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Home Energy, Ownership,

What You Need to Know About Smart Light Bulbs

Switching to smart light bulbs is a great way to add smart technology to your home. What can smart bulbs do that traditional bulbs can’t? Here’s a primer on smart light bulbs....

What are smart light bulbs?

Smart light bulbs look much like regular LED bulbs, but with Wi-Fi, you can remotely control them through an app or a voice assistant such as Amazon’s Alexa or Google Assistant. You can use the bulbs in existing light fixtures and lamps; buying a special smart light is unnecessary. Smart light bulbs come in the most common sizes. They are easy to set up and use....

What can smart light bulbs do?

Smart light bulbs give you many more lighting options than regular bulbs....

  • You can turn them on and off without using a switch.
  • Depending on which smart bulbs you buy, you can change the color of your lighting. Smart bulbs allow you to choose from several shades of white light. Many also allow you to change to several shades of colored light.
  • Most smart light bulbs are dimmable.
  • With an app, you can control your bulbs while away from home.
  • You can increase your home’s security by programming the bulbs to come on and off randomly while on vacation.
  • Smart light bulbs allow you to set your lighting to help wake you up in the morning and put you to sleep at night.

What about cost?

Smart light bulbs cost significantly more than regular bulbs, but costs are coming down. Some smart bulbs are now available for about $10 each, although others cost $20 or more. The bulbs also draw a tiny amount of electrical power while not in use. However, you’ll save some money with smart bulbs in the long run because they last much longer than other bulbs. Smart light bulbs are also LED, resulting in savings if you use incandescent bulbs....

Related – Understanding Different LED Light Colors...

Indoor Living, Ownership,

Is Peel-and-Stick Wallpaper the Right Choice For Your Walls?

Peel-and-stick wallpaper and borders are more popular than ever. Peel and stick is simple: no water, glue or mess. Is it a better choice for you than standard wallpaper? Here’s our guide to the advantages and disadvantages of peel-and-stick wallpaper, plus advice on how to apply it....

Advantages of peel-and-stick wallpaper

  • Peel-and-stick wallpaper tends to be less expensive than traditional wallpaper, which can cost hundreds of dollars per roll.
  • Hanging traditional wallpaper is messy and requires a professional installer. This factor is another reason peel-and-stick wallpaper, a DIY project, is a less expensive alternative to traditional wallpaper.
  • Peel-and-stick wallpaper is easily removable, which makes it a perfect solution for ho-hum apartment walls. Even in a home where you can decorate as you please, peel and stick allows you to change up your decor far more easily than traditional wallpaper, which is difficult to remove.

Disadvantages of peel-and-stick wallpaper

  • Peel and stick is not intended to be permanent, unlike traditional wallpaper, which can last for decades.
  • While peel-and-stick wallpaper is easier to apply because of its ready-made adhesive backing, it’s harder to fix mistakes in hanging, like bubbles or misalignment, than traditional wallpaper.

Let’s get started

If you decide peel-and-stick wallpaper is the best choice for your decorating project, measure and multiply the height and width of each wall you’re papering to get its area. Add the walls’ areas together to determine the square footage of paper you’ll need. Each roll of wallpaper will show the area it will cover. Buy enough rolls for your square footage plus one extra. ...

Next, assemble these tools. ...

  • A measuring tape.
  • A box cutter or X-ACTO knife.
  • A straight pin.
  • A four-inch plastic paint scraper.
  • A microfiber cloth.
  • A hairdryer.

Preparation

Before you hang the paper, wipe all dust and dirt from the walls with a microfiber cloth. If dirt is stubborn, lightly wash with mild, soapy water and dry thoroughly before applying paper....

If your wall is bare Sheetrock with no paint or texture, apply a coat of primer paint before hanging peel-and-stick wallpaper. Otherwise, the paper will pull off chunks of Sheetrock when you remove it. If the wall is painted with matte or flat paint, you will also need a coat of primer to prevent the wallpaper’s adhesive from damaging the wall surface when it’s later removed. And if the wall has a textured surface, lightly sand it down so it doesn’t show through the paper, then apply a primer coat....

