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Fixing Up Your Home And How to Finance It
Protect Your Housing Investment
Your home is an investment in living as well as in savings. If neglected,
it will pay no dividends. If properly maintained and improved, it will pay
a high yield in comfort and usefulness for your family and in avoidance of
costly repair bills.
Home improvements also tend to raise neighborhood standards
and, as a result, property values. From an economic standpoint,
home improvements mean higher employment, increased markets for materials
and home products-and therefore a more flourishing community.
If You Do It Yourself
If you are handy with tools and have the experience, you
can save money by doing many jobs yourself. But unless you
are skilled in wiring, plumbing, installing heat systems, and cutting through
walls, you should rely on professionals for such work.
When you buy the
required materials, it pays not to skimp. Good materials
are not necessarily the most expensive. What you need are products that look
good, are easy to maintain, and last a long time. Buy only from reliable
dealers.
If You Use a Contractor
If you plan to use the services of a dealer or contractor,
take care to choose one with a reputation for honesty and
good workmanship. There are several ways to check on a contractor:
- Consult your local Chamber of Commerce, the Better Business
Bureau, State Attorney General or Local Consumer Protection Agency.
- Talk with people for whom he has done work.
- Ask your lender about him, if you plan to finance the project
with a loan.
- Check his place of business to see that he is not a fly-by-night
operator.
- Find out, if you can, how he rates with known building-product
distributors and wholesale suppliers.
- Ask friends and relatives for names of firms that they could
recommend.
Compare Contractor Offers
Before deciding on a contractor, you may want to get bids from two or three
different firms. Make sure that each bid is based on the same specifications
and the same grade of materials. If these bids vary widely, find out why.
Many contractors offer package plans that cover the whole transaction.
Under such a plan the contractor provides all materials used,
takes care of all work involved, and arranges for your loan.
Your contractor
can make the loan application for you, but you are the one
who must repay the loan, so you should see that the work is done correctly.
Understand What You Sign
The contract that both you and the contractor sign should
state clearly the type and extent of improvements to be made
and the materials to be used. Before you sign, get the contractor to spell
out for you in exact terms:
- How much the entire job will cost you.
- How much interest you will pay on the loan.
- How much you will pay in service charges.
- How many payments you must make to pay off the loan, and how
much each of these payments will be.
After the entire job is finished in the manner set forth in your contract, you
sign a completion certificate. By signing this paper you certify that you approve
the work and materials and you authorize the lender to pay the contractor the
money you borrowed.
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