- 401(k) plans Financial plans that allow employees to set aside
tax-deferred income for retirement or emergency purposes.
- Amortization The process of paying the principal and interest on
a loan through regularly scheduled installments.
- Amortization tables Mathematical tables that lenders use to
calculate a borrower's monthly payment.
- Amperage The strength of an electrical current.
- Anchor bolt A large steel bolt anchored in concrete and attached
to a building to prevent the structure from moving.
- Annual Any kind of plant that must be planted every year.
- Annual mortgagor statement A yearly statement to borrowers that
details the remaining principal and amounts paid for taxes and interest.
- Annual Percentage Rate (APR) The cost of the loan expressed as a
yearly rate on the balance of the loan.
- Annuity The payment of a fixed sum to an investor at regular
intervals.
- Anticipatory breach A communication that informs a party that the
obligations of the original contract will not be fulfilled.
- Application A document that details a potential borrower's
income, debt and other obligations to determine credit worthiness.
- Application fee The fee that a lender charges to process a loan
application.
- Appraisal An opinion of the value of a property at a given point
in time.
- Appraisal fee The fee that an appraiser charges to estimate the
market value of the property.
- Appraisal report A detailed written report on the value of a
property based on recent sales of comparable sites in the area.
- Appraised value An opinion of the current market value of a
property.
- Appreciation An increase in the value of a home or other
property..
- Arbitration A method of resolving a dispute in which a third
party renders a decision.
- Arbor An area shaded by trees, shrubs or vines on a latticework
structure.
- Arch A curved structure that supports weight over an area, such
as a doorway.
- Architect A licensed professional who designs homes, buildings
and other structures.
- Architectural fees The fee an architect charges for services. In
general, architects charge for their services by the hour, by the square foot,
or by a percentage of the project budget.
- Arpent A French measurement of land equal to .84625 acres.
- Asbestos A fire-resistant mineral used for insulation and home
products that has been found to pose a health hazard.
- As-is condition The purchase or sale of a property in its
existing condition.
- Asking price A seller's initial price for a property.
- Assessed value A tax assessor's determination of the value of a
home in order to calculate a tax base.
- Assessment The estimated value of a piece of real estate or a
levy placed on property in addition to taxes.
- Assessment rolls A list of taxable property compiled by the
assessor.
- Assets Items of value which include cash, real estate, securities
and investments.
- Assignor A person who transfers rights and interests of a
property.
- Assumable mortgage A mortgage that can be transferred to another
borrower.
- Assumption clause A provision that allows a buyer to take
responsibility for the mortgage from a seller.
- Assumption fee A fee the lender charges to process new records
for a buyer who assumes an existing loan.
- Average price The price of a home determined by totaling the
sales prices of all houses sold in an area and dividing that number by the
number of homes.
- Avigation easement An easement over private property near an
airport that limits the height of structures and trees.
- Awning windows Single-sash windows that tilt outward and up.
- Abstract of judgment,law The summary of a court judgment that
creates a lien against a property when filed with the county recorder.
- Accelerated cost recovery system A tax calculation that provides
greater depreciation in the early years of ownership of real estate or
personal property.
- Acceleration clause A provision that gives a lender the right to
collect the balance of a loan if a borrower misses a payment.
- Accelerated depreciation A bookkeeping method that depreciates
property faster in the early years of ownership.
- Acceptance The seller's written approval of a buyer's offer.
- Access Any means by which a person can enter property.
- Accessibility The degree to which a building or site allows
access to people with disabilities.
- Accretion The gradual addition to the shore or bank of a waterway
by deposits of sand or silt.
- Acknowledgment A written declaration affirming that a person
acted voluntarily.
- Acre A measurement of land equal to 43,560 square feet.
- Acre foot The volume of material needed to cover an acre of land
one foot deep.
- Active solar system A system that utilizes electric pumps or fans
to transfer solar energy for storage or direct use.
- Actual age The number of years a structure has been standing.
- Addendum An addition or change to a contract.
- Additional principal payment Extra money included in the monthly
payment to help reduce the principal and shorten the term of the loan.
- Add-on interest The interest a borrower pays on the principal for
the duration of the loan.
- Adjustable-rate mortgage (ARM) A loan with an interest rate that
is periodically adjusted to reflect changes in a specified financial index.
- Adjusted cost basis The cost of any improvements the seller makes
to the property. Deducting the cost from the original sales price provides the
profit or loss of a home when it is sold.
- Adjustment period The amount of time between interest rate
adjustments in an adjustable-rate mortgage.
- Administrator A person given authority to manage and distribute
the estate of someone who died without leaving a will.
- Administrator's deed A legal document that an administrator of an
estate uses to transfer property.
- Adverse possession The acquisition of title to property through
possession without the owner's consent for a certain period of time.
- Adverse use The access and use of property without the owner's
consent.
- Aeolian soil Soil that is composed of materials deposited by the
wind.
- Affiant A person who makes a sworn statement.
- Affirmation A substitution for an oath granted to people based on
religious reasons.
- A-frame design An interior style that features a steeply peaked
roofline and a ceiling that is open to the top rafters.
- Agency The relationship of trust that exists between sellers and
buyers and their agents. The agency is formed through a written contract.
- Agency closing The process by which a lender uses a title company
or other firm as an agent to complete a loan.
- Agent A person licensed by the state to conduct real estate
transactions.
- Agreed boundary A compromise boundary to which property owners
agree in order to resolve a dispute.
- Agreement of sale A document the buyer initiates and the seller
approves that details the price and terms of the transaction.
- Alcove A recessed section of a room, such as a breakfast nook.
- Alienation clause A provision that requires the borrower to pay
the balance of the loan in a lump sum after the property is sold or
transferred.
- Alkali Mineral salt found in soil.
- Alkaline soil Soil that contains a higher concentration of
mineral salt than natural acid.
- Alley A lane behind a row of buildings or between two rows of
buildings.
- Allowances Budgets offered by builders of new homes for the
purchase of carpeting and fixtures.
- Alternative mortgage Any home loan that does not conform to a
standard fixed-rate mortgage.
- Aluminum-clad windows Wooden windows with aluminum covering the
exterior.
- Aluminum siding A metal covering that provides an alternative to
paint for owners of wood homes.
- Amenities Parks, swimming pools, health-club facilities, party
rooms, bike paths, community centers and other enticements offered by builders
of planned developments.
- American Society of Home Inspectors The American Society of Home
Inspectors is a professional association of independent home inspectors.
Phone: (800) 743-2744.
- Americans with Disabilities Act A law passed in 1990 that outlaws
discrimination against a person with a disability in housing, public
accommodations, employment, government services, transportation and
telecommunications.
- Back fill Soil used to solidify the foundation of a structure.
- Back title letter A letter that a title insurance company gives
to an attorney who then examines the title for insurance purposes.
- Back-to-back escrow Arrangements that an owner makes to oversee
the sale of one property and the purchase of another at the same time.
- Backup offer A secondary bid for a property that the seller will
accept if the first offer fails.
- Backwater valve A valve in a sewer line that prevents sewage from
flowing back into a house.
- Balance sheet A statement that shows the assets, liabilities and
net worth of an individual.
- Balloon-frame construction A type of framing used in two-story
homes in which studs extend from the ground to the ceiling of the second
floor.
- Balloon loan A mortgage in which monthly installments are not
large enough to repay the loan by the end of the term. As a result, the final
payment due is the lump sum of the remaining principal.
- Balloon payment The final lump sum payment due at the end of a
balloon mortgage.
- Balustrade Railing held up by a set of posts on a porch or
stairway.
- Bankruptcy A proceeding in which an insolvent debtor can obtain
relief from payment of certain obligations. Bankruptcies remain on a credit
record for seven years and can severely limit a person's ability to borrow.
- Bargain sale The sale of a piece of property for less than market
value.
- Baseboard Any board or molding found at the bottom of an interior
wall.
- Baseboard electric heat Heating units installed in the floor that
can be controlled by a central thermostat.
- Basement The area of a home below ground level.
- Basis Point A basis point is one one-hundredth of one percentage
point. For example, the difference between a loan at 8.25 percent and a
mortgage at 8.37 percent is 12 basis points.
- Bay The opening between two columns or walls that forms a space.
- Bay window A window that projects outward in a curve.
- Bearing wall A wall that supports its own weight in addition to
other parts of a structure.
- Beneficiary The lender who makes a loan, also called a mortgagee.
The person borrowing money is the mortgagor.
- Before-tax income Total income before taxes are deducted.
- Bequest Personal property given to a person through a will.
- Betterment An improvement that increases a property's value as
opposed to repairs that maintain the value.
- Bidding war Offers from multiple buyers for a piece of property.
Agents also sometimes compete to list a house for sale.
- Bilateral contract A contract in which the parties involved give
mutual promises. Also called "reciprocal" contracts.
- Bill of sale A document that transfers ownership of personal property.
- Binder A report issued by a title insurance company that details
the condition of a home's title. and provides guidelines for a title insurance
policy.
- Biweekly mortgage A mortgage that requires payments every two
weeks and helps repay the loan over a shorter term.
- Blanket insurance policy A policy that covers more than one
person or piece of property.
- Blanket mortgage A mortgage that covers more than one property
owned by the same borrower.
- Blighted area A neighborhood that has deteriorated.
- Blind nailing Nails driven into a wall and concealed with putty.
- Blueprint
- Blue-ribbon condition A house maintained close to its original
condition. Also called mint condition.
- Blue sky laws Regulations on the sale of securities to prevent
consumers from investing in fraudulent or high-risk companies without being
informed of the risks.
- Board-and-batten siding Siding is composed of 8- to 12-inch wide
wooden boards nailed vertically to create a barn-like exterior.
- Board foot Measurement of lumber that is the equivalent of 144
cubic inches.
- Board of Equalization A state board charged with ensuring that
local property taxes are assessed in a uniform manner.
- Boilerplate Form language used in deeds, mortgages and other
documents. Details can be added by individual parties.
- Bona fide A legal term that refers to actions or persons that are
honest and in good faith.
- Bond An agreement that insures one party against loss by acts or
defaults of another party.
- Book value The value of a property as a capital asset based on
its cost plus any additions, minus depreciation.
- Boring test An analysis of soil in which holes are bored into the
ground and samples are removed.
- Borough A section of a city that has authority over local
matters.
- Borrow Sand, gravel or other material used for grading.
- Borrow pit The hole at a site that has been excavated.
