Real Estate Terms for Germantown Real Estate
Local terms and usage for real estate in Germantown, Maryland. Glossary and photos.
REAL ESTATE TERMS
Terms of general use for buying real estate in Germantown, Maryland
Vocabulary for Montgomery County, Maryland Real Estate Buyers
Agreement of Sale
Contract of Sale, or Contract to Purchase, purchase agreement, or sales agreement according to location or jurisdiction. A contract in which a seller agrees to sell and a buyer agrees to buy, under certain specific terms and conditions spelled out in writing and signed by both parties. In Germantown, the contract is called Residential Contract of Sale
Appraisal
An expert judgment or estimate of the quality or value of real estate as of a given date. Required by mortgage companies to verify the value of the home for which they are giving a mortgage loan.
Basement Styles
Walk-out: A basement with a ground level exit without steps. Outside Welled Exit: A basement with a steps leading from a basement door along the house to the ground level. Daylight Basement: A basement which is only 4-6 feet less than ground level with 4-6 six feet wide steps leading directly to the ground level. Usually from a sliding glass or french doors. Home styles like a Split Foyer often have the lower level described as a basement.

Built on a slab, no basement. Lower level is
used for mechanicals and foundation
In-Ground Basement: A basement with no exit directly to the outside.
Certificate of Title
A certificate issued by a title company or a written opinion rendered by an attorney that the seller has good marketable and insurable title to the property which he is offering for sale. A certificate of title offers no protection against any hidden defects in the title which an examination of the records could not reveal. The issuer of a certificate of title is liable only for damages due to negligence. The protection offered a homeowner under a certificate of title is not as great as that offered in a title insurance policy.
Closing Costs
The numerous expenses which buyers and sellers normally incur to complete a transaction in the transfer of ownership of real estate. These costs are in addition to price of the property and are items prepaid at the closing day. This is a typical list:
Documentary Stamps on Notes Cost of Abstract
Recording Deed and Mortgage
Documentary Stamps on Deed
Escrow Fees
Real Estate Commission
Attorney's Fee Recording Mortgage
Title Insurance Survey Charge
Appraisal and Inspection
Escrow Fees
Survey Charge Attorney's Fee
The agreement of sale negotiated previously between the buyer and the seller may state in writing who will pay each of the above costs.
Closing Day
Settlement, Closing, Close of Escrow, it's called different things in different parts of the country. In Germantown, it's generally called the day of settlement or closing. The day on which the formalities of a real estate sale are concluded. The certificate of title, abstract, and deed are generally prepared for the closing by an attorney and this cost charged to the buyer. The buyer signs the mortgage, and closing costs are paid. The final closing merely confirms the original agreement reached in the agreement of sale.
Deed
A formal written instrument by which title to real property is transferred from one owner to another. The deed should contain an accurate description of the property being conveyed, should be signed and witnessed according to the laws of the State where the property is located, and should be delivered to the purchaser at closing day. There are two parties to a deed: the grantor and the grantee.
Deed of Trust
Like a mortgage, a security instrument whereby real property is given as security for a debt. However, in a deed of trust there are three parties to the instrument: the borrower, the trustee, and the lender, (or beneficiary). In such a transaction, the borrower transfers the legal title for the property to the trustee who holds the property in trust as security for the payment of the debt to the lender or beneficiary. If the borrower pays the debt as agreed, the deed of trust becomes void. If, however, he defaults in the payment of the debt, the trustee may sell the property at a public sale, under the terms of the deed of trust. In most jurisdictions where the deed of trust is in force, the borrower is subject to having his property sold without benefit of legal proceedings. A few States have begun in recent years to treat the deed of trust like a mortgage.
Earnest Money
The deposit money given to the seller or his agent by the potential buyer upon the signing of the agreement of sale to show that he is serious about buying the house. If the sale goes through, the earnest money is applied against the down payment. If the sale does not go through, the earnest money will be forfeited or lost unless the binder or offer to purchase expressly provides that it is refundable.
Equity
The value of a homeowner's unencumbered interest in real estate. Equity is computed by subtracting from the property's fair market value the total of the unpaid mortgage balance and any outstanding liens or other debts against the property. A homeowner's equity increases as he pays off his mortgage or as the property appreciates in value. When the mortgage and all other debts against the property are paid in full the homeowner has 100% equity in his property.
Hazard Insurance
Protects against damages caused to property by fire, windstorms, and other common hazards.
Home Types
Detached: Any home that is not connected to another.
Town Home: Any home that is connected side-by-side to another.
Apartment: Any multiple family dwelling with apartment homes on more than one level.
Condominium: Any home with a condominium association which owns the land and does some degree of maintenance/insurance.
Co-op: Any home which is owned by a corporation in which the residents own shares.
HUD
U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. Office of Housing/Federal Housing Administration within HUD insures home mortgage loans made by lenders.
Lien
A claim by one person on the property of another as security for money owed. Such claims may include obligations not met or satisfied, judgments, unpaid taxes, materials, or labor
Mortgage
A lien or claim against real property given by the buyer to the lender as security for money borrowed. Under government insured or loan-guarantee provisions, the payments may include escrow amounts covering taxes, hazard insurance, water charges, and special assessments. Mortgages generally run from 10 to 30 years, during which the loan is to be paid off.
Mortgage Note
A written agreement to repay a loan. The agreement is secured by a mortgage, serves as proof of an indebtedness, and states the manner in which it shall be paid. The note states the actual amount of the debt that the mortgage secures and renders the mortgagor personally responsible for repayment.
Points
Sometimes called "discount points." A point is one percent of the amount of the mortgage loan. For example, if a loan is for $25,000, one point is $250. Points are charged by a lender to raise the yield on his loan at a time when money is tight, interest rates are high, and there is a legal limit to the interest rate that can be charged on a mortgage. Buyers are prohibited from paying points on Department of Veterans Affairs guaranteed loans (sellers can pay, however). On a conventional mortgage, or an FHA insured mortgage, points may be paid by either buyer or seller or split between them.
Survey
A map or plat made by a licensed surveyor showing the results of measuring the land with its elevations, improvements, boundaries, and its relationship to surrounding tracts of land. A survey is often required by the lender to assure him that a building is actually sited on the land according to its legal description.
Title
As generally used, the rights of ownership and possession of particular property. In real estate usage, title may refer to the instruments or documents by which a right of ownership is established (title documents), or it may refer to the ownership interest one has in the real estate.
Title Insurance
Protects lenders or homeowners against loss of their interest in property due to legal defects in title. Title insurance may be issued to either the mortgagor, as an " owner's title policy, " or to the mortgagee, as a "mortgagee's title policy." Insurance benefits will be paid only to the "named insured" in the title policy, so it is important that an owner purchase an "owner's title policy", if he desires the protection of title insurance.
Title Search or Examination
A check of the title records, generally at the local courthouse, to make sure the buyer is purchasing a house from the legal owner and there are no liens, overdue special assessments, or other claims or outstanding restrictive covenants filed in the record, which would adversely affect the marketability or value of title.
Germantown Real Estate
A part of the Homefinders.com Network

