I Invite a Libertarian to be My Neighbor

Taxes and the stripper pole in front of the kitchen sink might have something to do with it. o_O

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That's a load bearing stripper pole.

Seriously, property taxes vary wildly from town to town in NH.

My home and land is almost three times the assessed value of this home, and I pay half that in taxes.
 
That's a load bearing stripper pole.

Seriously, property taxes vary wildly from town to town in NH.

My home and land is almost three times the assessed value of this home, and I pay half that in taxes.

Yep and any place without sales tax or income tax will be just like that , varying wildly from each township . Ea town will decide how much revenue they wish to generate and set rates accordingly .
 
That's a load bearing stripper pole.

For thick girls or guys?

Seriously, property taxes vary wildly from town to town in NH.

Same here.

My home and land is almost three times the assessed value of this home, and I pay half that in taxes.

The taxes on my house in Atlanta would be ridiculous. My parents taxes were 3x's mine (and that was after the school taxes were taken off) and their house was smaller and on less property.
 
That's a load bearing stripper pole.

Almost certainly, which means there is something gravely amiss in the structure. In that case the property is worth perhaps $10K, unless it is good tillable ground, in which case I would give maybe as high as $25K. Not a shekel more.

I just picked up a neighbor's house on 2+ acres for $5K. It's on creek bottom, so prone to flood, but for that money and about $60.00 per year in tax, I can live with that.

The house is in need of structural work and I began removing floors and partitions just before Bibi had surgery. I think about $10K and all my free labor will bring the edifice into good livable trim.

There are plenty of other such houses available here in the wake of the 1000-year flood. People are shy to return. Don't blame them a bit.

So if any of you are looking for very cheap houses and are not afraid to assume the risk of another 1000-year flood in your lifetime, Elkview WV might be the ticket.

You should be able to get a place for the nominal land value, and that should not be more than $2K/acre at the extreme. I got my other neighbor's place for $330/acre last year, bring us back to about 30 in total.


My home and land is almost three times the assessed value of this home, and I pay half that in taxes.

That's still WAY too much for my tastes. I paid $2K on my home in Freehold NJ back when I was yanking down $400K-$500K/annum and even that chapped my ass.

We pay about $300.00 on our 30 +/- acres, which I can live with. Cross into Kanawha county and it would be 10x that, less than a mile away.
 
Wow.

For some reason I thought home prices in NH were high. I've never really looked though.

I'd move there if I could get a job in my field.
 
Good thread start.. so if anyone else has vacant/ for sale properties they'd like to see more libertarian folk settle in - throw em on up here. (especially ones where that white stuff doesn't fall out of the sky half the year)
 
That's still WAY too much for my tastes. I paid $2K on my home in Freehold NJ back when I was yanking down $400K-$500K/annum and even that chapped my ass.

And how much was the good old state of NJ pulling from your income?

I reckon that taxes in Freehold, in the type of home I am imagining you had, are probably $1000 a month now.

Overall, it works for me, and when I retire and the kids are gone, I'll sell it all, buy a camp way the hell up north and be done with it.
 
And how much was the good old state of NJ pulling from your income?

I reckon that taxes in Freehold, in the type of home I am imagining you had, are probably $1000 a month now.

Overall, it works for me, and when I retire and the kids are gone, I'll sell it all, buy a camp way the hell up north and be done with it.

I can only guess what NJ , NY & MASS taxes are now but my guess is very high . I have a retired buddy in Mass and he lives in a pd for , nice old family home and it takes his entire pension to pay his property tax .
 
So if any of you are looking for very cheap houses and are not afraid to assume the risk of another 1000-year flood in your lifetime, Elkview WV might be the ticket.

But What about the internet connection there?

I would be much more into the idea of WV, as it's still fairly close to kin.
 
And how much was the good old state of NJ pulling from your income?

Just short of zero. In one ten-year period I pulled down about $3MM and paid a grand total of $1500.00. The virtues of having a whoop-ass accountant.

