For sale in Hawaii

Friday, May 27, 2005

Older Artcle "Maybe Useful"

Property Values and Taxes escalate in Hawai’i

9/9/2004
by Timothy Hurley, Honolulu Adverstiser


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September, 2004

Escalating property values across Hawai'i have set off a barrage of campaigns aimed at easing the property tax burden on homeowners.

"We're furious," said Bill Tavares, who is leading a citizens' drive on Maui to overhaul the county's tax structure. "It's frightening, and it's angering us."

When Tavares' father settled in Ku'au, Maui, in 1910, he bought a 2-acre oceanfront parcel for $500. Today, you can't buy 10 square feet there for $500, and the land is worth millions.

The property, which the Tavares family has no plans to sell, has exploded in value in just the past few years as neighboring properties have been scooped up for millions, resulting in a huge jump in property taxes.

It's the same story across rural Hawai'i, where a hot real estate market is drawing buyers of vacation homes, oceanfront property and large tracts for investment. While the land buys are adding to the county treasury through substantial tax collections, they end up increasing the existing property tax bills as the neighborhood values rise accordingly.

All the counties have begun efforts to address the situation:

• On Kaua'i, the county hasn't had an initiative on the ballot in 20 years, but a citizens group formed a year ago was able to qualify a measure aimed at rolling back owner-occupied property tax bills to 1998-99 levels, with increases thereafter capped at 2 percent per year or the Social Security retirement compensation adjustment, whichever is smaller.

• Also on Kaua'i, a task force has proposed lowering assessed values to an average of the values from 1999 to 2003. In addition, property taxes for long-term residential owners would be set at half the rate of every other land category.

• On the Big Island, the County Council is advancing three property tax relief measures proposed by Mayor Harry Kim. One would increase the homeowner's exemption by 20 percent, another would limit increases in assessed valuations to no more than 3 percent a year, and the third would allow homeowners to dedicate their property for residential uses for five years, freezing their assessed valuation during that time.

• On Maui, Tavares' group —known as COMET, or the Committee for More Equitable Taxation — is gearing up to lobby the County Council for a 4 percent cap on property tax assessment and for other proposals to help compensate the county for any lost revenue.

"This is a broken system. It's antiquated," said Kihei resident Tony Fisher, a COMET board member. "It works fine if you're in Podunk, Iowa, where there is no change in real estate, but Hawai'i is a unique place."

COMET was formed in the late 1980s, during the last major real estate boom that forced property taxes skyward. The County Council responded with a four-year freeze in assessed valuations and eventually with a "circuit breaker" tax credit that allows qualified homeowners to pay no more than 3 percent of their adjusted gross income on the property they occupy.

When the economy lost steam in the 1990s, the citizens group went dormant. Now that real estate is scorching again, the group has picked up where it left off.

Tavares said most affected now are owners of oceanfront homes who are not interested in selling. For example, the assessment of his son's home, a 17,000-square-foot property on the original Tavares acreage, recently rose by 16.5 percent in one year to $1.34 million.

"It's the kiss of death to be on the water now," he said.

Increasing property taxes is a nationwide phenomenon, rising an average of 10 percent between 2001 and 2003, according to some estimates. Some of the hardest hit places are suburban areas and other desirable locations, including coastal regions, where home prices and assessments have been marching upward.

"It's a big problem here," said Sandra Scarr, a Kona coffee farmer in Holualoa, whose taxes have risen $800 in two years. "Land values are going up and people are being taxed off ... their farms and out of their homes."

Farther south, Larry Ford, 66, lives mostly on a fixed retirement income challenged by continual increases in property tax on his 2-acre parcel. The problem has been exacerbated by recent pricey property sales in his neighborhood, he said.

"Real estate prices are going up in Kona but not my income," he said. "I don't want to move. My place is not for sale."

Ford said he doesn't feel the county has an equitable tax system — which might make the increases more bearable.

For example, only two police officers serve the rural region from South Kona to Ka'u, he said, while numerous officers serve the Hilo area. While the population is bigger in Hilo, the property values and tax bills are larger in West Hawai'i.

"Everyone should bear the burden equally," Ford said.

Lowell Kalapa, president of the nonprofit Tax Foundation of Hawai'i, said changes to the property tax system are needed but not merely for residential property, as many of the current proposals propose. Tax breaks for homeowners merely shift the tax burden to businesses and others who then charge more for their goods and services, he said.

