my little pony
white women can't be trusted 3.0
- Messages
- 35,994
I don’t want to discuss this with someone who does not know US real estate.
well if I dont see a black pot inside your glass pending house
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
I don’t want to discuss this with someone who does not know US real estate.
Well if you hire someone you can fire the next day, I suspect they aren't that interested in helping you. I know I wouldn't be motivated.Well selling Is extremely stressful. I agree 100% with that. Finding a real estate agent that you like and trust is key. I interviewed a few when I sold my condo.
It's funny you say that, because here if you buy pre-construction it's cheaper than buying an existing house. Or at least it was. When I bought my first house, I bought it pre-construction and the price went up something like $15K in that year, but my price was locked in. The appraisal was fine, not more than I spent. Plus as a first time buyer I liked having a new house where everything was under warranty, so I could learn things gradually. And with the way prices were trending, it would have been hard for me to catch up if I tried to save enough to buy a comparable house already built.Something to consider with new construction is that you don't know immediately if the builder has made a really bad mistake. Plus, there are all the extra costs that have you spending more than the house will appraise for. (New construction cost about 20% more than a comparable home that isn't new.)
From this thread, my own research, and talking to friends/colleagues, I’m going to go with cookie cutter banality over charm. Charm is for people who are handy and have time and enjoy being covered in dust. I am not that person. There is a company here—DSLD Homes—that builds floss and duct tape houses but they have a great reputation.Three
colleagues of mine live in one and loved the whole process. They finance it, build it, and you just move in. I can live in an ugly house in an ugly neighborhood for my first foray into real
estate.
Maybe it depends on the part of the country? But every article I read when looking at new homes said there was a premium and a new home could cost between 17 and 30% more than a similar existing home.It's funny you say that, because here if you buy pre-construction it's cheaper than buying an existing house.
My coworker's husband works for DSLD. ?
And/or the builder needs a certain committed volume so that the I
agree that 1-2 year old houses can be a great value, especially in larger developments where construction may still be ongoing. When you can get something shiny and new for the same price, you generally don't buy something slightly used unless it's at a great (discounted) price or you can get great upgrades for the same price. Either way, the owner is typically taking a loss, which is your gain in a flat or slowly appreciating housing market.
There are mortgage payment calculators online where you can plug in various loan and down payment amounts, interest rates, HOA and insurance, taxes, etc, and see what your monthly payment will be, to get an idea of what amount of mortgage you are comfortable with. It sounds like you are targeting a good price range.What I need to be careful of is here you can get approved for WAAAY more than you can actually afford.
There are mortgage payment calculators online where you can plug in various loan and down payment amounts, interest rates, HOA and insurance, taxes, etc, and see what your monthly payment will be, to get an idea of what amount of mortgage you are comfortable with. It sounds like you are targeting a good price range.
Tell your coworker’s husband there are several happy teachers from Archbishop Hannan High living in his company’s homes in Covington and Ponchatoula! Maybe a fourth!
Where I live, the seller pays the real estate agents' commissions. Even the buyer's real estate agent! (Unless you negotiate otherwise.) It seems crazy to me, but having just sold one place and bought two in its place, it came in handy.the company I’m thinking of going with pays closing costs and will pretty much finance anyone and I won’t pay realtor fees. If I get an agent to buy one if these nearly-new houses, I’ll have to pay her fees, go through a bank with actual standards, and possibly come up with closing costs cash in hand which I just flat-out cannot do.
Where I live, the seller pays the real estate agents' commissions. Even the buyer's real estate agent! (Unless you negotiate otherwise.)
Closing costs vary but most of the typical ones are seller expenses as well.
Save for a big emergency, babe. We have weird hot-water HVAC and the unit is on the roof of a big condo. $9000 to replace it in the 19th year of its life after a few repairs kept it limping along the last three years.Yes! I have had fun with Trulia. I can manage 1750 a month. That will leave me with just enough so that if I have any small emergencies—flat tires, broken water heater, etc.—I can handle it.