6 Quick Tips for Buyers
Category:Buyer
- If you will be commuting by car between your new home and your job,
be sure to drive the route during both morning and evening rush hours
before you make an offer to purchase. Many times prospective buyers
look at homes during the late morning or early afternoon when traffic
is relatively light. Make sure you know exactly what you are facing
when you will be driving the route every day.
- When you find a home you like, have your realtor run "comps"
on recent sales in the area to compare prices, sizes, and features of
your prospective home with others. Be aware that the raw data may not
provide an accurate comparison. Sometimes the sold price of a property
includes other terms and conditions - decorating allowances, money for
a new roof, etc. If that's the case with a home you are using as a basis
for price comparison, the information may not be accurate, and the house
you like may be overpriced. Be sure you are comparing apples to apples,
not apples to oranges.
- Investigate, before purchase, the original use of the land on which
the house is built. More than one buyer has run into trouble because
of items not readily apparent. For example, if an orchard was leveled
to build your subdivision, there may be a lot of wood under the soil.
This wood can be a haven for termites, which then are likely to migrate
to the homes in the area.
- If the exact school your child attends is important to you, verify
that the address of your proposed home is within the boundaries for
that school. Don't assume anything. School boundaries are sometimes
drawn according to factors other than geography.
- You've found your peaceful haven on a lovely, quiet lake. Make sure
you visit on a summer weekend before you buy. You may be unpleasantly
surprised by the noisy jet skis, absent on Wednesday, but zipping around
on Saturday and Sunday afternoon. They can seriously interfere with
your dream of serenity!
- 6. The home you want to buy is a "For Sale By Owner". Be
very careful before jumping into a purchase without a real estate agent
to guide you and manage the transaction to closing. There are many,
many pitfalls that can cause a FSBO deal to fall apart. The home may
be overpriced and consequently not appraise for the mortgage you want.
Various inspections may not be completed in a timely fashion without
an agent to oversee the timeline. You may not receive full disclosure
of past problems with the property - leaky basements, buried oil tanks,
etc. Consider asking your real estate agent to find out whether the
sellers will "cooperate" (pay your agent a commission) to
handle the details of the sale and thus insure that everything possible
is done to make the sale go through.
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