Hanging the paper

  • After cutting your first strip of paper, begin hanging it at the top of the wall in an upper corner of the room. Peel the wallpaper backing from the top of the strip. Start with an inch of overlap on the ceiling above, pressing the paper into the ceiling and the juncture where the ceiling meets the wall. Cut off the overlap.
  • Slowly apply the strip of paper, peeling the backing and smoothing it downward onto the wall with your hands as you go. If you encounter wrinkles and bubbles, pierce them with the straight pin and use the plastic scraper to work the flaw out gently. You can also use the hair dryer to warm the paper to help smooth out problems. 
  • At the bottom of the wall, press the paper tightly into the line along the top of the baseboard, then use the knife to run along that line. Pull the extra paper away, then press the paper down along the bottom with the plastic scraper.
  • When applying the next strip, let it overlap the strip you just applied by a quarter-inch. 
  • When you reach the last space on the wall, if there is no room for the width of a full sheet, press the paper into the corner, top to bottom, and then cut along that edge with the knife.
  • When you come to an electrical outlet or switch, remove the plate, drape the paper over the outlet or switch, and gently cut out a hole for the outlet or switch.

Related – Rolling Out the Options on Today’s Wallpaper Styles...

Home Energy, Ownership, Shopping Guides,

The Top 10 Energy Guzzlers In Your Home

Rising home expenses make watching your spending vital. One area of expenditure you can control is your electrical use. Tame your monthly electric bill with this guide to the appliances and systems that cost the most to run....

What are the energy guzzlers in your home?

These appliances and systems, listed in descending order of electrical use, are used daily rather than periodically. The most significant energy guzzlers are machines that run a motor and a heating coil. Common savings tactics involve efficient use and running these energy guzzlers during off-peak utility hours when rates are lower. ...

  1. Air conditioners are the undisputed champions for spending your energy dollars, using far more electricity than anything else in your home. Savings tip: Buy a smart thermostat and program it to run the system less when no one is home and at night when you are asleep.
  2. Electric heaters significantly increase your energy bill, though less than air conditioning. Heating coils and blower motors (used also in air conditioners) help make your bill too hot to handle. Savings tips: Again, a programmable thermostat helps shave energy bills. Also, if there is a natural gas service in your area, investigate the cost of converting to a gas system. 
  3. Clothes washers and dryers spin that kilowatt meter because both have electric motors to turn the tubs. Additionally,  the dryer has a heating coil. Saving tips: Wash fewer but larger loads rather than more frequent smaller ones. Do laundry late in the evening or start at bedtime during cheaper, off-peak power usage hours. 
  4. Refrigerators and freezers are like your air conditioner: They use energy-intensive evaporator cooling technology. Saving tip: If you have a stand-alone freezer unit in addition to your refrigerator-freezer combo, buy a refrigerator-freezer unit big enough to hold all your frozen foods. Then, sell the current fridge and the separate freezer. Running one bigger appliance is cheaper than running two.
  5. Electric stoves use heating coils that bump up your energy bill. Savings tip: As with laundry, cook fewer, larger meals.  
  6. LED big-screen TVs use energy-efficient LED lighting, but there are a lot of LED lights on the screen. Additionally, the other electronic components crank up the power usage. Savings tip: Electronics in standby mode are silent energy vampires. Plug your TV and other entertainment units into a power strip. When not in use, turn off the power to all of them.
  7. Light bulbs around the house use a surprising amount of energy. Savings tip: Changing all your old-fashioned incandescent bulbs to LEDs is initially expensive. But using LED bulbs costs pennies on the dollar compared to incandescent, so the savings over time are phenomenal.
  8. Computers, if used several hours daily, rank next in the amount of energy they use. Saving tip: When not operating, shut down computers rather than let them go into “sleep” mode. 
  9. Dishwashers use a heating coil plus run a motor to spray water. Savings tips: Wash fewer, more oversized loads, run short cycles when dishes are not heavily soiled, and run loads later in the evening after peak hours.
  10. Coffee makers give you a wake-up call on energy usage and your cup of Joe. Once again, there’s a heating coil at work. Savings tip: Forget it. Your morning coffee is worth any price!

Related – Do Shutting Vents Save on Energy Costs?...

Building a Home, Buying,

Opportunity Knocked. Home Builders Answered!

The highest mortgage interest rates in decades have made many homeowners reluctant to sell. That has led to a lower inventory of existing homes for buyers to choose from. As a result, new home construction is booming. Here’s what you need to know about home builders’ activity....

Homeowners aren’t moving on

Historically, many houses have become available as homeowners buy new homes and put their existing houses on the market. But today, many homeowners, whose current mortgages may have an interest rate of around three percent, know they will pay a much higher rate if they buy a new home. This has discouraged them from selling and lowered the inventory of listed homes. In response, home builders have seized an advantage by stepping up new home construction....

Home builders have competitive advantages

Home builders of new construction homes can offer incentives to buyers that sellers of existing homes are hard-pressed to match. Builders can:...

