Post on the Your Money message board · Get a daily dose of market news S earch MSN Money tips advertisement MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances. © 2005 Microsoft MSN Privacy Legal Advertise Feedback Help



Land For Sale In

LandAndFarm.com - Land for sale, Farms for sale, Rural Property for sale Advertise here Search Properties Wanted Auctions Newsletter Quick Start Register About My Properties Number of visitors online now: 217 Thursday, December 29, 2005 Ad Prices Help Contact Login Subscribe to Rural Property Bulletin Last Few Listings Most Viewed Least Viewed Recently Updated Search by USA Map Rural Property Sites Tool Box Get new properties in your email box! Newsletter Sign-up: yourname@xyz.com HTML TEXT For fun: old listings Contact Us Community Stats Seller emails: 102,892 Property emails: 110,227 Property Views: 13,028,620 Newsletter Subscribers: 14,850 Site Statistics Property 1761 Brokerage 15 Finance & Mortgages 3 Wanted 1 Businesses For Sale 7 Livestock 1 Rural Living 16 Miscellaneous 3 By Land Use: commercial land : 117 dairy farm : 22 fish - aquaculture : 15 forest - natural : 283 forest - planted : 116 historic : 41 horse farm : 380 hospitality : 61 hunting property : 610 livestock operation : 129 mobile home park : 4 oil or minerals : 7 orchard : 17 organic uses : 20 pasture : 319 permanent crops : 43 poultry farm : 33 recreational property : 677 residential land : 844 row crops : 107 undeveloped land : 377 vegetable farm : 15 vineyard : 15 waterfront : 152 By Country: United States : 1709 Canada : 39 South Africa : 34 Zambia : 5 Botswana : 5 Chile : 4 Argentina : 2 Belize : 2 Brazil : 2 Mozambique : 2 Australia : 1 Namibia : 1 Kenya : 1 By Price Per Acre: <$100: 8 $100 to $500 : 34 $500 to $2,000 : 280 $2,000 to $5,000 : 402 >$5,000 : 734 By Acres: <50 : 991 <200 : 1460 200 to 500 : 182 500 to 1,000 : 78 >1,000 : 108 By State/Province: Alabama : 24 Arizona : 11 Arkansas : 14 California : 20 Colorado : 29 Connecticut : 4 Florida : 88 Georgia : 283 Idaho : 12 Illinois : 29 Indiana : 7 Iowa : 9 Kansas : 17 Kentucky : 58 Louisiana : 13 Maine : 32 Maryland : 6 Massachusetts : 7 Michigan : 7 Minnesota : 16 Mississippi : 14 Missouri : 76 Montana : 6 Nebraska : 4 Nevada : 6 New Hampshire : 5 New Jersey : 16 New Mexico : 7 New York : 75 North Carolina : 59 North Dakota : 38 Ohio : 61 Oklahoma : 9 Oregon : 6 Pennsylvania : 6 South Carolina : 64 South Dakota : 22 Tennessee : 293 Texas : 27 Utah : 11 Vermont : 11 Virginia : 123 Washington : 11 West Virginia : 49 Wisconsin : 18 Wyoming : 6 Alberta : 1 British Columbia : 3 Buenos Aires Capital Federal : 1 IV Coquimbo : 1 Manitoba : 1 Mendoza : 1 New Brunswick : 11 Nova Scotia : 12 Ontario : 3 Para : 1 Quebec : 3 Queensland : 1 Saskatchewan : 5 VII Maule : 1 XI Aysen : 2 Not In USA or Canada : 1 Properties by: Land Use Country State/Province Acres Price Per Acre Florida RESULTS Sort by: price size Total records: 88 Showing records: 1 to 20 Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 New Search Secluded Home On 5 Acres ( residential land, horse farm, pasture) A 5.00 acre property with an asking price of $489,000. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Hillsborough. Awesome Acreage in NE Florida ( forest - planted, undeveloped land, hunting property) A 21.40 acre property with an asking price of $295,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Nassau. Walker Springs Auction ( hunting property, forest - natural, undeveloped land) A 1,257 acre property. This property is to be AUCTIONED . Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Jefferson. 87 Acres With Hunting Lodge ( hunting property, recreational property, residential land) A 87 acre property with an asking price of $699,900. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Wakulla. 12 Acres Fenced ( horse farm, residential land, pasture) A 12.00 acre property with an asking price of $599,550. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Lake. Land For Sale In North Florida ( residential land, forest - natural, recreational property) A 5.00 acre property with an asking price of $74,900. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Columbia. 40 Acre South Florida Ranch ( residential land, livestock operation, pasture) A 40 acre property with an asking price of $1,950,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Okeechobee. Mims - Florida 40 Acres+additional acres ( residential land, pasture, horse farm) A 40 acre property with an asking price of $1,600,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Brevard. Serenity Arabian Farms ( residential land, waterfront, horse farm) A 47 acre property with an asking price of $1,700,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Putnam. 5.0 Rdfront Pasture Trees ( pasture, residential land) A 5.00 acre property with an asking price of $65,000. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Hamilton. Jupiter Farms Jewel ( horse farm) A 1.25 acre property with an asking price of $349,000. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Palm Beach. Cedarpond Farm ( horse farm, residential land, forest - natural) A 35 acre property with an asking price of $750,000. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Putnam. Willows ( residential land) A 7.50 acre property with an asking price of $1,350,000. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Brevard. Grant Property ( residential land, horse farm, pasture) A 24.25 acre property with an asking price of $1,100,000. This property is for sale. Country: Other. State/Province: Florida. County: Brevard. 160 Acre Farm Walnut Hill Fl ( pasture, forest - planted, forest - natural) A 160 acre property with an asking price of $999,900. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Escambia. Saddle Club Estates ( horse farm, pasture, residential land) A 22.00 acre property with an asking price of $839,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Volusia. Tampa Bay Area 20-40 Acres ( horse farm) A 40 acre property with an asking price of $1,700,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Pasco. Country Living So Close To Jax ( residential land, undeveloped land, mobile home park) A 16.00 acre property with an asking price of $185,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Charlton. 4.69 Acres With 5 Stalls ( horse farm, residential land, pasture) A 4.69 acre property with an asking price of $669,900. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida 64 Unrestricted Acres ( forest - natural, residential land, undeveloped land) A 67 acre property with an asking price of $275,000. This property is for sale. Country: United States. State/Province: Florida. County: Holmes. Total records: 88 Showing records: 1 to 20 Go to page : 1 2 3 4 5 LandAndFarm.com SPONSORED RESULTS 1. Hollywood Beach Marriott Located on the beach and boardwalk of the world famous Hollywood Beach, Florida, the brand new Hollywood Beach Marriott with 229 oceanview rooms is your perfect destination. http://www.hollywoodbeachmarriott.com 2. Looking For FLORIDA? Find Florida and more at Lycos Search. No clutter, just answers. Lycos ? Go Get It! http://www.lycos.com 3. Find FLORIDA at eBay Looking for Florida? eBay has great deals on new and used electronics, cars, apparel, collectibles, sporting goods and more. If you can?t find it on eBay, it probably doesn?t exist. http://www.ebay.com 4. Shop for FLORIDA Looking for Florida? MonsterMarketplace shopping directory has Florida and everything else you?re looking for at one secure online location. Click to view top selling Florida. http://www.monstermarketplace.com 5. Research FLORIDA at HighBeam. View free full-text articles and free premium archive previews at HighBeam Research. Find, organize and share information from 1,000s of trusted business, consumer and reference publications. http://www.highbeam.com ©1998-2005 - LandAndFarm.com - Contact Us - Privacy Notice - Disclaimer - UserAgreement - Advertise With Us



