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#150: Reverse Mortgage Takes Over “CPR”, Keeping LTC Alive

One of the fortunate few with the foresight to purchase long term care insurance decades ago, adding a lifetime inflation rider, you’re now facing a double challenge keeping up with the escalating policy costs. Some seven years ago, at the suggestion of a tax advisor, you began paying the annual long term care premiums by making tax-free transfers of funds out of a single-premium life insurance policy you had bought years earlier.*

It has now become obvious that, with yet another announced steep hike in the long-term care premium, you are on the brink of totally “drying up” the life insurance “well.” Meanwhile, although you have seen some nice growth this year in your investment portfolio, most of your funds are in retirement accounts, and withdrawals would trigger tax* (precisely the effect you had been trying so hard to avoid by paying premiums with funds transferred out of the life insurance)!

Consider allowing the equity built up in your home to “take over” the task of providing tax-free* funding of premium payments needed to keep your long-term care insurance policy alive. With a reverse mortgage set up as an equity line of credit, you will be able to pay the long-term care premiums without triggering income tax liability.*

Just as when a rescuer is performing CPR and a second person is available to relieve the first, the asset value you’ve built up in your home can ‘take over” the function performed by the cash value in your life insurance policy, keeping your lifetime long-term care protection – protected.

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

*Please consult a tax advisor. Borrower must occupy home as primary residence and remain current on property taxes, homeowner’s insurance, the costs of home maintenance, and any HOA fees.

#149: Using a reverse mortgage to help realtors help seniors downsize

REALTORS CAN HELP SENIORS BUY UP AND SIZE DOWN

As a long time real estate professional, you’ve always prided yourself of finding solutions to serve your clients’ needs. This is a tough time, you’re finding, for seniors. Many of the folks whom you helped purchase homes years ago are now finding those homes much too big for their needs and not easily adaptable to their less active lifestyles. With home prices in and around Indianapolis having dramatically escalated over the intervening years, it’s been a challenge getting those clients to take action. Not wanting to take on mortgage payments, they’re reluctant to tap their investments to cover the costs of a new purchase.

As their trusted advisor, you might help clients tap into their “housing wealth” they’ve created, helping them apply for HECM-for-purchase reverse mortgage loans. While coordinating the timing between the sale and the purchase can be tricky, the plan can work best for where seniors are having their new home built and the departure from their old home can take place in close proximity to the move-in to the new.

Using reverse mortgage financing addresses both the common concerns you’ve mentioned: Your clients avoid the need to tap into their investment holdings to afford a higher-priced home, and also avoid any need to take on monthly mortgage payments. (The “silent” mortgage balance is not due until the borrowers either permanently depart the home or sell.)

An added benefit to you, the realtor, is that your seniors are the largest single buying demographic in the USA today and a focus on them can help kick start your business in these very competitive times.

Reverse mortgage financing can help you help senior clients (and you) to “buy up” while “sizing down”.https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#148: Using a reverse mortgage to help pay student loans

PROVIDING STUDENT LOAN HELP FROM UNCLE, NOT UNCLE SAM

Learning that the Supreme Court has struck down the President’s plan to forgive student loan debt, you knew immediately how severe an effect that decision would have on your younger sibling’s family. A hard-working single mom, your sister is very proud of her two sons, both of whom remained focused on their studies throughout college and are now trying to launch careers (in architecture and engineering, respectively). The boys’ father has never been in a position to be of help, and the boys have been sharing an apartment in order to save money, bartending on weekends to bring in extra cash. Both began making student loan payments nine months ago, with you offering occasional cash gifts in order to ease their burden. As proud uncle, you had been closely following the “Uncle Sam” student loan forgiveness proposal. You’ve decided to step in and offer more substantial help, at least until the nephews’ earnings have increased and until their respective careers appear to be on a secure track.

As a widower with no children of your own, you are in a position to offer help to your to your nephews, but you want to be able to control the timing of the gifts. Your idea is to make a lump sum gift to each now, then continue to follow their progress. The first time, you plan to give each nephew $17,000 (the annual exclusion limit for this year) From a US News Article

on the subject, you’ve learned that your nephews can use that gift money to pay off accrued interest and/or pay down principal, and you plan to have them attribute the gift money to principal.

While you have sufficient cash reserves to fund the $34,000 gift, going forward, you would like to come up with a more long-term plan that would not necessitate cashing in investments or negatively affecting your own lifestyle. You might consider “tapping” your own housing wealth, arranging a reverse mortgage on your residence, set up as a line of credit. Withdrawals from the line of credit would be income tax-free; whatever portion of your housing wealth is not being used would be credited with growth at the same rate as the interest being charged on the reverse mortgage loan balance.

It could be that, as your nephews move forward in their careers, that their employers might offer paying off some portion of their student loans. A Provision in the Cares Act allows employers to contribute annually towards paying off an employee’s student loan.