- Boulevard A street lined with trees or constructed with a
landscaped median.
- Boundary The dividing line between two adjacent properties.
- Braced framing A construction method in two-story homes in which
the frame is reinforced with posts and braces.
- Breach of contract The failure to perform provisions of a
contractwithout a legal excuse.
- Breach of covenant The failure to obey a legal agreement.
- Breach of warranty A seller's inability to pass clear title to a
buyer.
- Break-even point The point in which the owner's rental income
matches expenses and debt.
- Breast height The height at which the diameter of a tree is
measured: four feet, six inches above the ground.
- Breezeway A roofed passageway with open sides.
- Brick Building material made from clay molded into oblong blocks
and fired in a kiln.
- Bridge loan A short-term loan for borrowers who need more time to
find permanent financing.
- Brokerage The act of bringing together two or more parties in
exchange for a fee or commission.
- Broker A person licensed by the state to deal in real estate.
- Broom clean The ideal condition of a building when it is turned
over to an owner or tenant.
- Brownstone A vintage row house constructed of red sandstone.
- Buffer strip A parcel of land that separates two or more
properties.
- Building and loan association An organization that raises money
to helps its members purchase real estate or construct a building.
- Building code A comprehensive set of laws that controls the
construction or remodeling of a home or other structure.
- Building inspector A city or county employee who enforces the
building code and ensures that work is correctly performed.
- Building moratorium A halt on home construction to slow the rate
of development.
- Building paper A thick, water-resistant paper that serves as
insulation.
- Building permit A permit issued by a local government agency that
allows the construction of home or renovation of a house.
- Builder upgrades Extra house features or better finishing
materials that a builder offers.
- Building line or setback Guidelines that limit how close an owner
can build to the street or an adjacent property.
- Building restrictions Regulations that limit the manner in which
property can be used.
- Built-ins Appliances or other items that are framed into a home
or permanently attached.
- Bulkhead A retaining wall designed to hold back water from the
ocean or another body of water.
- Bundle of rights The various interests or rights an owner has in
a property.
- Bungalow A small one-story house or cottage.
- Butterfly roof A roof formed by two gables that dip in the middle
to resemble a butterfly's wings.
- Buy-down mortgage A home loan in which the lender receives a
premium as an inducement to reduce the interest rate during the early years of
the mortgage.
- Buyer broker A real estate broker who exclusively represents the
buyer's interests in a transaction and whose commission is paid by the buyer
rather than the seller.
- Buyer's market A slow real estate market in which buyers have the
advantage.
- Buyer's remorse An emotion felt by first-time homebuyers after
signing a sales contract or closing the purchase of a house.
- Bylaws The rules and regulations that a homeowners association or
corporation adopts to govern activities.
- Caveat emptor A legal principle derived from Latin than means
"let the buyer beware."
- Ceiling height The standard height of a ceiling is eight feet.
- Central air conditioning A device that generates cold air through
an outside unit that is connected to ductwork inside the house.
- Central business district The area of a city where most large
businesses are located.
- Certificate of Deposit (CD) A document which shows that the
bearer has a specified amount of money on deposit with a bank, stock-brokerage
firm or other financial institution.
- Certificate of deposit index An index based on the interest rates
on six-month CDs. It used to determine the interest rate for some
adjustable-rate mortgages.
- Certificate of eligibility A document issued by the Veterans
Administration that verifies the eligibility of a veteran for a loan program.
- Certificate of occupancy A document which states that a home or
other building has met all building codes and is suitable for habitation.
- Certificate of sale A document issued at a judicial sale, which
entitles the buyer to receive a deed after court confirmation of the purchase
of the property.
- Certificate of title A written opinion on the status of a piece
of property based on an examination of the public record.
- Chain of title The official record that details the ownership
history of a piece of property.
- Chair railing Decorative trim installed on a wall about 32 inches
above the floor, which protects against scuffs from furniture.
- Change order A modification of the construction contract to
authorize a change in the work, an adjustment in the amount of the contract or
a change in the contract time. The owner, architect and contractor must sign
the change.
- Change frequency The adjustment schedule on an adjustable-rate
mortgage.
- Chattel Personal property such as furniture, clothing or a car.
- Chattel mortgage A lien on personal property used as collateral
for a loan.
- Chimney back The back wall or lining of a fireplace or furnace
chimney.
- Chimney flue The passage inside a chimney that channels smoke and
heat to the outside.
- Chimney pot A short pipe at the top of a chimney that increases
ventilation to the fireplace and reduces smoke.
- Cinder block A block made of ash and cement that is used in
construction.
- Cinder fill Cinders used below a basement or around a foundation
to promote drainage.
- Circuit breaker An electric fuse that activates or deactivates a
circuit.
- Cistern A tank used to store rainwater.
- Classified property tax A tax that varies in rate depending on
the use of the property.
- Clear title A property that does not have liens, defects or other
legal encumbrances.
- Closing The final procedure in which documents are signed and
recorded, and the property is transferred.
- Closing costs Expenses incidental to the sale of real estate,
including loan, title and appraisal fees.
- Closing statement A document which details the final financial
settlement between a buyer and seller and the costs paid by each party.
- Cloud on title An invalid encumbrance on real property.
- Cluster development A method of squeezing more homes into less
space.
- Codicil A change to a will that adds or subtracts provisions or
clarifies portions of the document.
- Co-housing Individual housing units that are clustered around a
common building where residents share cooking and other activities.
- Coign The cornerstone of a building that differs in shape or
color from the rest of the wall.
- Co-insurance Coverage that involves the use of two or more
insurers..
- Collar beam The structural element that connects roof rafters.
- Collateral security Additional security that a borrower supplies
to obtain a loan.
- Collection The series of steps a lender takes to bring a
delinquent mortgage up to date.
- Collusion The action of two or more people to break the law.
- Colonia Unincorporated communities along the U.S.-Mexico border.
- Column A slender upright structure that consists of a base, a
round or square shaft and a capital.
- Column footing The support base for a load-bearing column. The
footing is usually made of reinforced concrete.
- Co-maker A person who signs a promissory note with the borrower
and assumes responsibility for the loan.
- Combination door An outer door with interchangeable screen and
glass panels.
- Combination window A window with interchangeable screen and glass
panels.
- Commercial bank A financial institution that provides a broad
range of services, from checking and savings accounts to business loans and
credit cards.
- Commercial property An area that is zoned for businesses.
- Commingling The mixing of money held in trust with other funds.
- Commission The negotiable percentage of the sales price of a home
that is paid to the agents of the buyer and seller.
- Commitment A promise by a lender to make a loan with specific
terms for a specified period.
- Commitment fee The fee a lender charges for promising to make a
loan.
- Common area An area inside a housing development that is owned by
all residents.
- Common-area assessments Fees paid by the owners of a condominium
project or planned-unit development to maintain, repair, improve or operate
common areas.
- Common-interest development A project composed of individually
owned units that share usage and financial responsibility for common areas.
- Common law A body of laws based on custom, usage and rulings by
courts in various jurisdictions.
- Community property Property accumulated through the joint efforts
of husband and wife. It is a classification of property peculiar to certain
states.
- Community Reinvestment Act A federal law that encourages
financial institutions to loan money in the neighborhoods where minority
depositors live.
- Commute The distance and time it takes a person to reach the
workplace.
- Comparables Properties used as comparisons to determine the value
of a certain property.
- Comparative market analysis An estimate of the value of a
property based on an analysis of sales of properties with similar
characteristics.
- Competent A term for a buyer who is legally fit to enter into a
sales contract.
- Compound interest The interest paid on the principal balance in a
mortgage and on the accrued and unpaid interest of the loan.
- Concrete tilt-up The process of pouring concrete into forms on
the ground, allowing the forms to harden and then raising the material to a
vertical position to form walls.
- Condemnation The process the government uses to take private
property for public use without the consent of the owner.
- Conditional commitment A promise by a lender to make a loan if
the borrower meets certain conditions.
- Condominium Individual units in a building or development in
which owners hold title to the interior space while common areas such as
parking lots, community rooms and recreational areas are owned by all the
residents.
- Condominium conversion The change in title from a single owner of
an entire project or building to multiple owners of individual units.
- Conduit A metal pipe that houses electrical wiring.
- Consent judgment A binding written agreement between two parties
to have a judgment entered and recorded.
- Conservator A court-appointed guardian.
- Consideration Anything that is legal, has value and induces a
person to enter into a contract.
- Construction budget The funding that an owner arranges for the
construction of a project.
- Construction documents Drawings and specifications from an
architect that provide detailed requirements for the construction of a
project.
- Construction loan Short-term loans a lender makes for the
construction of homes and buildings. The lender disburses the funds in stages.
- Construction to permanent loan The conversion of a construction
loan to a longer-term traditional mortgage after construction has been
completed.
- Consumer Credit Counseling Service (CCCS) A nationwide, nonprofit
organization that helps consumers get out of debt and improve their credit
profile. National headquarters: 8701 Georgia Avenue., Suite 507, Silver
Springs, MD 20910. Phone: (800) 388-2227.
- Contemporary style A design that features streamlined shapes,
large unadorned windows and industrial materials.
- Contiguous lots Pieces of property that are adjoined.
- Contingency A condition specified in a purchase contract, such as
a satisfactory home inspection.
- Contingency listing A property listing with a special condition
attached.
- Contingent fee A fee that must be paid if a certain event occurs.
- Contract An agreement between two or more parties that creates or
modifies an existing relationship.
- Contract for deed A contract in which the seller agrees to defer
all or part of the purchase price for a specified period of time.
- Contract to purchase A contract the buyer initiates which details
the purchase price and conditions of the transaction and is accepted by the
seller. Also known as an agreement of sale.
- Contractor The individual who contracts for the construction of a
home or project.
- Contractual lien A voluntary obligation such as a mortgage or
trust deed.
- Controlled growth Any restrictions imposed on the amount or type
of new development in an area.
- Conventional loan A long-term loan a lender makes for the
purchase of a home.
- Convertible adjustable-rate mortgage A mortgage which starts as
an adjustable-rate loan, but allows the borrower to convert the loan to a
fixed-rate mortgage during a specified period of time.
- Conveyance The transfer of title of property.
- Conveyance tax A tax imposed on the transfer of real property.
- Cooperating broker A real estate broker who finds a buyer for a
property that another broker has listed.
- Cooperative corporation A business trust that holds the title to
a cooperative residential building and grants occupancy rights to shareholders
in the corporation.