real estate investing isnt

MSN Money - The real risks of investing in real estate MSN Home Hotmail My MSN Sign In Money S earch MSN Money: Help Home News Banking Investing Planning Taxes My Money Portfolio Loans Insurance Investing Home Portfolio Markets Stocks Funds ETFs Commentary Brokers CNBC TV MSN Money Insight Jubak's Journal SuperModels Start Investing Strategy Lab Company Focus Mutual Funds Street Patrol Other Views Contrarian Chronicles TheStreet.com Resources Commentary Index Decision Centers Start Investing Mutual Funds Find Hot Stocks Simple Strategies Power Tools Investing For Income Real Estate Related Links Expert Picks Market Dispatches CNBC Stock Picks Message Boards Print-friendly version Send this to a friend Research any REIT Find top-performing mutual funds Sortable database of SEC filings Find stock winners with our screener Personal finance bookshelf Find It! Article Index Finance Q&A Tools Index Site Map The Basics The real risks of investing in real estate advertisement With prices soaring, real estate looks tantalizing -- but the margin of error is shrinking. Forget the get-rich-quick plans. Pay attention to the numbers. By Kiplinger's Personal Finance Magazine For Derrik Dyka, the biggest obstacle to successful real estate investing isnt a meltdown in property values or tenants who wreck an apartment or dont pay their rent. "Its overconfidence," says Dyka, a 34-year-old Minneapolis investor who turns old apartments into new condominiums. If youre expecting to cash in on the 21st centurys first gold rush without breaking a sweat, it would be wise to take Dykas words to heart. The margin of error for making money in real estate is closing fast. Its not surprising that real estate tempts so many Americans today. Over the past five years, home prices have soared and rags-to-riches tales abound. But so much real estate has become so expensive that Real Estate Research Corp. in Chicago reports that many real estate pros say now is a better time to sell than buy. As San Diego real estate investor Chuck Wise observes about the area where he operates, todays buyers are like "lambs being shorn." Start investing with $100. Explore our new ETF center. Of course, that doesnt mean that all deals are doomed to fail. But it does mean that its time for would-be investors to pay more attention to the perils of owning property, not just the potential profits. Watch your cash flow The most common entree into real estate investing is the single-family house. Investors bought almost one-fourth of all homes sold in 2004, according to the National Association of Realtors. If youre one of those buyers and your income from that property (after taxes) exceeds your expenses by $100 or $200 a month, youre in good shape. But because prices and property taxes are so high in many areas, and theres so much competition for attractive rental properties, its increasingly difficult to find deals that generate enough income to more than cover your expenses -- whats called positive cash flow. In areas such as the leafy suburbs of New York City and Boston, where a modest three-bedroom house can easily cost $600,000, theres no way you can collect enough rent to cover the steep property taxes and payments on a $500,000 mortgage. Figure monthly out-of-pocket expenses of more than $3,000, if not $4,000. The pool of renters who will pay that much is small. Related news and commentary on MSN Money • Nothing quick about getting rich with real estate • Do you have what it takes to be a landlord? • Don't bite off too much house • How to find a good investment property • 7 creative ways to buy your first house • Decision Center: Home financing So be ready to set your sights lower and get your hands dirty. Instead of a well-located home in pristine condition, look for a fixer-upper off the beaten track for maybe $150,000 that you can rent for $1,000 a month. The numbers work if youre willing to spend weekends, say, painting the walls and, if youre capable, making repairs that would otherwise require professional help. The hidden profit from home improvements is why "ugly real estate often makes more money than the nice stuff," says Kelley Pace, head of Louisiana State Universitys real-estate research institute. Mind the cap You can quickly figure out whether a house or condo is likely to generate positive cash flow. For more complex properties, such as a small office building or retail space, check the cap rate, a single number that can tell you if youre overpaying. The cap rate -- cap is short for capitalization -- is a propertys net operating income as a percentage of its price. The figure is real estates version of a bond yield. If a property sells for $500,000 and generates net income of $50,000 (rents minus expenses), the cap rate is 50,000 divided by 500,000, or 10%. The lower the cap rate, the more you pay for each dollar of annual income. In 2000, the average cap rate on commercial property in the U.S. was 10%. Since then, because of relentless price appreciation, the average cap rate has sunk to 8%. That alone suggests that wringing further gains out of commercial property is unlikely. If you want to invest in a commercial property, aim for a purchase price that results in a 10% cap rate. But remember that the cap rate also depends on how much you collect in rent. Ask the broker for details about the tenants leases, including how rents compare with those of other nearby properties and when the leases are up for renewal. The property should come with an information packet that is more like a stock prospectus than a real estate agents fact sheet on a single-family house. If necessary, hire a property inspector. Then take all the information to a lawyer who specializes in real estate. If you have any doubts about the property, walk away. Page 1 of 2 Story continues on next page Fund data provided by Morningstar, Inc. © 2005. All rights reserved. Quotes supplied by ComStock , an Interactive Data company. MSN Money's editorial goal is to provide a forum for personal finance and investment ideas. Our articles, columns, message board posts and other features should not be construed as investment advice, nor does their appearance imply an endorsement by Microsoft of any specific security or trading strategy. An investor's best course of action must be based on individual circumstances. © 2005 Microsoft MSN Privacy Legal Advertise Feedback Help