Your sister may have experienced chagrin over the Supreme Court decision, but your nephews will be proud to call you “Uncle”!

If you’d like to see what you might qualify for with a reverse mortgage in Indiana, or to download your Reverse Mortgage Guide Click Here (and scroll down)

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#147: Using a reverse mortgage to pay for in-home elevator.

MOVING UP AND DOWN WITHOUT MOVING OUT

The two of you have always committed to taking care of both sets of elders. With your mother-in-law having recently passed, your father-in law, in his early nineties, insists he wants to “age in place”, continuing to live in the modest two-story home they’d owned for many, many years. You and your wife are going to pay for whatever home modifications are needed to make that possible for him. In the course of researching different options, you’ve concluded that a home elevator might actually be easier for your father-in-law to use than a stair-lift.

 In fact, you have become excited by the possibility of having an elevator installed in your own home as part of an already planned remodel, avoiding the need to someday move your master bedroom to the main level. (Your own parents moved years ago into a retirement community that offers assisted living, that lifestyle is not your first choice.) 

While you had set aside cash for the original remodel plan of your own home, in order to pay for both elevators, you would need to cash in investments, triggering some tax costs. With talk of interest rates easing in the near future, you’ve considered a home equity line of credit.

An alternative way of using the equity accumulated in your home would involve a reverse mortgage. Withdrawals from the line of credit would be tax-free, avoiding the need to trigger tax events by cashing in investment holdings. While allowing your father-in-law to remain in his home, you can make your own residence more aging-in-place suitable. Meanwhile, whatever portion of your housing wealth is not being used will grow at the same rate as the interest being charged on the reverse mortgage loan.

You might say that the combination of home elevators and a reverse home equity loan can allow both your father-in-law – and the two of you –  to “move up and down without moving out”!

If you’d like to see what you might qualify for with a reverse mortgage in Indiana, or to download your Reverse Mortgage Guide Click Here (and scroll down)

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#146: Using a reverse mortgage to help grandchild start a business.

HOUSING WEALTH CAN GIVE GRANDDUGHTERS AN ENTREPRENEURIAL EDGE

Despite your having made clear to your two children that, once they were through with their schooling they would be expected to manage their finances on their own, you now find yourselves feeling differently when it comes to your twin granddaughters. Passionate and very hardworking entrepreneurs, the girls are in sore need of a financial boost to keep their floral business competitive. They are trying to break into the wedding planning market with a new concept.  You’re not in a position to “invest” giant sums, but you would like to, over the next year or two, “invest” as much as a few hundred thousand dollars.

You’re satisfied that, turmoil in the investment markets notwithstanding, your own financial situation has remained stable. With your home paid off and in good repair, you’re hoping to live out both your lives in place. From a financial standpoint, you’ve been able to manage well on retirement plan and other investment income and social security. You would be able to gift some cash to the granddaughters without disrupting the portfolio, but not in the amounts really needed to make a difference.

You might consider using the equity you’ve accumulated in your home as the source for funding investments in your granddaughters’ business venture, by arranging a reverse mortgage line of credit. There will be no principal or interest payments due, and therefore no effect on any of your current or future sources of income. Any withdrawals you make to invest in your grandkids’ business will be tax-free. Meanwhile, the unused portion of the credit line will be credited with growth at the same rate as the interest being charged on the loan.

Your housing wealth might be just the ticket to helping your granddaughters create wealth of their own.

If you’d like to see what you might qualify for with a reverse mortgage in Indiana, or to download your Reverse Mortgage Guide Click Here (and scroll down)

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#145: A reverse mortgage as backup resource to fund home healthcare.

FOR AGING IN PLACE, PUT A RESOURCE IN PLACE

With no formal training in finance or accounting, the two of you nonetheless pride yourselves on discussing important financial matters and (after consulting your advisors), coming to your own conclusions. You’re both close to age 67, and after dealing with various health issues in recent months, you arranged to retire at the end of 2023 (several years earlier than originally planned). Fortunately, none of the medical challenges necessitate moving to a facility; it is very feasible for you to continue to “age in place”, and your home is fully paid for and in excellent repair.

The issue under discussion with your financial advisors is whether you should apply for (or defer applying for) social security benefits. You’ve been given several reading pieces about the so-called “tax torpedo”, referring to the fact that up to 85% of Social Security benefits can be counted as taxable income. On the other hand, while you have built up a very nice investment nest egg (even given the choppy market of late),and will have modest deferred compensation assets available for both of you, you want to be prepared to hire at-home healthcare help if needed.

Another reading piece that should prove of interest is an article that appeared in Kiplinger three years ago: ‘”In challenging times, federally insured home equity conversion mortgages offer an outside-the-box income option for those 62 and older,” Charles Rawl, CFP®, RICFP® wrote.

