So put a home-sale contingency on your offer. |
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Can someone give me an example between a starter house and McMansion in Arlington? That is all I have seen! I do not think people renovate it with modest budget and sell. Maybe all the starter homes stay "starter" forever?
One reason I do not like Arlington. If you do not have $1.5m to spend, your house looks cramped and starter. |
+1 |
You can't be serious. Not in this market. As I stated before, if the market is hot for your house, now is the time to sell. Do it, bank the profit, find a rental in the school district you want you kids in, get them settled, and take your time looking. Invest wisely and grow your equity. Its not rocket science. |
+1 Sell in a sellers market and buy in a buyer's market. It is a huge sellers market---take advantage of the tight inventory and demand to get a great sales price. Use the rental time to explore an area you are thinking of buyin in. We only have a single house come on the market about once every 6 months (and its been that way since early 2000). It took us 2 years of renting to find our home--but totally worth it. |
I did it. No problem. I absolutely refused to sell until I had a place to go. Found a house in North Arlington with no issue. Granted, it was 2011, but the market was pretty hot then, too. |
| It seems impossible to purchase a starter home with a sales contingency. The houses are under contract within days. |
| LoL, when you rent the prices will keep going up , you'll have to rent for 5 years until the market cools down. |
| We too are looking for a new house a bit bigger than ours. Have been for 2 years. |
We live in one of those red brick colonials that are all over Arlington. We don't have the lot size/shape to bump out. So we are stuck in a two bedroom that we bought 8 years ago and need three bedrooms now. There are lots of colonials where people have bumped out the back to add a master suite, expanded kitchen, and main level family room. But we've only seen one come on the market recently (a listing on Jefferson Street that just sold for $885K, if you want to check it out) but that didn't have a basement. Some people think the bumped out houses look choppy, but we'd be happy with one. We can't afford new construction starting at $1.3K. There is no inventory in N. Arlington now in the $800-$1.1 range. I think that is why when you drive around you can now see so many of those "build on your own lot" companies doing steady business. |
Confused, if it's your starter home why would you need a sales contingency? Either way, prepare your house to sell, keep looking for a house and if you land one, than you put your place on the market and try and get the timing to work out. Normal people do this all the time. |
But how can this work in hot areas if homes in such areas sell in a matter of days? |
ummm... because houses are selling days? why wouldn't it work... just did this last spring... got an offer accepted on a new place after losing out on a couple, went ahead and closed on the new house... then put ours on the market (the only reason we waited to put ours on the market was that we had given a 2 month rent back on the new house)... got a contract in 2 days on our current house and negotiated a closing 1 week after we got access to the new house... done... |
But what if you need the funds from the current house to buy the new house (and to qualify for the loan for the new house)? |
Fine to do, but in this market you will never win a bid. |