Colorado Real Estate Listings
Colorado Real Estate Listings You are here: About > Home & Garden > Home Buying / Selling > Real Estate For Sale > Real Estate Agent Web Sites > States A-C, Find an Agent > Colorado Home & Garden Home Buying / Selling Essentials 10 Things Home Buyers Shouldn't Do Best Tips for First Time Home Buyers "Must-Do" Tasks Before You Sell How to Buy a Home, Step by Step For Sale by Owner Advice Articles & Resources How To Buy a Home How To Sell a House Celebrity & Historic Credit Reports & Scores Design & Remodel Home Maintenance Inspections & Appraisals Investing & Foreclosures Modular & Manufactured Mold, Radon, Lead, etc. Mortgage Advice Moving & Relocation Real Estate Careers Real Estate For Sale Vacation Homes Buyer's Guide Before You Buy Top Picks Home Buying Books Foreclosure Books Mortgage Books Product Reviews Forums Help FREE Newsletter Sign Up Now for the Home Buying / Selling newsletter! See Online Courses Search Home Buying / Selling Colorado Real Estate Listings This guide to Colorado real estate agents will help you locate real estate listings in that state. Properties for sale throughout Colorado. Articles & Resources Sort By : Guide Picks | Alphabetical | Recent Up a category Alamosa - Thelma Turney Century 21 Valley Realty. Breckenridge - Susan Gunnin RE/MAX Properties of the Summit. Colorado Springs - Paul Cornuke RE/MAX Properties, Inc. Denver - Alan Cramer Priority One Real Estate. Denver - Gary & Cindy Belhumeur Frontier Real Estate 4 more Articles & Resources below Articles & Resources more from your guide Denver - Dave Babb Mercury Realty, Inc. Denver - The Brokerage House The Brokerage House. North Glenn - Michael Barela Metro Brokers, Barela and Associates. Trinidad - Charlie Barks & Barbara Sandgren Adobe Gold Properties. Topic Index | Email to a Friend Our Story | Be a Guide | Advertising Info | Work at About | Site Map | Icons | Help User Agreement | Ethics Policy | Patent Info. | Privacy Policy | Kids' Privacy Policy ©2005 About, Inc., A part of the New York Times Company . All rights reserved. Around About Oprah's Life Vacation Ideas Shop Safely Online VIDEO: Craft Rooms VIDEO: Christmas Traditions What's Hot Coping with Unethical People How To Buy Land Real Estate Appraisal Before You Buy a Log Home Package Home Buying / Selling - GuideReviews Headlines Getting Ready to Sell Your House Guests and lots of activities make it difficult to show... Before You Buy Gas Logs Gas logs are growing in popularity every year, so manufacturers... Pros and Cons of Becoming a Real Estate Agent You've decided you want to become a real estate agent,... Step-by-Step Directions Help You Measure Square Footage Each year, home owners discover that their new home's square...
Home Loan
Home Equity Scams: Borrowers Beware! Home Equity Loans : Borrowers Beware! D o you own your home? If so, it's likely to be your greatest single asset. Unfortunately, if you agree to a loan that's based on the equity you have in your home, you may be putting your most valuable asset at risk. Homeowners-particularly elderly, minority and those with low incomes or poor credit-should be careful when borrowing money based on their home equity. Why? Certain abusive or exploitative lenders target these borrowers, who unwittingly may be putting their home on the line. Abusive lending practices range from equity stripping and loan flipping to hiding loan terms and packing a loan with extra charges. The Federal Trade Commission urges you to be aware of these loan practices to avoid losing your home. The Practices Equity Stripping You need money. You don't have much income coming in each month. You have built up equity in your home. A lender tells you that you could get a loan, even though you know your income is just not enough to keep up with the monthly payments. The lender encourages you to "pad" your income on your application form to help get the loan approved. This lender may be out to steal the equity you have built up in your home. The lender doesn't care if you can't keep up with the monthly payments. As soon as you don't, the lender will foreclose-taking your home and stripping you of the equity you have spent years building. If you take out a loan but don't have enough income to make the monthly payments, you are being set up. You probably will lose your home. Hidden Loan Terms: The Balloon Payment You've fallen behind in your mortgage payments and may face foreclosure. Another lender offers to save you from foreclosure by refinancing your mortgage and lowering your monthly payments. Look carefully at the loan terms. The payments may be lower because the lender is offering a loan on which you repay only the interest each month. At the end of the loan term, the principal-that is, the entire amount that you borrowed-is due