- Cooperative mortgages Any loans related to a cooperative
residential project.
- Cooperative project A project in which a corporation holds title
and sells shares representing individual units to buyers who then receive a
proprietary lease as their title.
- Cornice A horizontal molding that projects from the top of a
structure or wall.
- Corporate relocation An arrangement by which employers pay to
transfer and move employees.
- Co-signer A second party who signs a promissory note and takes
responsibility for the debt.
- Counteroffer A response to an offer.
- Corner bead A reinforcement placed in the corner where two walls
intersect.
- Corner influence The effect on the value of a property because it
is situated on a corner or near a corner.
- Corrective work Necessary or desired repairs to remedy problems
uncovered by a home or specialized inspection.
- Cost-plus contract A construction contract that determines the
builder's profit based on a percentage of the cost of labor and materials.
- Cottage A small, one-story house.
- Covenant A legal assurance or promise in a deed or other
document, or implied by the law.
- Covenants, conditions and restrictions (CC&Rs) Rules and
regulations for a development, such as acceptable landscaping or improvements
that can be made to individual units.
- Craftsman style An architectural style that evolved as part of
the Arts and Craft movement near the turn of the century.
- Crawl space The space between the ground and the first floor of a
home, usually no higher than four feet.
- Creative financing Innovative home-financing arrangements that
help sell a property.
- Credit The money a lender extends to a buyer for a commitment to
repay the loan within a certain time frame.
- Credit history A record of an individual's current and past debt
payments.
- Creditor An individual or institution to whom a debt is owed.
- Credit life insurance Insurance that pays off a mortgage in the
event of the borrower's death.
- Credit rating The degree of credit worthiness assigned to a
person based on credit history and financial status.
- Credit report A credit bureau report that shows a loan
applicant's history of payments made on previous debts. Several companies
issue credit reports, but the three largest are Trans Union Corp., Equifax and
Experian (formerly TRW ).
- Credit repository Large companies that gather financial and
credit information from various sources about individuals who have applied for
credit.
- Credit union Nonprofit cooperative organizations that provide
banking and financial services, including mortgages, home improvement loans
and home equity loans, to their members.
- Cross-bridging The strengthening of a structure by bracing cross
members between beams.
- Cul de sac A street or alley that is closed at one end.
- Cupola A dome-like structure that sits on top of a roof.
- Curable defect A deficiency in a property that is easy or
inexpensive to fix, such as chipping paint.
- Curb appeal The first impression of a house as seen from the
street.
- Curtain wall An exterior wall that encloses a yard or other area
but does not provide any structural support to a home.
- Custom builder A builder who constructs a home or building based
on plans created by the owner.
- Custom home A structure designed by an architect hired by the
owner.
- Call option A clause in a loan agreement that allows a lender to
ask for the balance at any time.
- Can lights Cylindrical chambers with bulbs recessed into the
ceiling.
- Cancellation clause A clause that details the conditions under
which each party may terminate the agreement.
- Cantilever A projecting structure supported on one end, such as a
balcony.
- Cap A limit on the amount the interest rate or monthly payment
can increase in an adjustable-rate mortgage.
- Cape Cod style A wood-frame or shingled house with a steep roof
and several windows projecting from the second floor.
- Capital Money used to create income, such as funds invested in
rental property.
- Capital expenditure The cost of making improvements on a
property.
- Capital gains Profits an investor makes from the sale of real
estate or investments.
- Capital gains tax A tax placed on the profits from the sale of
real estate or investments.
- Capital improvement Any improvement that extends the life or
increases the value of a piece of property.
- Capitalization A mathematical formula that investors use to
compute the value of a property based on net income.
- Capitalization rate The percentage rate of return estimated from
the net income of a piece of property.
- Caravan A group of real estate agents who tour a house that has
been recently listed for sale.
- Carport A roof that covers a driveway or other parking area.
- Casement window A window hinged on its sides to allow it to swing
open vertically.
- Cash flow The amount of cash a rental property investor receives
after deducting operating expenses and loan payments from gross income.
- Cashier's check A check the bank draws on itself rather than on a
depositor's account.
- Cash-out refinance The refinancing of a mortgage in which the
money received from the new loan is greater than the amount due on the old
loan. The borrower can use the extra funds in any manner.
- Cathedral ceiling A high open ceiling formed by finishing exposed
roof rafters.
- Caulk An acrylic or silicon sealant used to fill cracks, crevices
and holes in a home.
- Cavedium A courtyard or atrium.
- Caveat A formal notice, that asks a court to suspend action until
the party which filed the challenge can be heard.
- Damper A movable plate in a fireplace that allows smoke and fumes
to travel up the chimney's flue.
- Days on the market The period of time a property is listed for
sale until it is sold or taken off the market
- Deadbolt lock Locks that require a key to open from the outside
and a turn button from the inside.
- Debt Any amount one person owes to another.
- Deck A roofless, floored area that adjoins a house.
- Deed The legal document that transfers ownership of a piece of
property.
- Deed of trust A document that gives a lender the right to
foreclose on a piece of property if the borrower defaults on the loan.
- Deep-seal floor drain A drain used to dispose of water from the
basement floor to a sewer line.
- Default The failure to fulfill a duty or promise or discharge an
obligation, such as making monthly mortgage payments.
- Deferred maintenance Any repair or maintenance of a piece of
property that has been postponed, resulting in a decline in property value.
- Delinquent mortgage A mortgage that involves a borrower who is
behind on payments. If the borrower cannot bring the payments up to date
within a specified number of days, the lender may begin foreclosure
proceedings.
- Density test An analysis of soil to determine if the surface can
support the foundation of a house.
- Dentils Small rectangular blocks that project from a building,
usually under cornices or along rooflines.
- Deposit Money given by the buyer with an offer to purchase
property. Also called earnest money.
- Depreciation The decline in value of a piece of property.
- Design/build A project in which the owner contracts directly with
an individual or company to perform design and construction.
- Designer Unlike architects, designers are limited to drawing
blueprints.
- Digital images Images that are incorporated into house listings
to give potential buyers a view of the property.
- Dimension plans Plans which show the layout of a house but are
less detailed than full blueprints.
- Disability insurance An insurance policy which covers an
individual's ability to produce income.
- Disclosure A statement to a potential buyer listing information
relevant to a piece of property, such as the presence of radon or lead paint.
- Discount points Fees that a borrower pays at the time the lender
makes the loan. A point equals 1 percent of the total loan amount.
- Distressed property Property that is in poor physical or
financial condition.
- Document needs list A list of documents a lender requires when a
potential submits a loan application.. The required documents range from
paycheck stubs to credit card statements.
- Domed ceiling A hemispherical ceiling that projects upward
without support.
- Domicile A person's primary or permanent home.
- Dormer A window set upright in a sloping roof.
- Double-hung window A window that consists of two sashes that
slide up and down.
- Dovetail joints Joints that lock two pieces of wood together with
meshed teeth.
- Down payment The amount of money a buyer agrees to give the
seller when a sales agreement is signed. Complete financing is later secured
with a lender.
- Down spouts A vertical gutter that empties water from the roof to
the ground.
- Drainage A system of gutters and drainpipes that carry water away
from the foundation of a house.
- Draw A payment made to subcontractors or suppliers from a
construction loan.
- Dropped ceiling A flat ceiling built lower than the original
ceiling.
- Dry rot A fungal decay that causes wood to become brittle and
crumble.
- Drywall A construction material composed of gypsum or plaster
wrapped in paper and produced in large sheets that can be nailed to wall
studs.
- Dual agency A relationship in which a real estate agent or broker
represents both parties in a transaction.
- Duct Any kind of pipe or channel that carries water, wiring or
conditioned air through a house.
- Due-on-sale clause Standard language in a mortgage which states
that the loan must be paid when a house is sold.
- Duplex A structure that consists of two separate family units.
- Dutch colonial style A design that features barn-like gambrel
roof, a ground-level front porch, and dormers.
- Early occupancy The condition in which buyers can occupy the
property before the sale is completed.
- Earnest money Money a buyer gives with an offer to purchase a
property. Also called a deposit.
- Earthquake insurance A policy that provides coverage against
damage to a home from an earthquake.
- Easement A right given to a third party to use a portion of the
property for certain purposes, such as power lines or water mains.
- Eaves The projecting overhang at the lower edge of a roof.
- Effective age The age of a structure estimated by its condition
rather than its actual age.
- Effective gross income Additional income that a lender considers
when assessing the loan application of a potential borrower.
- Electric service panel A panel that transfers power from the
utility line into a house to be distributed through fuses or circuit breakers.
- Elevations The exterior view of a home design that shows the
position of the house relative to the grade of the land.
- Ell An extension or wing of a house that is at right angles to
the main structure.
- Eminent domain The government's right to condemn private land for
public use, such as the routing of a public highway.
- Employer-assisted housing Programs which help employees purchase
homes through special plans developed with lenders.
- Empty nesters Potential buyers who have raised their families and
want to move into a smaller home.
- Encroachment Fences or other structures that extend into the
property of another owner.
- Encumbrance A claim or lien on a property which complicates the
title process.
- End loan The conversion from a construction loan to permanent
financing a condominium buyer secures after all units in a project have been
completed.
- Endorser A person who signs over ownership of property to another
party.
- English Tudor style An architectural design that features stone
or brick exterior walls and exposed beams.
- Environmental impact statement A government-mandated evaluation
of all aspects and effects a development will have on the environment of a
proposed site.
- Environmentally friendly home construction A method of
construction that utilizes recycled materials.
- Equal Credit Opportunity Act. A federal law that prohibits a
lender or other creditor from refusing to grant credit based on the
applicant's sex, marital status, race, religion, national origin or age. The
law also prohibits a creditor from refusing to grant credit because the
applicant receives public assistance.
- Equifax Equifax Credit Information Services, Inc., is one of the
"Big Three" credit-reporting bureaus that operate nationwide. Address: P.O.
Box 740249, Atlanta, GA 30374.
- Equity A determination of the value of a property after existing
liens are deducted.
- Errors and omissions insurance A policy that pays for any
mistakes a builder or architect makes in a project.
- Escrow A neutral third party holds the documents and money
involved in a real estate transaction and ensures that all conditions of a
sale are met.. Escrow also refers to a special account that a lender
establishes to hold monthly installments from the borrower to cover property
taxes and insurance.
- Escrow account An account that a lender or mortgage servicer
establishes to hold funds for the payment of expenses such as homeowners
insurance and property taxes. Also known as an impound account.