Of course, fucking the taxman meant I could save nothing and am now in the dumper. I just could not reconcile myself to paying taxes to these bastards who subsidize the parasites of all stripe. Steve (accountant) kept me in the middle of legality the whole time, so I could tell Themme to fuck off without fear. I just kept my head down, worked like a mad bastard, billed like crazy, and spent it all just to deny Themme the least bit of my labors. I worked strictly C2C through my engineering consulting corporation.

It all seems an age ago and so far away, as if it never happened and I am just imagining it all. I do sometimes wonder.

I reckon that taxes in Freehold, in the type of home I am imagining you had, are probably $1000 a month now.

I bought the house, situated in Monmouth Battlefield State Park, in '87 for $177K; rather high in those days. It sold recently for $660K, which is simply outrageous. If you look at an image of the art-deco spire of the '39 World's Fair, you are looking at the structural timber from which my house had been erected in the '40s. The previous owner had worked construction and demolition of the site in those days. He was of meager income and so took all the scrap timber and build the house, which is rather stout, but not fancy. The best feature was the 625 ft.^2 kitchen, in which I spent most of my time when home, which was not often.

Overall, it works for me, and when I retire and the kids are gone, I'll sell it all, buy a camp way the hell up north and be done with it.

Hey, if you can manage it, by all means enjoy it while you can.

We are between a rock and a hard place at the moment. Perhaps I will be able to find a way out, perhaps not. I still cannot reconcile the tax thing, though.

Speaking of criminal taxation - back in the late 70s I was acquainted with someone in Jackson Twp. He had a split-level house on about an acre. Nice, but nothing to write home about. Because Jackson had no "ratables", he was stiffed for $34 THOUSAND dollars per year in taxes. I'd have insured it up the wazoo, burned it, collected, dumped 2000 gallons of transformer oil, and walked away just to screw the local gov. for such evil as this. They should be burned with gasoline until they are naught more than ash, these filthy robbers.
 
But What about the internet connection there?

I would be much more into the idea of WV, as it's still fairly close to kin.

We are fibered up to the drops, AFAIK. Copper to the house.

Hell, the other house even has 3PH access.
 
My SIL in Amherst, NY showed me her property tax bill. OUTRAGEOUS! Her home is on barely 1/2 an acre and a basic 3 bedroom 1 bath, 1950's split level - nothing to write home about. If I remember correctly, it was somewhere between 10 and 15 grand a year. In my county, the taxes on that house would be about 600.00 per year.
 
$6K+/annum property tax.

NFW.

I'm reasonably sure that is why the property is listed so cheap. If the house sells for $109,000, the tax bill may be possible to cut to $4k if not $3k after the sale. The tax bill is almost definitely based on a house value of over $200k. Normally they do respect requests for a value re-assessment inside of a few months time, and if the actual selling price isn't proper basis for an assessment I don't know what is. I would call the town selectmen before purchasing the house and asking them their opinion on a re-assessment. If I see a selectmen I will ask them for sure... though I don't expect to see one for at least a couple of weeks.
 
I'm reasonably sure that is why the property is listed so cheap. If the house sells for $109,000, the tax bill may be possible to cut to $4k if not $3k after the sale. The tax bill is almost definitely based on a house value of over $200k. Normally they do respect requests for a value re-assessment inside of a few months time, and if the actual selling price isn't proper basis for an assessment I don't know what is. I would call the town selectmen before purchasing the house and asking them their opinion on a re-assessment. If I see a selectmen I will ask them for sure... though I don't expect to see one for at least a couple of weeks.

But is this not devoid of sense?

If what you say is so, then why have the sellers not done this, not only for themselves, but for the sake of increasing salability?

Were I selling a non-trivial property, I would be doing whatever I could to make it as attractive as possible. If a mere request for reassessment were all I needed to do, it would be done forthwith.

Please do ask. Such things do not happen in dumps like NJ, where such request have actually resulted in INCREASED assessments, and that is no lie.
 
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