You do realize that if someone bought their house in the 1950s, they are now 90+ years old if even still alive? Also, please explain "the money is there." Where is "the money"? You mean the equity in the house? The equity that only equals cash if one sells or takes out a HELOC or mortgage on the home? If that is what you mean, where do these seniors get the cash to make the monthly payments on the loan? Not feasible for most of our elders. My stepmother,age 82, is now having to tap her available cash to pay for care for my father, now 92. Things aren't so simple as some are claiming it to be. Most elderly people are not millionaires. Check out the monthly payment sometime on assisted living or nursing homes. Seniors are best off financially if they can manage to remain in their mortgage -free homes until the end. Should they be forced out due to property taxes? If my father had to move now,it would kill him.
You're right. I'm specifically talking about a 90-year-old. My grandmother lived on her own until age 92, and I have a neighbor who did about the same.
What I mean by "the money is there," is exactly how you interpreted (and also why my
not everything is about money point should not be left out of what I'm saying).
THE PART ABOUT MONEY: They bought a home for $5,000 and have unrealized appreciation that could be tapped into.
- My grandmother downsized to better support herself when she was in her 70's
- My neighbors are still in their home
THE PART ABOUT NOT-MONEY: I don't want my neighbors to leave, and am glad there's a tax-reduction program for lower-income, elderly, and veteran households. But, just as my neighbors made this community better, property taxes paid into a community benefit everyone. Good schools make for good neighbors. Clean, safe streets make for better revenue in the form of people coming to spend their money.
I've qualified for significant tax reductions in the past for being low-income and us both being disabled vets (instead of $10,000 I paid $2,700). Aside from improving the property, we made the community a better place by joining the school's SEPTA board, volunteering at the firehouse, coaching little league, and providing 4 good students (behaviorally and academically) to the school system - 2 of whom were state-ranked HS athletes.
Tax breaks can make a lot of sense, but there is an item in some older homeowners' portfolios with significant cash value.
They don't have to borrow or sell; they can rent out a room to someone they know and trust. Where I live, they'd get $1,000 a month. This could be done with a relative, like a newly divorced niece/nephew, a recently-graduated grandchild. This would not just provide cash, but other possibly-more-needed help, like cooking, cleaning, and transportation.