- Escrow agent A neutral third party who ensures that all
conditions of a real estate transaction are met.
- Escrow analysis A lender's periodic examination of an escrow
account to determine if the lender is withholding enough funds from a
borrower's monthly mortgage payment to pay for expenses such as property taxes
and insurance.
- Escrow closing Escrow closes when all conditions of a real estate
transaction are met and the title of the property is transferred to the buyer.
- Escrow company Firms that act as neutral third parties to ensure
that all conditions that the buyer, seller and lender establish in a real
estate transaction are met.
- Escrow payment Funds that a mortgage servicer withdraws from a
borrower's escrow account to pay property taxes and insurance.
- Estate The total assets of a person, including real property, at
the time of death.
- Eviction A legal procedure to remove a tenant for reasons
including failure to pay rent.
- Examination of title An inspection by a title company of public
records and other documents to determine the chain of ownership of a property.
- Excavation The process of clearing trees, removing topsoil and
grading land before the foundation is laid.
- Exclusive listing A contract that gives an agent the exclusive
right to market a property for a specific period of time.
- Executor A person appointed to carry out the instructions in a
will. If there is no will, a probate court will appoint an executor.
- Exhaust fan Ventilating devices that remove water vapor,
undesired smells or smoke.
- Experian Experian, formerly known as TRW Information Systems &
Services, is one of the "Big Three" credit-reporting bureaus.. Address: 505
City Parkway West, Orange, CA 92868.
- Facade The part of a building facing the street or a courtyard.
- Fair Credit Billing Act A federal law that governs credit and
charge card billing errors. If a credit or charge card company violates any
provision, consumers can sue to recover damages.
- Fair Credit Reporting Act. A federal law passed in 1971 that
regulates the activity of credit bureaus. It is designed to prevent inaccurate
or obsolete information from staying in a consumer's credit file and requires
credit bureaus to have reasonable procedures for gathering, maintaining and
disseminating credit information. The act also requires credit bureaus to show
a consumer their credit file if the consumer presents proper identification,
although the bureau reserves the right to charge a fee for doing so.
- Fair Debt Collection Practices Act. A federal law passed in 1977
which outlaws debtor harassment and other types of collection practices. The
act regulates collection agencies, original creditors who set up a separate
office to collect debts, and lawyers hired by the creditor to help collect
overdue bills. An original creditor--the company or individual that originally
granted the credit--is not covered by the act, but may be covered by similar
measures approved by state governments.
- Fair Housing Act Landmark federal law passed in 1965 and amended
in 1988 that makes it illegal to deny rent or refuse to sell to anyone based
on race, color, religion, sex or national origin. The 1988 amendment expanded
the protections to include family status and disability.
- Fannie Mae The official name of the Federal National Mortgage
Association, it is a congressionally chartered, shareholder-owned company that
buys mortgages from lenders and resells them as securities on the secondary
mortgage market.
- Farmer's Home Administration A U.S. Department of Agriculture
agency that provides credit to farmers and rural residents.
- Fascia A board that connects the ends of the roof rafters and
provides a surface to support gutters.
- Federal Home Loan Mortgage Corporation,law The Federal Home Loan
Mortgage Corporation, commonly known as Freddie Mac. The company buys
mortgages from lending institutions, pools them with other loans and then
sells shares to investors.
- Federal Housing Administration (FHA) This government agency
operates a variety of home-loan programs. Its most popular is the Sec. 203(b),
program, which provides low-rate mortgages to buyers who make a down payment
as small as 3 percent.
- Federal National Mortgage Association Now officially dubbed
Fannie Mae, this federally chartered agency buys mortgages from lending
institutions, pools them with other loans and sells shares to investors.
- Federal Reserve Board A group of economists and other experts who
set the nation's monetary policy. Its chief tool to control inflation is the
power to control interest rates.
- Federal Trade Commission The government agency responsible for
regulating a variety of companies and industries, from credit bureaus and
collection agencies to timeshare operators and certain types of creditors.
National headquarters: Sixth and Pennsylvania Avenue NW, Washington, D.C.
20580. Phone: (202) 326-2222.
- Fee simple This type of ownership is the maximum interest a
person can have in a piece of real estate. It entitles the owner to use the
property in any manner they see fit, in accordance with state and local laws.
- Fee simple defeasible The owner of the property holds a fee
simple title contingent upon certain conditions.
- Federal style The all-American home architecture style that
evolved after the Revolutionary War. Details include bigger windows and a
front doorway surrounded by glass and topped with an arched window.
- FHA loans Mortgages that are insured by the Federal Housing
Administration. The FHA's 203(b) loan program provides low-rate mortgages to
buyers who make a down payment as small as 3 percent. The agency also operates
loan plans for investors and purchasers of rural property.
- Feng shui An ancient Chinese belief that the physical
characteristics of a house and the positioning of the home will affect the
fortunes of the owner.
- Fiduciary duty The relationship of trust that buyers and sellers
expect from a real estate agent. The term also applies to legal and business
relationships.
- Field changes Modifications made on the construction site that do
not match blueprints.
- Fill dirt Soil brought in to solidify a finished foundation.
- Filled land An area where the ground has been raised by adding
dirt, gravel or other fill material.
- Finder's fee A fee in any amount that is paid to someone.
- Finish grade A finish that prepares a lot for landscaping.
- Fire wall A buffer composed of fire-resistant material.
- Firm commitment A promise made by a lender when it agrees to loan
money for the purchase of property.
- First mortgage The primary mortgage on a property that has
priority over all other voluntary liens.
- Fixed installment The monthly payment on a home loan.
- Fixed-rate mortgage A home loan with an interest rate that will
remain at a specific rate for the term of the loan. About 75 percent of all
home mortgages have fixed rates.
- Fixed time The specific weeks in a year an owner of a timeshare
arrangement has access to accommodations.
- Fixer-upper A house that needs refurbishment or remodeling It
usually sells at a below-market price.
- Fixture Personal property permanently attached to a house, such
as drapery rods, toilets, built-in bookcases or a furnace.
- Flashing Metal strips placed around chimneys, skylights, vents,
windows, doors, beneath shingles and along seams in the roof to prevent water
seepage.
- Flat fee A set fee charged by a broker instead of a commission.
- Flat roof A roof with a level surface.
- Floor area ratio The calculation of the floor area of all homes
or buildings in a project. It is used in the planning and development of a
site.
- Float floor drain A drain that diverts water from the basement to
a collection area. Water is then removed with a sump pump.
- Floating wall Walls built to withstand movement in the basement
floor.
- Flood insurance Hazard coverage that is required in designated
flood areas.
- Flood plain Flat, flood-prone areas located along waterways.
- Florida rooms Enclosed porches built on the side or back of a
home.
- Footings Concrete foundations that support a structure.
- Forbearance A course of action a lender may pursue to delay
foreclosure or legal action against a delinquent borrower.
- Foreclosure The legal process reserved by a lender to terminate
the borrower's interest in a property after a loan has been defaulted. When
the process is completed, the lender may sell the property and keep the
proceeds to satisfy its mortgage and any legal costs. Any excess proceeds may
be used to satisfy other liens or be returned to the borrower.
- Forfeiture The relinquishing of property rights by a delinquent
borrower.
- For Sale By Owner (FSBO) The owner acts as the agent to avoid
paying a sales commission.
- Foundation The support structure of a house.
- Foyer The entrance hall to a home or building.
- Framing The construction of the skeletal framework of a house.
- Freddie Mac The common name for the Federal Home Loan Mortgage
Corporation, a congressionally chartered institution that buys mortgages from
lenders and resells them as securities on the secondary mortgage market.
- Free-market lots Owners of these types of lots may hire any
builder to construct their home.
- French doors Two adjoining doors inlaid with glass that open from
the middle.
- Frontage The portion of property that borders a roadway or body
of water.
- Fully amortized adjustable-rate mortgage A mortgage that
amortizes, or pays down, the balance of a loan.
- Furnace An enclosed heating device powered by coal, oil, propane
or natural gas.
- Fuse A device that allows power to be channeled into a home.
- Gable A triangular wall enclosed by the sloping ends of a ridged
roof or a triangular decorative feature.
- Gable roof A ridged roof that forms a triangle at each end.
- Gag rules A provision in contracts signed by new buyers that
prohibits the owners from publicizing complaints about the builder.
- Gambrel roof A roof with two slopes, often seen on barns.
- General contractor The person who hires all of the subcontractors
and suppliers for a project.
- General plan A government's long-range land-use plan.
- Georgian style Popular throughout the 18th century, this type of
architecture is distinguished by a symmetrical facade, prominent front
entrance and quoins-decorative blocks of masonry or wood set in the corners of
the house.
- Geodesic dome A structure constructed of lightweight bars forming
a grid of polygons.
- Gift A cash gift a buyer receives from a relative or other
source. Lenders usually require a "gift letter" stating that the money will
not have to be repaid.
- Gingerbread decoration An intricate, almost lacy, wood trim.
- Girders Crossbeams that support floor joists.
- Good-faith estimate An estimate from an institutional lender that
shows the costs a borrower will incur, including loan-processing charges and
inspection fees.
- Government National Mortgage Association Commonly known as Ginnie
Mae, this agency buys home loans from lenders, pools them with other loans and
sells shares to investors. Ginnie Mae differs from its cousins, Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac, in that it only purchases loans backed by the federal government.
- Grace period A specified amount of time to make a loan payment
after its due date without penalty.
- Grade The elevation of land above level ground.
- Graduated-payment mortgage (GPM) A mortgage that requires a
borrower to make larger monthly payments over the term of the loan. The
payment is unusually low for the first few years but gradually rises until
year three or five, then remains fixed.
- Grade level The flat or sloping surface upon which a house is
built.
- Granny flat Slang term for a separate unit in a house or above
the garage, which in the past may have been occupied by an elderly relative.
- Grantee A person conveyed an interest in a piece of property.
- Grantor The person who conveys an interest in a piece of property
to another person.
- Greek Revival style A style introduced in the U.S. at the end of
the 18th century. Its most prominent feature is a pillar-anchored pediment
forming a portico in the front of the house.
- Greenbelt Any stretch of park, open space or other natural
setting in a community.
- Gross income The total income of a household before taxes or
expenses are subtracted.
- Ground fault circuit interrupter Devices that detect leakage of
electrical current to the ground and prevent accidental shock.
- Ground rent The amount of money paid for the use of a piece of
property when it is a leasehold estate.