See Article

Consider using your own housing wealth as the “backup resource” in the event you need future in home medical care. With a reverse mortgage, there will be no monthly mortgage payments. In fact, the unused portion of your line of credit will continue to earn interest at the same rate as that being charged on the borrowed funds. Meanwhile, you can work with your tax advisor on either handling – or deferring – the Social Security “tax torpedo”.

As you “age in place”, you’ll be assured that, should home healthcare become a necessity, you have a funding resource already “in place”!

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#144: Using a reverse mortgage to fund home redesign

THUNDERSTORM DAMAGE DICTATES A PLAN, NOT A POEM

Moving into your home some twenty years ago, you were both thrilled with its woods-like setting. Now that three recent thunderstorms have resulted in downed trees and quite a bit of damage to the roof, you’re not so sure “Trees” remains your favorite poem. Luckily, none of your neighbors homes is close enough to suffer damage from your trees.  Despite the issues, you haven’t changed your mind about spending your retirement years “in place”, and in fact have completed the first stages of making the house safer and more easily navigable. Fortunately, a part time consulting gig (as a couple, you do training seminars for fledgling entrepreneurs) has allowed you (this time) to cover not only the costs for the first stage of the remodel, but also that portion of the tree removal and roof repair expenses not covered by insurance. Going forward, however, you realize you’re going to need a long-range funding strategy for completion of the remodeling and for property care emergencies.

Since you’d already made the decision to “age in place”, think about using the equity you’ve built up in the home itself as the financial resource of choice for completion of the remodel and for down-the-road emergency funding related to tree removal/damage repair Since an FHA-insured reverse mortgage line of credit will require no monthly mortgage payments, you can “tap” the resource on an as-needed basis to fund the remaining stages of making your home “senior-friendly”. It will be reassuring to note that the unused portion of your line of credit till continue to grow at the same rate as the interest being charged on the borrowed funds.

You’ll be able to wander in your “woods”, knowing that you’re financially prepared for whatever “excitement” Mother Nature chooses to bring to the stage.

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#143: Using a reverse mortgage to “power” the next generation

KEEPING THE POWER ON FOR KIDS AND GRANDKIDS

After retiring from the corporate world five years ago, you have continued your tradition of treating the kids and grandkids to a three day lakeside family reunion at a state park. Now, after recent storms and power outages wreaked havoc in the lives of one of your children’s families and, to a lesser degree, disrupted the lives of the two others, you’ve decided to offer both yourself and the kids a one-time additional “gift”.

After reading about solar panels, you investigated the costs and feasibility of having panels installed on the children’s homes. None of the three homes proved to be a good candidate (based on neighborhood, the type and state of the present roof, and the probable need to relocate over the next five to ten years). You are now thinking of paying for installing backup generators in each of the kids’ homes along with one for your own. While you are in a position to follow through on the plan, you’re reluctant to tap into your investment accounts during what you perceive is an uncertain outlook for the stock market.

Consider using your housing wealth to fund the costs of installing backup generators in each of the four homes. Your own home will serve as sole collateral for the loan, eliminating the need to tap your investment accounts. Whatever portion of your home equity has not been tapped will continue to be credited with growth at the same rate as the interest being charged on the loan, and there will be no need to make monthly mortgage payments.

A reverse mortgage on your home will provide the financial “back-up power” during future storms and power outages.

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/

#142: Using a reverse mortgage to help fund grad school for grandson

IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE HOUSE?

With neither of you having had the benefit of a college education, you’re proud of the fact that both your children and now your one grandchild are all college graduates. In fact, your granddaughter is planning to continue her studies, working towards a medical degree.

Retired three years now, you are not in a position to finance the entire cost of grad school, but you would like to help out in a significant way. You’ve been told that you are each allowed to make a once-a-year gift of $17,000 ($34,000 combined) without being subject to gift and estate tax, but you would like to give her $60,000 this year, reserving the decision about the amount of future gifts.

You’re not terribly concerned about the additional gift and estate tax (you don’t have a large enough estate for this to ultimately present a problem), but you would like to avoid filling out a gift tax return. Of equally important concern is choosing which accounts to draw from. With your home long fully paid for, your regular income has been coming from two fixed life annuities and through systematic withdrawals from each of your retirement accounts. You do have six figures in liquid and semi-liquid investment accounts.

While we offer no tax-related advice, we can refer you to the Gift Tax Education Exclusion for Tuition. To qualify for that exclusion, you should make the tuition payment directly to your granddaughter’s school.

From which of your accounts should the money be drawn? Consider using your housing wealth by setting up a reverse mortgage line of credit. With no monthly mortgage payments due (the home itself serves as sole collateral for the loan), you’ll be able to decide on the amount and the timing of each gift you choose to make. Meanwhile, whatever portion of your home equity has not been tapped will continue to be credited with growth at the same rate as that being charged on the loan.

Is there a doctor in the house? “Not yet,” you’ll be able to say, “but, with our help, there soon will be!”

https://mutualreverse.com/david-garrison/