Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not buy in Arlington right now because prices are way over valued.
Do you really think it is going to be better say, next year?
I agree there will be a point where prices just don't make sense, people are already looking father down the orange line closer to tysons.
You know, like in the Mosaic District.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was under the impresson that in desirable neighborhoods its critical that you get into the house before the open house. Once the open house happens, there will already be multiple contracts on it. If you are using a realtor, they really need to be working that angle for you. I am getting ready to list a condo I own in DC and my realtor is listing for about 10k than I would prefer. But he said the idea is to get a bunch of folks interested and then start the bidding up to get it above what I want. He also plans to show before the open house for serious buyers or realtors he has relationships with. I think we are assuming to be under contract and never really deal with an open house. I know its brutal and it sucks but thats just whats going on in the market right now.
Assume you meant to say $10k UNDER what you prefer.
I hope the agent is willing to back up his strategy with a cut in commission if s/he is wrong. S/he should. If you get one full-price offer, you are obligated to accept it or pay a commission anyway.
Or the realtor can say that all offers will be reviewed on XX date, which would give more people time to put in an offer on your place.
Anonymous wrote:Don't give up on Arlington. We just bought at list in the heart of this range. Three other offers - but good credit, a healthy earnest $ dep, and a rent-back put us over the top.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not buy in Arlington right now because prices are way over valued.
Do you really think it is going to be better say, next year?
I agree there will be a point where prices just don't make sense, people are already looking father down the orange line closer to tysons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I would not buy in Arlington right now because prices are way over valued.
Do you really think it is going to be better say, next year?
Anonymous wrote:I would not buy in Arlington right now because prices are way over valued.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was under the impresson that in desirable neighborhoods its critical that you get into the house before the open house. Once the open house happens, there will already be multiple contracts on it. If you are using a realtor, they really need to be working that angle for you. I am getting ready to list a condo I own in DC and my realtor is listing for about 10k than I would prefer. But he said the idea is to get a bunch of folks interested and then start the bidding up to get it above what I want. He also plans to show before the open house for serious buyers or realtors he has relationships with. I think we are assuming to be under contract and never really deal with an open house. I know its brutal and it sucks but thats just whats going on in the market right now.
Assume you meant to say $10k UNDER what you prefer.
I hope the agent is willing to back up his strategy with a cut in commission if s/he is wrong. S/he should. If you get one full-price offer, you are obligated to accept it or pay a commission anyway.
Anonymous wrote:I was under the impresson that in desirable neighborhoods its critical that you get into the house before the open house. Once the open house happens, there will already be multiple contracts on it. If you are using a realtor, they really need to be working that angle for you. I am getting ready to list a condo I own in DC and my realtor is listing for about 10k than I would prefer. But he said the idea is to get a bunch of folks interested and then start the bidding up to get it above what I want. He also plans to show before the open house for serious buyers or realtors he has relationships with. I think we are assuming to be under contract and never really deal with an open house. I know its brutal and it sucks but thats just whats going on in the market right now.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:My DH and did a marathon open house tour yesterday, and like a previous poster said - every house was packed! We ended up seeing some of the same people multiple times during the day.
We made an offer on our first choice, and have a back up selected, but with that many people I think it's pretty possible we don't get either. Now I am wondering, if last week was when most of the spring inventory came on the market or will we hit another 10 new listings next week.
We did both N. and S. Arlington 500K - 700k.
The price range you are looking at describe the level of insanity, I am not surprised at all. It has been challenging to find places in this price range inside beltway years ago, even in 2008-2009, demand for these properties was high. Try over 1.5 mil and you see a different level of interest.
Not in my N ARl neighborhood. We have zero inventory. Houses in that 1.5 mill range still go under contract before the Open house. It is insane.