By agreement with the seller, yes.
You are buying a house, you must have a closing attorney. Why wouldn't you ask him this question? He needs to draft a contract.
You add the closing costs to your basis.
I believe that you are responsible as the seller for any damage to the property until the papers are signed in the closing . At that time it becomes the new owners responsibility. Check with your realtor and closing attorney. Generally speaking, the seller still owns it and it is therefore his problem.
7,000
Yes, you are responsible for your mortgage payment until the day of closing the sale to a new owner of the house. Any remaining balance will be paid through the proceeds at closing.
Moving into a new house before closing is generally discouraged due to legal and financial risks. Until the closing process is complete, the sale is not final, so it is safer to wait to move in until all paperwork is signed, and the ownership of the property has officially transferred to you.
You are buying a house, you must have a closing attorney. Why wouldn't you ask him this question? He needs to draft a contract.
The policy is 'in force' for the policy period as long as you still own the house.
a house
Only if Buyer and Seller (Builder) agree.
Before. if you move out before you are emancipated they are still responsible for what you are doing, to support you and you will need their permission to move out etc.
a boy should be at least 18 before he can move out.
He did not. He died before the White House was finished in 1800.
You add the closing costs to your basis.
18
Get emancipated.
The closing potential is the time when the closing is supposed to happen. When purchasing a home, it is hard to determine the exact date in case of something that may go wrong. Many steps need to be taken care of before a house can be finally closed when purchasing it.