in one lump sum called a balloon payment. If you can't make the balloon payment or refinance, you face foreclosure and the loss of your home. Loan Flipping Suppose you've had your mortgage for years. The interest rate is low and the monthly payments fit nicely into your budget, but you could use some extra money. A lender calls to talk about refinancing, and using the availability of extra cash as bait, claims it's time the equity in your home started "working" for you. You agree to refinance your loan. After you've made a few payments on the loan, the lender calls to offer you a bigger loan for, say, a vacation. If you accept the offer, the lender refinances your original loan and then lends you additional money. In this practice-often called "flipping"-the lender charges you high points and fees each time you refinance, and may increase your interest rate as well. If the loan has a prepayment penalty, you will have to pay that penalty each time you take out a new loan. You now have some extra money and a lot more debt, stretched out over a longer time. The extra cash you receive may be less than the additional costs and fees you were charged for the refinancing. And what's worse, you are now paying interest on those extra fees charged in each refinancing. Long story short? With each refinancing, you've increased your debt and probably are paying a very high price for some extra cash. After a while, if you get in over your head and can't pay, you could lose your home. The "Home Improvement" Loan A contractor calls or knocks on your door and offers to install a new roof or remodel your kitchen at a price that sounds reasonable. You tell him you're interested, but can't afford it. He tells you it's no problem-he can arrange financing through a lender he knows. You agree to the project, and the contractor begins work. At some point after the contractor begins, you are asked to sign a lot of papers. The papers may be blank or the lender may rush you to sign before you have time to read what you've been given. The contractor threatens to leave the work on your house unfinished if you don't sign. You sign the papers. Only later, you realize that the papers you signed are a home equity loan. The interest rate, points and fees seem very high. To make matters worse, the work on your home isn't done right or hasn't been completed, and the contractor, who may have been paid by the lender, has little interest in completing the work to your satisfaction. Credit Insurance Packing You've just agreed to a mortgage on terms you think you can afford. At closing, the lender gives you papers to sign that include charges for credit insurance or other "benefits" that you did not ask for and do not want. The lender hopes you don't notice this, and that you just sign the loan papers where you are asked to sign. The lender doesn't explain exactly how much extra money this will cost you each month on your loan. If you do notice, you're afraid that if you ask questions or object, you might not get the loan. The lender may tell you that this insurance comes with the loan, making you think that it comes at no additional cost. Or, if you object, the lender may even tell you that if you want the loan without the insurance, the loan papers will have to be rewritten, that it could take several days, and that the manager may reconsider the loan altogether. If you agree to buy the insurance, you really are paying extra for the loan by buying a product you may not want or need. Mortgage Servicing Abuses After you get a mortgage, you receive a letter from your lender saying that your monthly payments will be higher than you expected. The lender says that your payments include escrow for taxes and insurance even though you arranged to pay those items yourself with the lender's okay. Later, a message from the lender says you are being charged late fees. But you know your payments were on time. Or, you may receive a message saying that you failed to maintain required property insurance and the lender is buying more costly insurance at your expense. Other charges that you don't understand-like legal fees-are added to the amount you owe, increasing your monthly payments or the amount you owe at the end of the loan term. The lender doesn't provide you with an accurate or complete account of these charges. You ask for a payoff statement to refinance with another lender and receive a statement that's inaccurate or incomplete. The lender's actions make it almost impossible to determine how much you've paid or how much you owe. You may pay more than you owe. Signing Over Your Deed If you are having trouble paying your mortgage and the lender has threatened to foreclose and take your home, you may feel desperate. Another "lender" may contact you with an offer to help you find new