- Group home A single-family residence used as a living space for
unrelated, developmentally disabled or mentally disabled people.
- Growing-equity mortgage A fixed rate mortgage that increases
payments over a specific period of time. The extra funds are applied to the
principal.
- Guarantee mortgage A loan guaranteed by a third party, such as a
government institution.
- Gutters Horizontal channels installed at the edge of a roof to
carry rainwater or melted snow away from the house.
- Half-bath Also called a powder room, a half-bath contains a
toilet and a sink but no bathtub or shower stall.
- Hazard insurance This provision of homeowners insurance covers
damage by fire, wind or other disaster. It is required by all lenders before a
loan is approved.
- Header Crossbeams above windows and doors.
- Heat pump An electric cooling and heating system.
- Hectare The equivalent of 2.471 acres.
- High density The concentration of housing units in a specific
area or on a specific property.
- High-rise Any building higher than six stories.
- Hip roof A pitched roof with sloping sides.
- Historic preservation The physical rehabilitation of a historic
home or building, and the movement of the same name begun in the 1960s in the
U.S. to preserve and protect landmarks and urban neighborhoods.
- Historic structure A home or building listed in the National
Register of Historic Places and certified as historic by the U.S. Secretary of
the Interior.
- Home equity conversion mortgage Loans made to older owners who
want to convert equity into money. Because borrowers are qualified on the
basis of the value of their home, e, the loan is not the same as a home equity
loan. Also known as reverse mortgages.
- Home equity loan A loan that allows owners to borrow against the
equity in their homes.
- Home inspection An examination of a home's construction,
condition and internal systems by an inspector or contractor prior to
purchase.
- Homeowners' association A group that governs a modern subdivision
or planned community. An association collects monthly fees from all owners to
pay for maintenance of common areas, handle legal and safety issues, and
enforce the covenants, conditions and restrictions set by the developer.
- Homeowners' insurance This insurance includes hazard coverage for
any damages that may affect the value of a house, in addition to personal
liability and theft coverage.
- Homeowners' warranty Special insurance policies that cover
certain home repairs for a specified amount of time.
- Home rule The power of a local government to adopt its own
land-use regulations.
- Homesteading A document that to protects some of a home's equity
from lawsuits.
- Home warranty A type of insurance that covers repairs to certain
parts of a house and some fixtures.
- Hopper window A window that contains a single sash that tilts
inward.
- Hose bibb A threaded faucet connection for devices such as a
washing machine.
- Housing discrimination The illegal practice of denying an
individual or group the right to buy or rent a home based on race, color,
religion, national origin, sex, disability or family status.
- Housing expense ratio The percentage of gross monthly income
devoted to housing costs.
- House wrap A polyethylene barrier wrapped around a house to save
energy.
- HUD-1 Uniform Settlement Statement A closing statement or
settlement sheet that outlines all closing costs on a real estate transaction
or refinancing.
- Impact fees Fees collected from developers of new homes to pay
for schools, parks and other facilities.
- Implied warranty of habitability Court cases which determined
that all new homes are assumed to be fit for human habitation and meet all
building codes.
- Impounds A portion of the monthly mortgage payment that is placed
in an account and used to pay for hazard insurance, property taxes and private
mortgage insurance.
- Income property Property that is not occupied by the owner but is
used to generate income.
- Incurable defect A defect in a property that cannot be fixed,
such as an adjacent hazardous waste site, or that would cost too much to
repair relative to the value of the property.
- Index Financial tables used by lenders to calculate interest
rates on adjustable mortgages and on Treasury bills.
- Individual Retirement Account Tax-deferred savings accounts that
allow people to accrue retirement funds.
- In-file credit report Computer-generated reports drawn from
credit repositories that are generally regarded as objective histories.
- Infill development Any significant new construction in an
established area.
- Infill housing Home construction in established areas.
- Inflation This event occurs when there is more money available
than there are goods and services to be purchased. Mortgage rates, which are
determined by the marketplace and the actions of the Federal Reserve Board and
Wall Street, are sensitive to inflation fears.
- Infrastructure The roads, schools, parks, utilities, bridges and
communications systems in a community.
- Initial interest rate The original interest rate on an adjustable
mortgage.
- Inspection report An examination of a home's exterior,
foundation, framing, plumbing, electrical system, heating, air conditioning,
fireplace, kitchen, bathroom, roofing and interior.
- Installment contract A purchase agreement in which the buyer does
not receive title to the property until all installments are paid.
- Insulation Materials including cellulose, glass fiber, rock wool,
polystyrene, urethane foam and vermiculite that slow heat loss.
- Insurable title Title to property that a company agrees to insure
against defects and disputes.
- Insurance Owners and buyers can purchase various types of
insurance: hazard, private mortgage and earthquake. The policies guarantee
compensation for specific losses.
- Insurance binder A temporary insurance arrangement usually put in
force until a permanent policy can be obtained.
- Interest The fee borrowers pay to obtain a loan. It is calculated
based on a percentage of the total loan.
- Interest accrual rate The rate at which interest accrues on a
mortgage.
- Interest-only loan The pays only the interest that accrues on the
loan balance each month. Because each payment goes toward interest, the
outstanding balance of the loan does not decline with each payment.
- Interest rate The sum, expressed as a percentage, charged for a
loan. Interest payments on most home loans are tax- deductible.
- Interest rate buy-down plans For cash-short buyers, some sellers
are willing to advance funds from the sale of the home to buy down the
interest rate and reduce the buyer's monthly obligation.
- Interest rate caps A limit on the amount that can be charged to
the monthly payment of an adjustable-rate mortgage during an adjustment
period.
- Interest rate ceiling The highest interest a lender can charge
for an adjustable-rate mortgage.
- Investment property Real estate that generates income, such as an
apartment building or a rental house.
- Jalousie window A window that consists of vertical rows of
horizontal glass slats that operate together by a crank mechanism that
connects all the slats.
- Joint liability The responsibility of two or more people to
fulfill the terms of a home loan or debt.
- Joint tenancy Ownership by two or more people that gives equal
shares of a piece of property. Rights pass to the surviving owner or owners.
- Joist A floor or ceiling support member supported by foundation
walls, piers or beams. Subflooring is connected to floor joists.
- Judgment The decision of a court or law. If a court decides that
a person must repay a debt, a lien may be placed against that person's
property.
- Judicial foreclosure A procedure to handle foreclosure
proceedings as civil matters.
- Jumbo mortgage Loans that exceed limits set by Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac. The current limit is $214,600.
- Junior mortgage A loan that subordinate to the primary loan.
- Kit home A structure that contains prefabricated components and
is put together by a contractor.
- Knee wall A wall-like structure that supports roof rafters.
- Knob-and-tube wiring An old-fashioned wiring system that has been
replaced by fuses and circuit breakers.
- Leverage The use of a small amount of cash--a 5 percent or 10
percent down payment--to buy a piece of property.
- Liabilities A borrower's debts and financial obligations.
- Liability insurance A policy that protects owners against any
claims of negligence, personal injury or property damage.
- Lien A claim laid by one person or company on the property of
another as security for money owed.
- Life cap A limit on the amount that a loan rate can move during
the term of the mortgage. For example, the rate on an adjustable-rate mortgage
that begins at 5 percent and has a lifetime cap of 6 percentage points cannot
rise above 11 percent, even if rates on fixed-rate mortgages soar to 20
percent.
- Life-cycle cost analysis An analysis of a building project's
expected operating, maintenance and replacement costs, calculated by an
architect.
- Limited partnership Real estate syndicates and other investment
groups use this type of ownership.. A general partner makes the group's
investment decisions, oversees the investment and is principally liable for
any losses.
- Lintel A horizontal piece over a door or window that carries the
weight of the structure above it.
- Liquid assets Cash and all other assets that can be converted to
cash relatively quickly. Liquid assets can include money in savings and
checking accounts, money-market accounts, and most certificates of deposit.
- Liquidated damages When a real estate deal goes awry, one party
often is entitled to liquidated damages, a sum of money set out in the
purchase contract in that event.
- Listing A piece of property placed on the market by a listing
agent.
- Listing inventories The known number of houses for sale within a
given market.
- Live-in partnership An arrangement in which two unrelated people
purchase a home.
- Live-work space An officially designated dwelling in which the
occupant conducts a home-based business or enterprise.
- Load-bearing wall A wall that supports not only its own weight,
but the weight of other parts of a home. Also called a bearing wall.
- Loan application The first step toward submitting a home loan
requires the borrower to itemize basic financial information.
- Loan application fee A fee charged by lenders to for making a
loan application.
- Loan commitment A promise by a lender or other financial
institution to make or insure a loan for a specified amount and on specific
terms.
- Loan officer An official representative of a lending institution
who is empowered to act on behalf of the lender within certain limits.
- Loan origination fee Most lenders charge borrowers an origination
fee--or points--for processing a loan. A point is 1 percent of the total loan
amount.
- Loan processing fee A fee charged by some lenders for gathering
information to enable the lender to process the loan.
- Loan term The amount of a time set by the lender for a buyer to
pay a mortgage. Most conventional loans have 30-year or 15-year terms.
- Loan -to-value ratio A technical measure used by lenders to
assess the relationship of the loan amount to the value of the property
- Lock-in When interest rates are volatile, many borrowers want to
"lock in" an interest rate and many lenders will oblige, setting a limit on
the amount of time the lock-in is in effect.
- Loft A living space not partitioned into rooms or a small space
built above a larger room.
- Log cabin Homes constructed of rough-hewn timbers and a standard
housing form in the early European settlement of the U.S.
- Low-ball offer An offer made to a seller that is substantially
below market value. The longer a property stays on the market, the more likely
there are to be such offers.
- Low density A low concentration of housing units in a specific
area.
- Low-documentation loan A mortgage that requires only minimal
verification of income and assets.
- Low-down-payment loan A home loan that requires the borrower to
make only a small down payment before obtaining the financing needed to
purchase a house.
- Landscape A home's surroundings can range from a shrub-studded
emerald lawn to a native-plant xeriscape. It is a major component of curb
appeal.
- Landscape architect A professional who holds a degree in
landscape architecture, which involves training in horticulture, landscape
design and planning.
- Landscape designer A landscape designer has training in
horticulture and landscape planning, but does not necessarily hold a degree.
- Landscape contractor A professional who carries out the plans of
a landscape architect or a landscape designer.
- Late charge A fee a lender imposes on a borrower when the
borrower does not make a payment on time.