  • Provide buyers with an allowance for adding upgraded features.
  • Help with closing costs if the buyer uses the builder’s preferred mortgage company.
  • Offer to buy down mortgage points for the first few years, again if the buyer uses the preferred lender.
  • Offer variations on floor plans, façades, lot sizes, and more.
  • Provide a tiered warranty for as long as 10 years, starting with wall-to-wall, 100 percent coverage the first year. 

An existing homeowner with one house to sell cannot match the scale builders have for offering such incentives. ...

Townhomes and condos are particularly appealing

New construction home builders also focus on properties of particular interest to the youngest and oldest buyers. Both groups are looking for places to live that are less expensive than traditional single-family homes, which has led to big increases in sales for new townhomes and condominiums....

With the financial incentives often available on new construction townhomes or condos, even the youngest buyers can afford a first home. Baby boomers may be able to buy such homes without a mortgage by using the equity from selling their single-family homes.   ...

Townhomes and condos also appeal because they require little to no exterior maintenance. Buying a traditional single-family home means signing up for every aspect of outside maintenance, from exterior painting to gutter cleaning and lawn mowing. Not so with townhomes or condominiums. Their owners need to maintain only what’s within their walls because the homeowners association generally handles all exterior maintenance and upkeep....

Related – Condominium or Landominium: Similar or Different?...

Selling, Selling Your Home,

Use Your Home Equity to Lessen the Sting of Higher Interest Rates

Today’s higher mortgage interest rates have many homeowners hesitant to sell their houses and buy new ones. But the skyrocketing home prices of recent years mean that many of those owners are sitting on substantial home equity. Here’s how that equity can soften the blow of higher interest rates....

Two factors increasing home equity

Your home’s equity is equal to the current market value of your home minus what you owe on your mortgage.  Home prices have spiked in recent years; the Federal Housing Finance Administration reports that average home values have risen more than 57 percent in the last five years and just shy of 300 percent in the past 30 years. That increase in the current market value of your home has left you with greater equity than you might have anticipated when you bought it....

Meanwhile, American homeowners are staying in their homes longer. The National Association of REALTORS® reports that between 1985 and 2009, the average length of time a homeowner owned his house was 6.1 years. Today, it’s 9.3 years. That longer stay means homeowners have paid down a greater proportion of their mortgages, increasing equity. Longtime homeowners may have completely paid off their indebtedness....

The bottom line is that if you have a home to sell that you’ve owned for more than a few years, you likely have an equity cushion. CoreLogic, a company that provides consumer analytics, states that the average American homeowner now has more than $274,000 in equity in their house....

Lower the amount you finance

Armed with your equity cushion, you may well be able to make a significantly larger down payment when you buy your next home. That lessens the amount of the home’s purchase price you’ll have to finance, thus helping to alleviate the impact of higher interest rates. And in certain circumstances, such as when you have already paid off your existing mortgage, you may come away from the sale of your existing house with enough equity to pay cash for your next home. ...

If you need to sell your home – because you’re relocating for a job, because your family is growing because you’re ready to downsize – don’t let higher interest rates stop you. Instead, put your current home’s equity to work to help you pay for the next one....

Related – Growing and Using Your Home Equity...

Buying, Buying a Home,

The Nightmare Cybercrime Targeting Home Buyers

Cybercriminals are now targeting home buyers by stealing their down payments electronically. The schemes look legit but can kill a home sale and leave a buyer with no recourse. Guard yourself against this cybercrime with these tips....

How cybercrime happens

You probably know to be cautious about a suspicious email from an unexpected source asking for personal information.  But it’s easy to be caught off guard by an email that seems to come from a business you are currently working with. Recently, cyber thieves have targeted the email accounts of real estate professionals — agents, mortgage companies, closing attorneys and title companies — to acquire the names and contact information of home buyers. When a closing is imminent, the thieves send the home buyer an email from an address that looks virtually identical to the professional’s email. The fraudulent email instructs the buyer to wire their down payment to a particular bank account. The email is bogus, and the bank account is overseas, controlled by the cybercriminals and generally outside the reach of U.S. law enforcement. The scheme has robbed buyers of their down payments and left them with no way to get the money back....

How can you protect yourself?

First, be aware that this sort of cybercrime is out there. There’s no need to be paranoid; just be vigilant and exercise due diligence when responding to email requests....

Early in the buying process, establish a relationship with a “go to” person at each professional’s office who is familiar with your case. If you receive an email from what seems to be one of your real estate professionals instructing you to send funds to a particular bank account, don’t act on it immediately, particularly if the instructions are different from what you were originally told. Instead, pick up the phone and call your “go to” individual at that office to check whether the email is legitimate and to inquire about the new transfer instructions. Do not call the phone number in the email, which will be answered by one of the cybercriminals....