financing. Before he can help you, he asks you to deed your property to him, claiming that it's a temporary measure to prevent foreclosure. The promised refinancing that would let you save your home never comes through. Once the lender has the deed to your property, he starts to treat it as his own. He may borrow against it (for his benefit, not yours) or even sell it to someone else. Because you don't own the home any more, you won't get any money when the property is sold. The lender will treat you as a tenant and your mortgage payments as rent. If your "rent" payments are late, you can be evicted from your home. Protecting Yourself You can protect yourself against losing your home to inappropriate lending practices. Here's how: Don't: Agree to a home equity loan if you don't have enough income to make the monthly payments. Sign any document you haven't read or any document that has blank spaces to be filled in after you sign. Let anyone pressure you into signing any document. Agree to a loan that includes credit insurance or extra products you don't want. Let the promise of extra cash or lower monthly payments get in the way of your good judgment about whether the cost you will pay for the loan is really worth it. Deed your property to anyone. First consult an attorney, a knowledgeable family member, or someone else you trust. Do: Ask specifically if credit insurance is required as a condition of the loan. If it isn't, and a charge is included in your loan and you don't want the insurance, ask that the charge be removed from the loan documents. If you want the added security of credit insurance, shop around for the best rates. Keep careful records of what you've paid, including billing statements and canceled checks. Challenge any charge you think is inaccurate. Check contractors' references when it is time to have work done in your home. Get more than one estimate. Read all items carefully. If you need an explanation of any terms or conditions, talk to someone you can trust, such as a knowledgeable family member or an attorney. Consider all the costs of financing before you agree to a loan. For More Information The FTC works for the consumer to prevent fraudulent, deceptive and unfair business practices in the marketplace and to provide information to help consumers spot, stop and avoid them. To file a complaint or to get free information on consumer issues , visit www.ftc.gov or call toll-free, 1-877-FTC-HELP (1-877-382-4357); TTY: 1-866-653-4261. The FTC enters Internet, telemarketing, identity theft and other fraud-related complaints into Consumer Sentinel , a secure, online database available to hundreds of civil and criminal law enforcement agencies in the U.S. and abroad. FEDERAL TRADE COMMISSION FOR THE CONSUMER 1-877-FTC-HELP www.ftc.gov April 1998
home For Sale by
MilitarybyOwner.com - Real Estate near U.S. Military Bases Forgot your password? Email: Password: 12/29/2005 2:30:33 PM -- Live Support Chat Live Chat Hours of Operation 9:00 AM - 9:00 PM EST M-F WELCOME Welcome to MilitarybyOwner.com, your one source for advertising your home For Sale by Owner or For Rent near our Military Installations. Use the power of your military network and the web to help you find, sell or rent your next home. HOME SEARCH State - Select - AL AK AZ AR AE AP CA CO CT DE DC FL GA HI ID IL IN IA KS KY LA ME MD MA MI MN MS MO MT NE NV NH NJ NM NY NC ND OH OK OR PA RI SC SD TN TX UT VT VA WA WV WI WY Military Base Select a state first City or Zipcode Price Range No Min $100,000 $150,000 $200,000 $250,000 $300,000 $350,000 $400,000 $450,000 $500,000 $550,000 $600,000 $650,000 $700,000 $750,000 $800,000 $850,000 $900,000 $950,000 to $100,000 $150,000 $200,000 $250,000 $300,000 $350,000 $400,000 $450,000 $500,000 $550,000 $600,000 $650,000 $700,000 $750,000 $800,000 $850,000 $900,000 $950,000 $1,000,000 No Max Bedrooms 1 or more 2 or more 3 or more 4 or more 5 or more Availability January February March April May June July August September October November December / / 2001 2002 2003 2004 2005 2006 2007 2008 2009 2010 AD Number -- THIS SITE IS AN INVALUABLE TOOL FOR SELLING YOUR HOUSE IN A MILITARY 'SELL BY OWNER' COMMUNITY. I COULDN'T KEEP UP WITH THE PHONE CALLS AND EMAIL HITS. PEOPLE STILL CONTACTED ME AFTER THE HOUSE WAS UNDER CONTRACT. CUSTOMER SERVICE IS EXCELLENT. A SMALL INVESTMENT FOR A HUGE PAYOFF. - TOM, FORT BRAGG, FAYETTEVILLE, NC MILITARY LOANS | 50 STATES | BUSINESS ADVERTISING | MOVING RESOURCES | TESTIMONIALS | FAQ | ABOUT US | CONTACT US
Florida Real Estate
