Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The seller wanted I think close to 2 months to continue living in the house and withdraw from the contract if they didn't find a place they liked better to buy. It was too risky for us due to school start dates and our lease ending but I'm still kind of sad, it was a very different flavor of house (SFH vs rowhome). We would have had to remodel the kitchen to put in a dishwasher though.
Wow. That’s a lot to ask of a buyer.
Anonymous wrote:The seller wanted I think close to 2 months to continue living in the house and withdraw from the contract if they didn't find a place they liked better to buy. It was too risky for us due to school start dates and our lease ending but I'm still kind of sad, it was a very different flavor of house (SFH vs rowhome). We would have had to remodel the kitchen to put in a dishwasher though.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The friend realtor we were working with suggested a very low ball price on our house, making the gap too large for the house we wanted to buy. We should have talked to more realtors. We would have gotten a wider range and could have made the deal work.
Because that house we wanted didn't work out, we ended up buying a vacation home, which changed the trajectory of our lives. Everything happens for a reason.
Well now I'm curious! how did buying a vacation home change the trajectory of your life? I'm asking this sincerely, not in a snarky way.
I think we always assumed we'd live in the same area, with the same group of friends and our kids would all be in the same school through HS. Our hometown area was part of our identity.
When we bought a vacation home, we made new friends in different parts of the country. It just opened our eyes to living somewhere else with a lower COL (like, hey, "these people are really cool and they live in XX. Maybe we could live in XX too?" We made the leap five years later.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The friend realtor we were working with suggested a very low ball price on our house, making the gap too large for the house we wanted to buy. We should have talked to more realtors. We would have gotten a wider range and could have made the deal work.
Because that house we wanted didn't work out, we ended up buying a vacation home, which changed the trajectory of our lives. Everything happens for a reason.
Well now I'm curious! how did buying a vacation home change the trajectory of your life? I'm asking this sincerely, not in a snarky way.
Anonymous wrote:The staircase rails weren’t to code.
Realtor told us, “oh, the same family has owned since ‘89, the family owns a plumbing business” - figured there was a lot of unlicensed work done over the last 30 years that we didn’t want to untangle. This was last year where inspections were being waived left and right in our market.