It is also a good idea to regularly change the passwords on your email and bank accounts to thwart cybercriminals from accessing your sensitive data....

Related – Five Steps to Secure Your Home Wifi Network...

Investment, Money,

Do You Have What It Takes to Become a Landlord?

Owning rental property can bring a nice return on your investment, but be sure you weigh the pros and cons before you decide to jump in and become a landlord....

Show me the money.  Unlike buying a personal residence — where you might get by with putting down as little as 5 percent — a rental property purchase will require a full 20 percent down payment. Interest rates will be a bit higher, too. Also, research the rental market in the area you are considering to see what the going rental rates are. You must be able to charge enough in rent to cover your mortgage, interest, taxes, insurance and upkeep, plus allow yourself a 7 percent to 10 percent profit. If you can’t, don’t do it....

Repair and upkeep.  The older the home, the more you will spend on repairs and upkeep. As a general rule, figure an annual repair cost equivalent to 1 percent of the house’s value. This raises the question of how handy are you? Can you do a lot of the fix-it stuff yourself? If so, you’ll save on some of these costs. But if you’ll be hiring out the work, you’ll be cutting into profitability....

Avoid a fixer-upper. Buying a fixer-upper means you’ll likely start with a negative cash flow before you get your first tenant and collect your first rent check.  That means you will have to build the repair costs into the rent and recover it over time....

Don’t forget the tenants. Owning an investment property isn’t just about managing the property. You also have to manage the people living in it. Make sure you’re prepared to screen tenants and deal with potentially sticky situations such as late payments and damaged property....

Should you hire a property management company? If you don’t live locally, own multiple properties, or don’t have the time or fix-it skills, it might make sense to contract with a management company. You also get their expertise in managing tenants, relieving you of multiple stressors. However, it will cost you 5 to 10 percent of your rent....

Insurance, Money,

Climate Change is Driving Up The Cost of Your Insurance

Many Americans tune out coverage of climate change, thinking the risks it poses will affect them “someday.” But with dangerous storms, excessive heat and droughts becoming more frequent and extreme, consumers are already feeling the pinch from climate change when it comes time to pay their homeowners insurance premiums. ...

From one extreme to the other

Some regions of the U.S. are more vulnerable than others to dangerous weather. California has gorgeous mountains and stately trees, but summer brings devastating wildfires. The Gulf and Atlantic coasts have sun-drenched beaches…and hurricanes. The upper Midwest is America’s farm belt, with the mighty Mississippi bisecting its rolling plains, but tornadoes, blizzards and floods wreak mayhem annually....

These weather phenomena have happened for many years but are becoming increasingly frequent and intense. And as real estate development spreads, more property lies in the path of these catastrophes....

By the numbers

Insurance companies set premium rates based on a rolling year-by-year amount of claims paid and the frequency of events in an area. That’s why increasingly destructive storms lead to rising homeowners insurance premiums. In recent years, the rising prices of construction materials restricted by supply chain kinks have also increased insurance costs. Altogether, Americans paid 8.4 percent more in property insurance premiums between the third quarter of 2020 and the same period in 2021....

Attracted to trouble

Some of the highest-risk locations in the country have the fastest-growing populations. In other words, people are moving into danger zones where homeowners insurance premiums are rising quickly....

Florida has long been attractive to retirees and others with its mild winters, lush greenery, golf, tennis and water recreation. Because it’s located in the tropics, however, Florida has a bullseye on it when it comes to hurricanes, causing its insurance rates to rise. The same holds true for the rest of the Gulf Coast and northward along the Atlantic seaboard. ...

In Florida, insurance rates have increased so much, sometimes into the tens of thousands per year, that many retirees on fixed incomes can no longer afford to pay their premiums....

What can you do?

You are not entirely helpless in the face of relentless insurance cost increases spurred by climate change. Here are some steps you can take to keep your premiums down....

  • If you live in a hurricane-prone area and your house does not already have “hurricane straps” in the attic, investigate having them retrofitted. Hurricane straps are galvanized metal braces that reinforce the junction between roof trusses and the top plate of outside walls. They fortify your roof against strong winds.
  • Have your roof inspected annually if your area is a target for hurricanes. Catching slight damage to shingles, flashing and gutters early prevents more extensive damage later during a storm.
  • In wildfire-prone areas, keep brush cleared from beneath larger canopy trees. Clear brush within 150 feet of your house and cut tree limbs that hang over your roof. Cut down high grass. Gather grass, brush and tree trimmings and have them hauled away.
  • Observe county burn bans strictly in areas prone to wildfires. According to the National Park Service, human activity triggers 85 percent of wildfires. So don’t be the cause of a wildfire emergency.
  • Take advantage of “bundle” insurance rates, using one company for all your property insurance for cars and homes.