COMMREX.com - Commercial Real Estate Exchange and Property Listing Service. Mortage finder and Refinance locator. Go" Advertising Info About COMMREX COMMREX.com Austin, Texas 512.346.9158 Fax 512.346.1762 Email Us COMMREX TM Commercial Real Estate Exchange Products and Services Apply for a Commercial Mortgage Online - It's quick, easy and FREE Featured Property Feature your property on this site. Banner Ad Program Place Banner ADS on this site. COMM-Find Find a commercial agent by location and specialization. Find out who looks at your properties!! Participation in the PackageCenter and use of the lead-generation system will tell you who downloaded your flyers or packages when you use our password protected lead-generation system. Save time and money and deliver a benefit to sellers and customers. Become a PackageCenter Participant and find out who is downloading your property packages and data. Learn more ... COMMREX PackageCenter TM Benefits of COMMREX membership Check out the benefits membership in COMMREX offers a commercial real estate professional. eLeads Subscribe to over 140 mailing lists by property type and geographic region. COMMLink Commercial Data Exchange: Integrate your listings in your website. BizCenter Online business tools, tips, and forms. Real Estate Calendar Commercial Real Estate Event Calendar. Add your own Event. Top Real Estate News Preview Todays Top News Real Estate Intelligence GlobeSt Commercial Real Estate News (CRENews) COMMREX Exclusive Create a Profit Center with your own state level or Association licensed COMMREX site. COMMBOT TM Is BACK!! Find Commercial RE Sites by Category. Enter your own! ListingAlerts Store search criteria to be matched against properties added to the system and receive Alerts by email. ©2005 COMMREX.com Internet Media Works! Privacy & Disclaimer Email Webmaster 512.346.9158
TEXAS LAND TITLE ABSTRACTS
Texas Land Title Abstracts -- Family History Search Search the Texas Land Title Abstracts Database For Your Family History. Build Your Family Tree While Discovering Your Family History . HOME STATE RECORDS CENSUS RECORDS VITAL RECORDS ANCESTRY.COM First Name Last Name Try Ancestry.com Free for 14 Days U.S. and Canada Records Collection Database Access 1 Billion Names at Ancestry.com FREE Access to Over 3,000 Databases for 14 Days Birth Records Marriage Records Death Records Census Records Military Records Court/Land Records TEXAS LAND TITLE ABSTRACTS Search The Texas Land Title Abstracts Database Abstracts of original Texas land titles comprising grants and locations. Description This database contains abstracts of original titles located in the archives of the Texas General Land Office in Austin, Texas. The records provide information about lands granted and transferred within the state of Texas including those dated in the 1700s. Fields of information include the district name (a three-letter code) the county, page in original document, grantee, patentee, date, volume, description/location, acreage, class, file, and any additional data found in the record. This database will prove useful for those seeking ancestors in Texas. Thanks to the Texas General Land Office who have worked with Ancestry.com to update this database with current and accurate information. Extended Description The following are the prefix codes for land districts in Texas: AUS ------- Austin LAM Lamar BAS ------- Bastrop LIB Liberty BEX ------- Bexar MAT Matagorda BOW ------ Bowie MIL Milam BRA ------- Brazoria MON Montgomery BRS ------- Brazos NAC Nacogdoches COL ------ Colorado PAN Panola FAN ------ Fannin PAS Paschall FAY ------ Fayette RED Red River FOR ------ Fort Bend REF Refugio GAL ------ Galveston ROB Robertson GOL ------ Goliad RUS Rusk GON ------ Gonzales SAB Sabine HAR ------ Harris SAU San Augustine HAS ------ Harrison SHE Shelby HOU ------ Houston SPA San Patricio JAC ------ Jackson TRA Travis JAS ------ Jasper VIC Victoria JEF ------ Jefferson Requests for more information about a name found in the land title abstracts of Texas may be obtained for $5.00 from the Texas General Land Office. Please click on the link to access the name submission form. (Link here) Upon completion of the form, please mail the form and fee to the following address: Texas General Land Office Stephen F. Austin Bldg. 1700 North Congress Avenue Austin, Texas 78701-1495 http://www.glo.state.tx.us/archives.html -- Related Databases Deduction of the title to Harlaem Commons : and abstract of the title of Dudley Selden. Abstract of title of Kip's Bay Farm in the city of New York Titles to land and land under water at Sea Gate, New York Harbor Land titles in old Pittston The promised land : a history of Brown County, Texas Abstracts of wills, Wichita County, Texas Title and history of the Henry Vassall estate, Cambridge, Mass. Nantucket lands and land owners Mary Chilton's title to celebrity : investigated in behalf of a descendant of John Haward, minimus Green flag over Texas : a story of the last years of Spain in Texas MyFamily.com, Inc. - This site is a member of the MyFamily.com Network.