- Late payment A payment a lender receives after the due date has
passed.
- Latent defect An invisible problem in a piece of property such as
bad wiring, termite damage or lead paint.
- Lead A metallic chemical element present in older dwellings,
primarily in the form of lead-based paint and lead plumbing. Exposure to lead
has been found to be a health risk.
- Lease A binding agreement that contains the terms and conditions
of a renter's occupancy.
- Leasehold estate An arrangement in which the borrower does not
own a specific piece of property but possesses a long-term lease.
- Lease option A lease that contains the right to purchase the
property for a specific price within a certain time frame.
- Lender A bank, savings institution or mortgage company that
offers home loans.
- Legal blemish Blemishes on a piece of property, such as a zoning
violation or fraudulent title claim.
- Legal description A specific way of identifying and locating a
piece of real estate that is acceptable to a court.
- Letter of intent A formal statement that the buyer intends to
purchase the property for a certain price on a certain date.
- Main water shut-off valve The primary valve that halts the flow
of water from the water meter into a home.
- Mansard roof A roof with four sides that slope upward from the
roof edge to the square peak.
- Manufactured housing Prefabricated homes that can range from
simple trailers to larger dwellings.
- Mantel The facing of stone, marble or other material around a
fireplace.
- Maintenance fee The monthly assessment members of a homeowners'
association pay for the repair and maintenance of common areas.
- Managed-competition lots Lots in which buyers choose between one
of several builders.
- Margin The lender's "retail markup" on the mortgage. For example,
if the index rate for an adjustable-rate mortgage is 5 percent but the lender
has a 2.5 percentage-point margin, the rate the borrower will pay is 7.5
percent.
- Market conditions Factors affecting the sale and purchase of
homes at a particular point in time.
- Market value The price that a piece of property sells for at a
particular point in time.
- Masonry The brick or stone work on a building.
- Master-planned community A suburban plan that includes homes and
commercial, work, educational and community facilities.
- Maximum financing A loan amount within 5 percent of the highest
loan-to-value ratio allowed for a property.
- Mechanical systems A home's plumbing, wiring, heating and cooling
systems.
- Mechanic's lien Subcontractors or suppliers sometimes will file
an encumbrance, or mechanic's lien, against a property to seek payment.
- Mediation A dispute-resolution process in which a neutral party
works to resolve contract differences.
- Median price The price of the house that falls in the middle of
the total number of homes for sale in that area.
- Merged credit report A report that draws information from the Big
Three credit-reporting companies: Equifax, Experian and TransUnion Corp.
- Metes and bounds A time-honored land surveying method of
describing land in terms of shape and boundary dimensions.
- Mint condition Mint condition, or blue-ribbon condition, refers
to a house that looks as close to new as possible.
- Mixed-income housing A neighborhood that contains houses of
widely varying prices.
- Mixed-use development A project that combines several different
functions, such as residential space above a commercial establishment or an
entire development combining commercial, residential and public
accommodations.
- Modification A change in any of the terms of the loan agreement.
- Molding Decorative trim elements applied to walls, ceilings, and
window and door openings.
- Money market account Accounts that work like money market funds
and allow individual investors to participate in certain managed investments
and withdraw funds under most conditions.
- Money market funds A mutual fund that pools the resources of
individuals to invest in certain managed investments.
- Mortgage A legal document specifying a certain amount of money to
purchase a home at a certain interest rate, and using the property as
collateral.
- Mortgagee A bank or other financial institution that lends money
to the borrower. The borrower is considered the mortgagor.
- Mortgagor The person who borrows money to purchase a house. The
lender is called the mortgagee.
- Mortgage acceleration clause A clause which allows a lender to
demand that the entire balance of the loan be repaid in a lump sum under
certain circumstances. The acceleration clause is usually triggered if the
home is sold, title to the property is changed, the loan is refinanced or the
borrower defaults on a scheduled payment.
- Mortgage banker A company that provides home loans using its own
money. The loans are usually sold to investors such as insurance companies and
Fannie Mae.
- Mortgage broker A company that matches lenders with prospective
borrowers who meet the lender's criteria. The mortgage broker does not make
the loan, but receives payment from the lender for services.
- Mortgage insurance Required by lenders in some loans to protect
them from a possible default . All conventional loans with less than a 20
percent down payments require private mortgage insurance, or PMI.
- Mortgage-interest deduction The tax write-off that the Internal
Revenue Service allows most owners to claim for the annual interest payments
they make on their real estate loans.
- Mortgage life insurance A special type of insurance that will pay
off a mortgage if the borrower dies before the debt is retired.
- Motivated buyer Any buyer with a strong incentive to make a
purchase.
- Motivated seller Any seller with a strong incentive to make a
deal.
- Move-in condition A house that is ready for a new occupant.
- Move-up buyer A buyer who has purchased a home before and is
looking for a bigger or more expensive home.
- Mullion A vertical dividing bar between window lights or panels.
- Multidwelling property A property that contains individual units
for several households but carries only one mortgage.
- Multifamily mortgage A mortgage on a multifamily dwelling with
more than four families, typically an apartment building.
- Multiple listing service (MLS) The service combines the listings
for all available homes in an area, except For-Sale-By-Owner (FSBO)
properties, in one directory or database.
- Multiple offers Multiple purchase offers occur in hot markets or
hot neighborhoods.
- Municipal housing inspector Inspectors employed by cities or
counties to check all construction sites and verify that contractors are
meeting building codes.
- Nail pops Nails in load-bearing parts of new homes that pop out
slightly because of settling of the structure.
- Needs-based pricing A seller's asking price that is based on
factors such as the required funds to pay off the mortgage, the cost of
remodeling or the purchase of another house.
- Negative amortization The situation occurs when a borrower's
monthly payment is not large enough to cover both the principal and interest
of a loan. As a result, the outstanding balance of the loan actually grows
larger with each payment rather than smaller. Most fixed-rate loans are not
subject to negative amortization, but many adjustable-rate mortgages are
susceptible.
- Negative-slope driveway A driveway that drops from street level
to the garage.
- Neo-traditional planning Planning of a community that favors the
return of new-home development with such traditional features as grid-street
patterns, prominent front porches, backyard garages, multi-use buildings and
housing clustered near commercial service areas.
- Net cash flow Investment property that generates income after
expenses such as principal, interest, taxes and insurance are subtracted.
- Net worth The worth of a person or company based on the
difference between total assets and liabilities.
- New Urbanism A community design philosophy that favors the return
of new-home development with such traditional features as prominent front
porches, backyard garages, multi-use buildings and housing clustered near
commercial service areas.
- Niche A small recessed area in a wall, traditionally arched at
the top.
- NIMBY (Not In My Back Yard) The response sometimes given by
neighborhoods and communities to proposed changes or development.
- No cash-out refinance The amount of the new mortgage covers the
remaining balance of the first loan, closing costs, any liens and cash no more
than 1 percent of the principal on the new loan.
- No-competition lots A lot in which the buyer's home will be
constructed by a particular builder.
- No-documentation loan A loan application that does not require
verification of income but typically is granted in cases of large down
payments.
- Non-assumption clause A loan provision that prohibits the
transfer of a mortgage to another borrower without lender approval.
- Non-liquid asset An asset such as a house that is not easily
turned into cash.
- Non-recurring closing costs Costs that are one-time only fees for
such items as an appraisal, loan points, credit report, title insurance and a
home inspection.
- Note The legal document that requires a borrower to repay a
mortgage at a certain interest rate over a specified period of time.
- Note rate The interest rate specified in a mortgage note.
- Notice of default A lender's initial action when a mortgage
payment is late and attempts to reconcile the issue out of court have failed.
- Online real estate listings Properties listed for sale on the
Internet.
- Open house A marketing tool in which a listing agent opens a
house for view.
- Open listing A property given to a number of brokers to market at
the same time.
- Open space Undeveloped land or common areas in a planned
community reserved for parks, walking paths or other natural uses.
- Option A situation in which a buyer puts down money for the right
to purchase a piece of real estate within a set time period but does not have
an obligation to buy.
- Oral agreement Contractual arrangements that are not in writing
and are usually not legally binding.
- Original principal balance The amount of principal owed on a loan
before a borrower makes any payments.
- Origination fee A fee charged by most lenders--also called
points--for processing a loan. A point is 1 percent of the total loan amount.
- Overhang A protruding structural feature.
- Owner financing A transaction in which the seller of a property
agrees to finance all or part of the purchase.
- Parcel An officially described piece of land.
- Partition An interior wall.
- Partnership There are several partnership options for unmarried
individuals to buy a piece of property, such as live-in partnerships (in which
both buyers share the residence) or a shared-equity partnership (in which one
buyer lives in the home and the other is an investor in the property).
- Passive loss A tax term that refers to any loss from a passive
activity, such as the ownership but not the operation of a piece of rental
real estate.
- Passive solar system A system that supplies solar heat without
the use of electric fans or pumps.
- Patent defect A visible deficiency in a piece of property, such
as a cracked basement slab or a sagging porch.
- Payment cap A legal limit on the amount a monthly payment can
increase on an adjustable-rate mortgage.
- Percolation test A test used to determine the ability of soil to
accommodate a septic system.
- Per-diem interest Interest charged or accrued daily.
- Panel A section or division of a wall, ceiling or a flat piece of
building material that forms the part of the surface of a wall, door or
cabinet.
- Paneling Strips of wood or wood material applied as a finish to a
wall.
- Parking strip The strip of grass between the sidewalk and the
street in front of a house.
- Partition Any kind of structure dividing one room or space from
another.
- Patio An interior courtyard or a paved backyard area.
- Perennial Any plant that produces leaves, flowers and seeds from
year to year, such as irises or peonies.
- Punch list Buyers compile a punch list during the final
walk-through detailing items to be fixed before closing.
- Purchase agreement A document which details the purchase price
and conditions of the transaction.
- Purchase-money mortgage A mortgage that a borrower obtains to
acquire a property.
- Pergola An arbor with an open roof of rafters supported by posts
or columns.
- Personal property Any moveable property in a house such as
furniture or appliances.
- Pest-control inspection A common pest-control inspection is a
termite inspection, which is required in some states, such as California.
- Pier A rectangular masonry support column.
- PITI (Principal, Interest, Taxes, Insurance) When a buyer applies
for a loan, the lender will calculate the principal, interest, taxes and
insurance. The figure is designed to represent the borrower's actual monthly
mortgage-related expenses.