If you live near a river, creek or lake along the Gulf or Atlantic coast, you should also talk to your insurance agent about flood insurance. This won’t lower your insurance costs — homeowners insurance doesn’t cover floods caused by overflowing bodies of water, so you need flood insurance in addition to your homeowners’ coverage. But it will protect you from a threat that increases with climate change. Flood insurance is sold separately by the National Flood Insurance Program....

Related – Navigating Homeowner’s Insurance and FEMA Claims...

Investment, Money,

Prudent Practices to Avoid Check Fraud

In an age of electronic payments, check writing may seem like a quaint relic of the past. Yet more than half of Americans still write checks, so the practice is not extinct. Unfortunately, check fraud is running rampant. Here’s how to write a check safely to avoid getting ripped off....

The prevalence of paper check fraud

The number of checks the Federal Reserve collects has dropped by 82 percent over the last 30 years, but banks report nearly 700,000 check fraud cases annually. Criminals steal mail containing checks from residential mailboxes and even outdoor tank-like blue U.S. Postal Service boxes. Then, they remove the writing from the checks and change the payee and/or amount. The prevalence of identity and check theft via stolen mail is one reason consumer advocates urge conversion to secure online payments....

How to handle checks to avoid becoming a victim

To protect yourself, adopt the following practices....

  • Fill out checks using a gel pen or fine-point Sharpie. These are harder for criminals to “wash” with chemicals that will erase ballpoint pen ink.
  • Write the dollar amount and the cents amount right against one another in the check’s numeric box so there’s no room for a thief to add digits to the dollar amount.
  • When writing out the check amount in words, draw a line through the unused space on the line to the very end.
  • Include as little personal information as possible on checks to avoid becoming a victim of identity theft. You should not have your Social Security or driver’s license number preprinted on your checks. If a store clerk needs this information, they’ll ask. Respond by writing out the number yourself rather than saying it aloud to other customers.
  • When mailing a check, use a security envelope with cross-hatching on the interior or wrap the check in a piece of paper.
  • Drop check payments off inside the post office. Home mailboxes are too vulnerable to theft.

Related – Protecting Your Personal Information After a Data Breach...

Money, Mortgage,

A Good Credit Score Helps Combat Higher Interest Rates

In its battle to tamp down inflation, the Federal Reserve has increased the interest rates banks charge each other, which ripples through other lending markets, including mortgages. Further increases are possible. Are you helpless in the face of these mortgage rate increases? Not necessarily if you maintain a good credit score....

Here’s what you can control

You can minimize the effect of rising interest rates by cultivating an excellent credit score. Improving your score can shave hundreds off a monthly house payment. Begin immediately with these steps....

  • Make payments you currently have on time, every time. If you have overdue bills, catch them up. If you carry a credit card balance, enact a plan to stop adding to it and start paying it down. 
  • Find out your credit limit on each card. Set a target to use no more than 30 percent of your limit. 
  • Do not open any more lines of credit. 
  • Subscribe to a credit monitoring service. It will make you aware of meaningful changes to your credit score. This knowledge will give you the power to improve your situation.

It takes time to improve a sagging credit score, but it can be done. Once it is elevated, maintaining your score is easier because you will have established good habits....

How much difference can a good credit score make?

Using the MyFico Credit Savings Calculator, you can see how your credit score affects your monthly mortgage payment. ...

For example, assume a home purchase of $384,800 (the median existing-home sales price as of September 2022) with a 20 percent down payment, financing $307,840 over 30 years. ...

A person with a fair FICO score of 620 to 639 would pay an APR of 8.37 percent at current national rates. That amounts to $2,339 in principal and interest per month and $534,099 in total interest paid over the life of the loan. By contrast, a buyer with an excellent credit rating of 760 to 850 would pay an APR of 6.781 percent: $2,003 monthly and $413,237 in interest over the life of the loan. ...

In this case, an excellent FICO score translates to savings of 1.589 percent in interest, $336 in the monthly payment, and $120,862 over the life of the mortgage. The difference in total mortgage savings between a fair and a great credit score is substantial. ...

You cannot “fight the Fed” on rising interest rates, but you can fight to keep your interest rate down by building great credit....

Related – How Inflation and Rising Interest Rates Affect the Housing Market
...

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