"The truth is the taxpayers end up paying for it anyway," he said.

What's more, politicians lose accountability for their spending, Kalapa said. When homeowners get an artificially low property tax bill, they think they can ask for more parks, police and services, and politicians can oblige with seemingly little impact.

Right now the counties play a "smoke-and-mirrors game" to cater to their largest constituency, he said.

Kalapa said he would recommend three actions, in concert, to deal more honestly deal with the property tax system: First, create a tax circuit breaker credit that allows homeowners to pay no more than 3 percent of their income. Second, stop the homeowner's exemption that decreases assessed values across the board, for this will build a bigger tax base so the tax rate can be lowered. Third, establish a single rate for all classes of property.

Maui County Councilman Riki Hokama, chairman of the Budget and Finance Committee, said council members will be taking up property tax issues in October, and he's looking at creating a property tax category that imposes the highest rate on time-shares and short-term rentals outside the resort areas.

As for a major overhaul, Hokama said that will have to be examined carefully so that all taxpayers are treated fairly.

Reach the author, Timothy Hurley at (808) 244-4880 or thurley@honoluluadvertiser.com.
Reprint permission courtesy of the Honolulu Advertiser.

Hawaii's Booming Real Estate Market

by Henry Springs


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Palm trees, sun drenched beaches, resorts and single family homes set in the most alluring of landscapes translates into "a little piece of paradise." Hawaii's market includes a variety of accommodations to satisfy a growing mix of buyers and visitors.

It's "panoramic views of the Pacific" from Honolulu or any one other of its choice shorelines is an amenity you won't find beyond its cluster of islands: Oahu, Maui, Molokai and Lanai. Eager buyers are continuing to buy single properties with a strong economy seasoned with "steady job growth," rising incomes and low interest rates. The steady stream of buyers has created a demand that has far surpassed the supply. There are few markets hotter than the Hawaiian islands.

Hawaii just like Phoenix and Las Vegas is experiencing a real estate "boom." Appreciation for housing is in the double digits and the most recent sight of people lining up in droves to get a piece of an unfinished condo at the "Moana Pacific Development" in downtown Honolulu is causing a bit of a stir. One bedroom condominiums starting at about $310,000 and going way up from there. Condos are only a small part of the across the board activity that is keeping Realtors and buyers on an up note. Last year prices on Hawaii's largest island Oahu rose 13.4 percent to a median price of $380,000 "after climbing 11.7 percent" in 2003.

The median condo price on the island "rose more than $40,000 in the past two years to $175,000 at the end of 2003. In April of 2004 single family homes spent an "average of 23 days on the market while condos averaged 34 days in the same time period. 23 days is the shortest time on record for a home to spend on the market since the Board of Realtors started keeping records in 1987. The other islands of Maui, Molokai and Lanai that make up the state "collectively posted an 18 percent boost" in the average price of a home for the first two months of last year, that meant a price of $698,337 for Jan. and Feb. of 2004.

"Half a million dollar homes" have become the norm in the market where supplies aren't keeping pace with demand but that's only the tip of the iceberg. Hawaii's booming housing market has been the result of steady growth in population, industry and construction that hasn't been able to keep pace with demand. Since 1998 the steady migration of home buyers to Maui has seen "a gold rush mentality take hold." In 1998 the median price of a home was $265,000. In 2004 the median price of a home for the same period of the year was $539,000. Home prices for Hawaii's market have risen considerably within the past two years but no where "more pronounced than in Maui." Maui's beautiful beaches, "posh storefront resorts," rainy bamboo forests, craters and much more for the intrepid vacationer, retiree, golfer, second home buyer or thrill seeker.

The islands have benefited with an economy based on tourism and complimentary industries. Homeowners and developers of all shapes and sizes have been transplanted along its shores. The beginning of the current boom began in the mid 90's and now has escalated into rush for "beautiful landscapes" that investors and homeowners are having to wait for construction to be completed in order to take advantage of. The beginning of the current "boom" began with wealthy baby boomers, retirees, and second home buyers who bought a piece of the "priceless beauty" of virgin landscapes. They are currently buying into a lifestyle as premium prices allow but things are more likely to get worse, rise even higher before they settle.