- Planned communities The concept began in the 19th century and
describes any town or neighborhood built with certain guidelines and goals.
- Planned-unit development Residents own the home and the land, and
share the use and financial responsibility for common areas.
- Plaster A labor-intensive and more costly wall finish.
- Pocket door A sliding door that retreats into the wall when
opened.
- Point Fees charged by lenders at the time a loan is originated. A
point is equal to 1 percent of the total loan amount.
- Porch The structure can be a simple covered entrance to a home or
a fully enclosed room on the outside of a residence.
- Porte cochere A porch-like roof extending over a driveway.
- Portfolio lender A lender who makes loans with its own funds and
keeps the loans on the company's books--in other words, inside the
institution's "portfolio"--rather than selling the loan on the secondary
market.
- Portico A porch supported by a row of columns.
- Possession When a buyer signs the papers and receives the keys to
the house, the buyer officially takes possession.
- Power of attorney A document that authorizes an individual to act
on behalf of someone else.
- Pre-approval letter A letter from a lender that informs a seller
about the amount of money that a potential buyer can obtain.
- Prepaid expenses The costs for taxes, insurance and assessments
paid before the due date.
- Prepaid interest Interest paid before it is due. For example, at
the close of a real estate transaction borrowers usually pay for the interest
on their loan that falls between the closing period and the first monthly
payment.
- Prepayment penalty Lenders can impose a penalty on a borrower who
pays a loan off before its expected end date.
- Prequalification Many lenders will prequalify a borrower who is
shopping for a loan by completing a preliminary assessment of the buyer's
ability to pay for a home.
- Pre-sold home Homes that are sold before they are built.
- Pressure relief valve A safety vent that relieves excess pressure
in a water heater.
- Price range The range of how much a buyer is willing to pay for a
home.
- Primer The initial coat of paint that is applied before the final
topcoat.
- Principal The amount of money that the borrower owes on a
mortgage.
- Principle of conformity The idea that a house will more likely
appreciate in value if its size, age, condition and style are similar to, or
conform to, other houses in the neighborhood.
- Principle of progression An appraisal term which states that real
estate of lower value is enhanced by the proximity of higher-end properties.
- Principle of regression An appraisal term which states that the
value of higher-end real estate can be brought down by the proximity of too
many lower-end properties.
- Privacy fence A structure erected between two pieces of property.
- Private mortgage insurance (PMI) A special type of loan insurance
that many lenders require borrowers to purchase if the borrower's down payment
is less than 20 percent of the home's purchase price.
- Probate sale A real estate sale triggered by the death of the
owner, with proceeds to be divided among heirs or creditors.
- Production home Homes that are mass-produced by one builder in a
project.
- Programming A written summation by an architect of a project's
design objectives, constraints and criteria.
- Project budget A fiscal outline that includes the construction
budget and all costs for land, furniture, equipment, financing, professional
services, contingencies and owner-furnished goods and services.
- Property line The official dividing line between properties.
- Property report A disclosure issued by the state when a
time-share project is located or sold.
- Property tax Property taxes are calculated at about 1.5 percent
of the current market value.
- Property tax deduction The U.S. tax code allows homeowners to
deduct the amount they have paid in property taxes.
- Property value The value of a piece of property is based on the
price a buyer will pay at a certain time.
- Proration Agreed-upon percentages of certain expenses associated
with a piece of property that must be paid by the buyer or the seller at the
time of closing.
- Qualifying ratios Lenders compute qualifying ratios to determine
how much a potential buyer can borrow.
- Queen Anne style A Victorian-era style that originated in San
Francisco.
- Quit-claim deed A document that releases a party from any
interest in a piece of real estate.
- R-value A construction term that refers to the resistance of to
heat loss. The higher the R-value, the slower the rate of heat loss.
- Radon A ground-generated radioactive gas that seeps into some
homes through sump pumps, cracks in the foundation and other inlets. A leading
cause of lung cancer , radon is found in mostly the northern half of the
country.
- Rafter Rafters form the slope of a pitched roof and are analogous
to floor joists.
- Rammed-earth construction An alternative building process in
which dirt is compacted into large structural frames to create walls.
- Ranch style Modern ranch-style homes, popularized in the 1950s,
were championed by such architectural giants as Frank Lloyd Wright.
- Rate-improvement mortgage A loan with a clause that entitles a
borrower to a one-time cut in the interest rate without going through
refinancing.
- Rate lock When interest rates are volatile, many borrowers want
to "lock in" an interest rate and many lenders will oblige, setting a limit on
the amount of time the guaranteed interest rate is in effect.
- Real estate Land and anything permanently affixed to it,
including buildings, fences and other items attached to the structure.
- Real estate agent A real estate agent has a state license to
represent a buyer or a seller in a real estate transaction in exchange for a
commission. Most agents work for real estate brokers.
- Real estate attorney A lawyers who specializes in real estate
transactions.
- Real estate broker A real estate agent who is licensed by the
state to represent a buyer or seller in a real estate transaction in exchange
for a commission. Most brokers also have agents working for them, and are
entitled to a portion of their commissions.
- Real estate investment trusts (REITs) The trusts are publicly
traded companies that own, develop and operate commercial properties.
- Real Estate Settlement Procedures Act (RESPA) A federal law
designed to make sellers and buyers aware of settlement fees and other
transaction-related costs. RESPA also outlaws kickbacks in the real estate
business.
- Real property Land and any permanent fixtures on it, including
buildings, trees and minerals.
- Realtist A designation for an agent or broker who is a member of
the National Association of Real Estate Brokers.
- REALTORŪ A designation for an agent or broker who is a member of
the National Association of Realtors.
- Recission The cancellation of a contract by law or consent by the
parties involved.
- Reconveyance When a borrower completely pays off the mortgage,
the property is reconveyed to them from the lender.
- Recorder A public official responsible for keeping the records of
all real estate transactions.
- Recording The filing of a specific document to the appropriate
government entity.
- Recording fee A fee charged by real estate agents for conveying
the sale of a piece of property into the public record.
- Redlining The practice by a bank or insurance company to deny
credit or insurance to people based on ethnic background or neighborhood.
- Refinancing The process of replacing an older loan with a new
mortgage that has better terms.
- Regulation Z The federal code issued under the Truth-in-Lending
Act which requires that a borrower be advised in writing of all costs
associated with the credit portion of a financial transaction.
- Rehabilitation mortgage A mortgage that provides for the costs of
repairing and improving a resale home or building.
- Relocation benefits Benefits provided by employers for new
workers and can include moving costs, reimbursement for temporary housing and
transportation, real estate agent assistance and discounted loans.
- Relocation company A firm that administers all aspects of moving
in new employees to the community.
- Remaining balance The amount of unpaid principal on a home loan.
- Remaining term The original loan term minus the number of
payments made.
- Renter's insurance A policy that covers the replacement value of
possessions.
- Rent loss insurance A policy that covers any loss of rent or
rental value in the event of fire or other damage that renders the property
uninhabitable.
- Repayment plan When a borrower falls behind in mortgage payments,
many lenders will negotiate a repayment plan rather than go to court.
- Replacement reserve fund Money that is set aside from homeowners'
assessments to replace common property, such as furniture in a planned
development's community room.
- Repossession When a house is repossessed, it is taken back by the
lender holding the mortgage.
- Resale value The future value of a piece of property that can be
affected by many factors, including the surrounding neighborhood, school
scores, and economic and housing market conditions.
- Reserve fund All homeowners associations set aside a certain
amount of money for major repairs or improvements.
- Restructured loan A mortgage in which new terms are negotiated.
- Return on investment The amount of profit a property generates.
- Reverse mortgage A special type of loan available to equity-rich,
older owners. Repayment is not necessary until the borrower sells the property
or moves into a retirement community.
- Ridge board A horizontal board that serves as the apex of the
roof structure.
- Ridge vent A vent located along the ridge board of the roof that
allows moisture to escape.
- Right of first refusal An agreement by a property owner to give
another person the right to buy or rent the property before it goes on the
open market.
- Right to recission A provision in the federal Truth-in-Lending
Act that allows borrowers to cancel certain kinds of loans within three days
of signing.
- Rough-in The installation of plumbing, electrical and other
mechanical systems.
- Rural Housing Service A U.S. Department of Agriculture program
that provides financing to farmers and certain borrowers to purchase rural
property when other funds are not available.
- Sale-leaseback A transaction in which the buyer leases back the
property to the seller for a specified period of time.
- Sales contract A contract signed by the buyer and seller that
details the terms of a home purchase.
- Saltbox style A design that dates to colonial times and takes its
name from the shape of saltboxes.
- Sanitary sewer The drain line in a house that carries away food
and human wastewater to a municipal sewer system or a septic system.
- Sash One of two windows in a double-hung window.
- Schematic designs Renderings of floor plans and the exterior of a
house.
- Second mortgage Another loan placed upon a piece of property.
- Secondary mortgage market A market of packaged home loans that
are resold as securities to investors. Major players are Fannie Mae and
Freddie Mac.
- Secured loan Any loan backed by collateral.
- Security Apiece of property designated as collateral.
- Seller broker A seller broker represents the interest of the
seller.
- Seller carry-back An agreement in which the seller provides
financing for a home purchase.
- Seller take-back An agreement in which the seller provides
financing for a home purchase.
- Seller's market A hot real estate market in which sellers have
the advantage and multiple offers are common.
- Semi-custom home The buyer of a semi-custom home is free to make
some design changes but not to the home's structural plan.
- Septic system A self-contained sewage treatment system that
distributes wastewater to an underground storage area and relies on bacterial
action to decompose solid waste matter.
- Servicer A firm that collects mortgage payments and manages
borrowers' escrow accounts.
- Setback The minimum distance a house or buildings must be from
the lot line.
- Settlement statement A document that details who has paid what to
whom.
- Shared-appreciation mortgage A loan that allows a lender or other
party to share in the borrower's profits when the home is sold.
- Shared-equity transaction A transaction in which two buyers
purchase a property, one as a resident co-owner and the other as an investor
co-owner.
- Shed ceiling A shed ceiling pitches upward at one end.
- Shed roof A shed roof pitches up longer on one side than the
other.
- Shingle style An alternative style of Victorian homes that
evolved in the late 19th century to simplify the complexity of the traditional
Victorian house.
- Shingles Thin, wedge-shaped pieces of wood or flat rectangular
pieces of slate, mineral fiber, glass fiber or composition asphalt installed
on a roof to prevent water seepage.