Real Estate Broker Code

DRL - Real Estate Broker Home Login About DRL Site Map Contact DRL FAQ Business Professions Health Professions All Boards Definition Download Help Duplicate License Education FAQs Fees Forms Practice FAQs Obtain License Organizations Renew Online Rules Statutes Verifications What's New Real Estate Broker Code Book A real estate broker is an individual who: a. For another, and for commission, money or other thing of value, negotiates or offers or attempts to negotiate a sale, exchange, purchase or rental of an interest or estate in real estate; b. Is engaged wholly or in part in the business of selling real estate to the extent that a pattern of real estate sales is established, whether or not such real estate is owned by such person. Five sales in one year or 10 sales in 5 years is presumptive evidence of a pattern of sales. c. For another and for commission, money or other thing of value, negotiates or offers or attempts to negotiate a sale, exchange, purchase or rental of any business, its goodwill, inventory, fixtures or an interest therein; or d. Is engaged wholly or in part in the business of selling business opportunities or goodwill of an existing business or is engaged wholly or in part in the business of buying and selling, exchanging or renting of any business, its goodwill, inventory, fixtures or an interest therein. e. For another, and for commission, money or other thing of value, negotiates or offers or attempts to negotiate a sale, exchange or purchase of a time share. f. Is engaged wholly or in part in the business of selling time shares to the extent that a pattern of sales is established, whether or not the time shares are owned by such person. g. For another, and for a commission, money or other thing of value, promotes the sale, exchange, purchase, option, rental or leasing of real estate or business opportunities. This paragraph does not apply to a person who only publishes or disseminates verbatim information provided by another person. For exceptions to the above, see s. 452.01(3), Wis. Stats. No person may engage in or follow the business or occupation of, or advertise or hold himself or herself out as, or act temporarily or otherwise as a broker without a Wisconsin real estate brokers license. The purpose of licensure is to ensure that only qualified people handle real estate transactions and supervise licensed salespersons in Wisconsin. It ensures proper listing, selling, buying, exchanging, leasing or renting of real property or a business opportunity. Last updated: Wednesday, January 7, 2004 Wisconsin Department of Regulation & Licensing. All Rights Reserved. If you have suggestions about how to improve our website, contact our webmaster . Disclaimer | Privacy Statement




 Home

 Real Estate

 Real Estate Agents

 Real Estate Investment

 Real Estate Loans

 Real Estate Listings

 Florida Real Estate

 Real Estate Corporation

 Las Vegas Real Estate

 Real Estate and Rental

 Colorado Real Estate

 Real Estate Investing

 Homes For Sale

 Home Mortgage

 Selling Home

 Real Estate License Forms

 Rental Property

 Investment Property

 Real Estate

 Purchase Property

 Foreclosure Property

 Real Estate Board: Abitibi

 Real Estate

 Real Estate Learning Center

 Real Estate -Commercial -Construction

 Real Estate Real Estate

 REAL ESTATE FORECLOSURES Valuecom

 real estate professionals,and the

 Real Estate Vail Real

 Real Estate

 Real Estate Banner Network

 Real Estate - Homes

 Real Estate Agents This

 REAL ESTATE CLIPART where

 Real Estate Fund Managers

 Real Estate Management, 15th

 Real Estate Sales Summit

 Real Estate Licensing Bill

 Real Estate Course Search

 Real Estate MIT established

 Real Estate Real Estate

 Real Estate | Rentals

 Real estate successis a

 Real Estate Advertise Save

 Real Estate Inspector --

 Real Estate Agents This

 Real Estate Agent

 Real estate agents usually

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent! --

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent By

 Real estate agents help

 real estate agent Tommy

 Real estate agents usually

 Real Estate Agent

 real estate agents Money

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent that

 Real Estate Agents &

 Real Estate Agent Webpages

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agents The

 Real Estate Agents Career

 real estate agents. While

 Real Estate Agents FAQs

 Real Estate Agents |

 Real Estate Agent License

 Real Estate Agent Find

 real estate agents because

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent Listings

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agent: It's

 real estate agents to

 Real Estate Agent Moorestown

 real estate agents to

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agents Apartments

 real estate agent here.

 Real Estate agent Property

 Real Estate Agent

 Real Estate Agents You

 real estate investment trust

 Real Estate Investment Software

 Real Estate Investment Courses

 real estate investment course

 Real Estate Investment Opportunities

 real estate investment information

 Real Estate Investments AreSafe,

 Real Estate Investment

 real estate investment as

 Real Estate Investment, Seller

 real estate investment seminars