Recovering from a real estate mistake

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Maybe hire a really good decorator/space planner to make the most of the space. Would be much cheaper and might help you hate the place less


Do this.
Anonymous
There is another option here that you don't seem to be considering. I say this with good intentions and no snark-

How about ACTUALLY recalibrate your expectations? If you would lose 250K on a sale, this is almost certainly a home that is nicer than the vast majority in this country. You can live there and be happy. You just have to change your outlook. Buy one or two things or make one or two small changes that really will make a difference to you, and move on. Accept the situation and don't focus on what bothers you about the house.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:If you do sell at a loss and it is a capital loss, then it (slowly) can be deducted from your income when calculating Federal taxes. See a CPA or tax attorney for the details on this.


Wrong!!! A loss on the sale of a house is a personal loss and can’t offset other income or be carried forward. It is not the same as a capital loss on the sale of securities.

Op - ignore this poster!!!


So rent the house for 2-3 years and that makes it a capital loss. Again, talk to a CPA or tax attorney.
Anonymous
Just rent it out.
Anonymous
Also, declaring bankruptcy is hardly a big deal anymore
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We’re in this situation, or close to it. Overpaid at the PEAK of the market including interest rates. House ended up having significant issues we discovered after the sale that will legally require us to sell as-is unless we spend $200K+ to fix them.

However, we LOVE our location and the lot we’re on is surrounded by new builds. So we’re debating selling at a loss to a developer and move on, teardown + rebuild, or stay for 5-8 years and spruce it up via an interior designer.


Nothing legally requires you to sell as-is but you would need to disclose anything major.

Again also confused about why if you overpaid the move would be to lock in your losses by selling???
Anonymous
There will probably be a lot of people in this situation due to the inflated, over list price sales that happened in the past five years or so combined with the economic slow down I think is coming.
Anonymous
I'm very sorry that this happened to you. It's very common that agents encourage people to get into bidding wars that are not based on comps but instead just based on fear of missing out, and it's mostly worked out for buyers because prices have continued to go up (I'm sorry that has not been your experience). But the never-ending price increases will stop at some point, and many more buyers will be in your situation.
Anonymous
Blaming the realtor is a big red flag about you. They’re nearly irrelevant at this point. There’s nothing they know that you can’t find out even from far away.

Also buying the house and immediately regretting it and being “miserable” in it. That says more about you than the house. It doesn’t sound like you have six kids in two bedrooms. It sounds like you’re doing pretty well and yet still miserable, which is a flag that whatever your problem is, a kitchen can’t and won’t fix it.

I’m fine with people moving, selling, buying, renovating etc whenever they want and nobody wins on every investment. But your blaming the realtor, flip flopping on the house, and blaming the house for your unhappiness suggest you should stay put and spend the money on therapy.

A renovation or a move will never make you happy unless you were already pretty happy, can afford it, and aren’t counting on it to change your life.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Blaming the realtor is a big red flag about you. They’re nearly irrelevant at this point. There’s nothing they know that you can’t find out even from far away.

Also buying the house and immediately regretting it and being “miserable” in it. That says more about you than the house. It doesn’t sound like you have six kids in two bedrooms. It sounds like you’re doing pretty well and yet still miserable, which is a flag that whatever your problem is, a kitchen can’t and won’t fix it.

I’m fine with people moving, selling, buying, renovating etc whenever they want and nobody wins on every investment. But your blaming the realtor, flip flopping on the house, and blaming the house for your unhappiness suggest you should stay put and spend the money on therapy.

A renovation or a move will never make you happy unless you were already pretty happy, can afford it, and aren’t counting on it to change your life.


+1000. OP needs to solve her own problems.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Maybe hire a really good decorator/space planner to make the most of the space. Would be much cheaper and might help you hate the place less


This.

Back when we thought our city apartment wasn't working for us, we started looking for a house in the suburbs. In the end, we decided to commit to making the apartment work better for us . . . I hired a decorator and was willing make big decor changes and let go of furniture, rugs, window treatments, and lighting fixtures that we held on to over the years because they were "perfectly nice." We essentially went to square one . . . the results were transformative, and here we are ten years later and still in love with the place.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:We’re in this situation, or close to it. Overpaid at the PEAK of the market including interest rates. House ended up having significant issues we discovered after the sale that will legally require us to sell as-is unless we spend $200K+ to fix them.

However, we LOVE our location and the lot we’re on is surrounded by new builds. So we’re debating selling at a loss to a developer and move on, teardown + rebuild, or stay for 5-8 years and spruce it up via an interior designer.


We are in this situation. How much would you lose if you sell? It could be a wash if you thinking about how much it would cost to fix vs. locking in your loss by selling now.

We are just sucking it up and fixing the problems. 1) the loss, 2) we'd have to pay more for something else in our area, 3) there really isn't anything we like more than our house, which we love everything about except the issues.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Blaming the realtor is a big red flag about you. They’re nearly irrelevant at this point. There’s nothing they know that you can’t find out even from far away.

Also buying the house and immediately regretting it and being “miserable” in it. That says more about you than the house. It doesn’t sound like you have six kids in two bedrooms. It sounds like you’re doing pretty well and yet still miserable, which is a flag that whatever your problem is, a kitchen can’t and won’t fix it.

I’m fine with people moving, selling, buying, renovating etc whenever they want and nobody wins on every investment. But your blaming the realtor, flip flopping on the house, and blaming the house for your unhappiness suggest you should stay put and spend the money on therapy.

A renovation or a move will never make you happy unless you were already pretty happy, can afford it, and aren’t counting on it to change your life.

+2

Find a way to like the house. Buy furniture and storage that fits well. Purge so it doesn't feel overcrowded. Save up for a reno if there are bigger problems with layout. At some point you thought this house was suitable. Find a way to like it.
Anonymous
We had friends who were super unhappy with their condo. They hated how dark if felt and wanted to sell and move, but couldn't afford it. It turns out they didn't know you could buy different wattages of light bulbs. We cleared that up for them and they spent a few hundred on lightbulbs. Problem solved.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:This is totally normal.for this area. It typically takes 10 years to not be under water on a house in this area. Renovate and deal with it.


Wrong, this is totally uheard of. We have never had a problem selling a house, we always chose inside the beltway with great school ratings of 9s or better.

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