In 1995 Coldwell Banker had 11 agents in Maui and sold $50 million dollars worth of property. In 2003, 100 Coldwell bankers on Maui sold over $980 million in property. Volume and prices are testament to the "high end" market Hawaii has become including the dramatic gains and activity of the single family home.

Hawaii's High End Real Estate Market

by Henry Springs


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Hawaii is made up of a number of islands Oahu, Maui, and Molokai just to name a few. With a healthy economy and population continuing to rise the islands in Hawaii have been rampant with housing aimed at baby boomers, retirees, and anyone with the resources take advantage of the increasing options in luxury residential living that the ever changing island landscapes are offering. Condominiums have recently sprouted but not on the scale of other growing urban areas. The Moana Pacific between Waikiki beach and downtown Honolulu is currently under construction and won't open until early 2006. It's a 46 story condo development, scheduled to offer 706 units.

Developers offered 95 units prior to ground breaking with one bedrooms starting at $310,000 and penthouse units running as high as $3.8 million. With recent demand developers are content with taking their initiative as far as they can go. Initial offerings at the Moana Pacific prompted would be buyers "to camp out a week before they went on sale." A "shanty town of tents and tarp covered sidewalks" was formed as everyone from "surfer dudes," elderly retirees, and upwardly mobile electrical engineers lined up hoping to buy a piece of paradise.

The mad rush didn't happen overnight but the "willingness, the allure" for homeowners to drop down a sizable amount of money for their "piece of paradise" has been the reason why they have come and built for a long, long time. Baby boomers and wealthy retirees originally came to stake their claim in properties. They are still coming and so are younger buyers with more discretionary incomes who have built $10 million dollar mansions on Keawakapu Beach, Maui. where "understated cottages and ranch homes" once lined the shore.

Doug and Mary Hajjar arrived in Maui in 1997 and began constructing their dream home, "a winter get away" at a cost of about $5 million. Not everyone dropped down millions of dollars to build their vacation or retirement home in 1997, not everyone could or still can buy according to today's standards. The house that the Hajjars built includes a pool six bedrooms, "an aqua shingle roof, a winding glass staircase and a 60 inch TV that disappears into the family room floor." Today the 6,000 square foot home would sell for $15 million or more, just one aspect of how the market has blossomed. There more recent examples with similar results with "coveted beach front property in Maui like the Hajjar's" increasing by even higher multiples.

Jeff and June Mair are another couple who made the most of a beach front property on Maui in 2001. The Mairs originally constructed a 4,800 square foot home at a cost of $2.95 million just four years ago." We bought the land for $1.55 million" and " a month later we could've sold it for $2 million." That was their response four years ago. The house is now valued at over $7million dollars. Hawaii seems to be at that middle of the road ground where those who purchased or constructed properties within the past few years are reaping sizable returns on their appreciation rather quickly. Despite the activity, the property and the growth there are some observers that feel everything isn't perfect in many a man made "piece of paradise" with the natural Hawaiian landscape as a back drop.

Property values have continued to rise as resort developments, mansions, and beach fronts have been changed forever. The majority of housing landscapes now reflect " a Newport Beach mentality, "a hodgepodge of the million, multi-million custom made homes, spacious cottages and ranch style homes found on beach fronts and backdrops of the islands. Choice offerings have evolved to satisfy nearly every budget and every desire. The rampant and unrestrained developments that now dot the island's once pristine landscapes can only become more numerous. A "27,800 square foot orange stucco mansion designed be Mexican Architect Ricardo Legoretta now stands like a beacon across the shore line" signifying not only a new era in the housing market but a new era in the history of the islands where it is changing as quickly as its view changes with the speed and amount of development.

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Other Useful Blogs

Pod casting Information
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Hot Vacation and rental Markets
http://hotspothomes.blogspot.com/

Humor
http://bigbullshitter.blogspot.com/

Some Great Rentals

Brigantine,New Jersey House For Rent
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Brigantine,NJ Store for rent

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Moorestown,New Jersey Condo for rent

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Search Nationwide Rental Listings

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San Francisco Rental listings (Free searches and Property Postings)

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Colorado Ski Vacations and Colorado rental listings

www.4rentincolorado.net (Free searches and Property Postings)

Hawaii Vacations and Hawaii rental listings (Free searches and Property Postings)

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Search the Hottest Housing Markets
www.hotspothomes.com

Sunday, May 01, 2005

For sale in Hawaii

www.4saleinthehawaiianislands.com