- Shoe molding An unobtrusive finish trim between the floor and the
baseboard designed to hide any irregularities in the seam between the floor
and wall or baseboard.
- Sill plate A horizontal piece of wood placed on top of the
foundation.
- Sill cock An exterior threaded faucet connection for garden hoses
that provides water outside a home.
- Skylight A window in a roof that allows natural light to
illuminate a room.
- Slab foundation A foundation built directly on soil with no
basement or crawl space.
- Slider window A window that is composed of two windows, or
sashes, that glide open and closed on a metal track.
- Soffit An external area under the overhang of a roof.
- Soils test A test of the subsoil to ensure that foundations can
be safely constructed.
- Spanish Mission style A design that is derived from the original
missions established by the Spanish in the Southwest.
- Special assessment When a homeowners' association needs or wants
extra funds, it levies a special assessment upon the owners.
- Special deposit account Rehabilitation mortgages require a
special deposit account from which restoration and remodeling funds included
in the loan are disbursed to the appropriate contractors as work is completed.
- Specifications The written requirements for materials, equipment,
construction systems and standards.
- Speculation home A home that has been built without a buyer.
- Splash block A slanted block used to divert runoff water from a
downspout away from the foundation.
- Split-level style A home that is a ranch-style house stacked to
fit on a smaller lot and perhaps to accommodate a garage.
- Square footage The number of square feet of livable space in a
home or building.
- Standard Metropolitan Statistical Area Areas designated by the
U.S. Office of Management and Budget that contain a city of 50,000 or more.
- Standard payment calculation A calculation that is used to
determine the monthly payment necessary to repay the balance of a home loan in
equal installments.
- Starter home Homes that fall within the lower price range of a
typical first-time buyer.
- Steel framing A construction method used by commercial and
residential builders.
- Step-rate mortgage A loan that allows a gradual increase in the
interest rate during the first few years of the loan.
- Storm sewer A drain line, which is not connected to the sewer
line, removes all other wastewater from a home.
- Storm windows Sets of windows and screens that are installed on
older double-hung windows.
- Strike plate The metal part of a lock that is anchored to the
doorframe and holds the door closed.
- Straight purchase A transaction in which the buyer gives a
new-home builder a deposit to begin building and the balance when the sale of
the house closes.
- Stucco A mixture of sand and cement used to cover the exterior
surface or interior walls of a home or building.
- Studs The upright pieces of lumber or steel in a wall to which
panels, siding, drywall or other coverings are attached.
- Subagent When an agent brings a buyer to a property, they in
effect act as a subagent to the listing agent.
- Subcontractor Specialty construction companies hired by the
general contractor to perform certain tasks.
- Subdivision The process in which the owner of a large piece of
property divides it into smaller parcels.
- Sub-flooring The sheathing, usually made of plywood, placed on
top of floor joists and covered by flooring.
- Subordinate loan A second or third mortgage.
- Sump pump A pump that moves water from a basement sump pit.
- Survey A precise measurement of a piece of property by a licensed
surveyor.
- Sweat equity The non-cash value put into a piece of property by
the owner, such as do-it-yourself home improvements.
- Title The actual legal document conferring ownership of a piece
of real estate.
- Title company Firms that ensure that the title to a piece of
property is clear and provide title insurance.
- Title insurance A policy issued to lenders and buyers to protect
any losses because of a dispute over the ownership of a piece of property.
- Title risk Possible impediments to the transfer of a title from
one owner to another.
- Title search A check of public title records to ascertain that
the seller is the legal owner and that there are no claims or liens against
the property.
- Top producer A real state industry term that refers to agents and
brokers who sell a high volume of homes.
- Top soil The top layer of soil that is removed when lots are
graded in preparation for construction.
- Total expense ratio The percentage of monthly debt obligations
relative to gross monthly income.
- Townhouse An attached home that is not a condominium.
- Tract home Another term for a production home, a mass-produced
house constructed by one builder in a project.
- Trade equity Other real estate or assets a buyer gives to a
seller as part of the down payment.
- Trading down A reference to buyers who purchase a home that is
less expensive than their current house.
- Trading up A reference to buyers who purchase a home that is more
expensive home than their current house.
- Transfer of ownership Any legal means by which a piece of real
estate changes hands.
- Transfer tax An assessment by state or local authorities at the
time a piece of property changes hands.
- Transom A small hinged window directly above a door.
- Trans-Union Trans-Union Corp. is one of the "Big Three"
credit-reporting bureaus that operate nationwide. Address: 760 Sproul Road,
P.O. Box 390, Springfield, PA 19064-0390. Phone: (312) 408-1400.
- Tray ceiling A tray ceiling has edges that slant toward the
middle from the walls.
- Treasury bills Securities issued by the Treasury Department that
have the full backing of the U.S. government.
- Treasury index An index used to determine interest rate changes
for adjustable rate mortgages.
- Trellis A decorative landscape structure made of thin strips of
wood or plastic.
- Trim work The finishing of doors, doorways, window frames and
floors.
- Truss A prefabricated framework of girders, struts and other
items used to support a roof or other load-bearing elements.
- Trust account Special accounts used by brokers and escrow agents
to safeguard funds for a buyer or seller.
- Trustee A legally empowered person who holds or controls a piece
of property for another person.
- Truth-in-Lending Act A federal law that protects consumers in a
variety of ways. One of its key provisions allows a consumer to cancel a
home-improvement loan, second mortgage or other loan if the home was pledged
as security (except for a first mortgage or first trust deed) until midnight
of the third business day after the contract was signed.
- Tuck-point The process of removing old mortar from between bricks
and replacing it with new mortar.
- Two-step mortgage An adjustable mortgage with two interest rates,
one for the first five or seven years of the loan, and the other for the
remainder of the loan term.
- Two- to four-family property A piece of property that is owned by
one person but provides housing for up to four households.
- Tap fees Most companies charge a tap fee for hooking up
utilities.
- Tax deduction A tax break given by the government. Mortgage
interest, loan points and property taxes can be deducted.
- Tax lien An impediment placed against a property, such as back
taxes.
- Tax sale The public sale of a property by the government for
nonpayment of taxes.
- Tax shelter A term often applied to real estate investment and
refers to various tax advantages.
- Tear-down condition A house that requires the entire interior to
be rebuilt.
- Teaser rate An low, short-term rate offered on a mortgage to
entice the borrower.
- Tenancy by the entirety When a married couple owns a home, it is
usually considered tenancy by the entirety If the property must be sold to pay
the debts of one spouse, both must agree.
- Tenants in common Two or more owners who share interest in a
specific property.
- Terrace A terrace can be several things: an unroofed paved area
right next to a house; a roofed balcony; a veranda; or a raised bed of earth
constructed to enhance a landscape.
- The 72-hour clause When a buyer has a house to sell before they
can purchase another home, most sellers insist on a 72-hour clause. In the
event of a better offer coming in before the contingency is settled, this
clause entitles the seller to give the buyer 72 hours to remove the
contingency or lose the house.
- Third-party origination In a third-party origination transaction,
the lender has another institution originate all or part of a mortgage.
- Timeshare Ownership that involves the acquisition of a specific
period of time, or that percentage of interest, in a vacation home or resort.
- Underlayment A layer of wood between the subfloor and the floor.
- Underwriting The process that lenders go through to evaluate the
risks posed by a particular borrower and to set appropriate conditions for the
loan.
- Undisclosed heir A person who claims the right to a piece of
property after the death of an owner without a will.
- Undisclosed spouse An unidentified marital partner who can claim
the right to a piece of property.
- Unrecorded deed An unrecorded deed transfers ownership from one
party to another without being officially recorded.
- U.S. Department. of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) A federal
agency that oversees the Federal Housing Administration and a variety of
housing and community development programs.
- Unsecured loan Any loan that is not backed by collateral.
- Upgrades Options than the standard carpeting, lighting, finish
carpentry and other amenities offered to all buyers in a new-home project.
- Upzoning The process in which a property is zoned from a lower to
a higher use.
- Urban sprawl The unplanned expansion of development over a large
area.
- Usury A reference to illegally excessive interest charged on any
loan.
- Variable rate An interest rate that changes with fluctuations in
such indexes as the U.S. Treasury bill index.
- Vaulted ceiling An elongated half-cylinder that arches above the
floor.
- Verification of deposit Part of the loan process, in which a
lender will ask a borrower's bank to sign a statement verifying the borrower's
account balances and history.
- Verification of employment Part of the loan process, in which a
lender asks the borrower's employer for confirmation of the borrower's
position and salary.
- Vestibule A small entrance hall or room.
- Veterans Administration (VA) The U.S. Department of Veterans
Affairs operates a variety of programs to help veterans. One of the key plans
it oversees is the VA loan program, which allows most veterans to purchase a
house without a down payment.
- Victorian style An architectural style that dates from the
mid-19th century.
- Vinyl-clad windows Wood windows sheathed in vinyl on the outside.
- Voluntary lien A lien that a homeowner willingly gives to a
lender.
- VA loans A program that allows most veterans to purchase a house
without a down payment.
- Variable interest rate A loan rate that moves up and down based
on factors including changes in the rate paid on bank certificates of deposit
or Treasury bills.
- Variable rate mortgage A loan with an interest rate that hinges
on factors such as the rate paid on bank certificates and Treasury bills.
- Wainscoting Wood paneling, tongue-and-groove boards or similar
material installed between a baseboard and a chair rail.
- Waiver A voluntary relinquishing of certain rights or claims.
- Walk-out basement A feature that allows a door to open onto
ground level.
- Walk-through A buyer's final inspection of the home to determine
if conditions in the purchase agreement have been satisfied.
- Warranty A legally binding promise to do something in the future.
- Wetlands Watery areas such as swamps, marshes and floodplains.
- Wild deed An improperly recorded deed.
- Will The most basic legal document outlining the disposition of a
person's estate in the event of death.
- Window light An individual pane of glass.
- Window seat A bench built under an interior window.
- Window well A curved, corrugated steel insert used to isolate
basement windows from moisture if they're below the soil line.
- Window well covers Curved plastic covers designed to be installed
on top of a window well to cover the opening.
- Wraparound mortgage A loan to a buyer for the remaining balance
on a seller's first mortgage and an additional amount requested by the seller.
Payments on both loans are made to the lender who holds the wraparound loan.
- Zero-lot lines Houses built without space between them and with
little or no yard.
- Zoning Regulations that control the use of land within a
jurisdiction..
- Zoning variance A one-time modification of existing zoning law.
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