Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiving these are a sign of Bubble 2.0.
Of course all the DC boosters will declare that now it's different, that DC is such a great place to live and that EVERYONE wants to be where the action is ... but come on, is it really worth dropping $200 a pop on places that you might be interested in?
+1000 from an agent and one who has been saying for over a year to clients, wait. This is a bubble. This too shall pass.
And it's not $200, more like $500 - $600 on a house. That's a lot of cash, though an excellent time to be a home inspector.
uh huh, so which economic collapse is coming to deflate this bubble?

Anonymous wrote:We sold our house to a buyer that did a pre-inspection and had no contingencies over an all-cash buyer that did have an inspection contingency. Same $$$ offered to us, but we did not want the hassle of negotiating over repairs.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiving these are a sign of Bubble 2.0.
Of course all the DC boosters will declare that now it's different, that DC is such a great place to live and that EVERYONE wants to be where the action is ... but come on, is it really worth dropping $200 a pop on places that you might be interested in?
+1000 from an agent and one who has been saying for over a year to clients, wait. This is a bubble. This too shall pass.
And it's not $200, more like $500 - $600 on a house. That's a lot of cash, though an excellent time to be a home inspector.
Anonymous wrote:We waived the home inspection and offered cash. It was a tough market. It worked out fine for us.
I don't have a lot of faith in home inspectors so waiving didn't feel like much of a risk. The inspector who came in when we sold our house found a million small things and missed some major ones (like the roof needing replacement).
Anonymous wrote:So between these two, which would be better: cash offer with home inspection and quick close OR financing without home inspection?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Waiving these are a sign of Bubble 2.0.
Of course all the DC boosters will declare that now it's different, that DC is such a great place to live and that EVERYONE wants to be where the action is ... but come on, is it really worth dropping $200 a pop on places that you might be interested in?
+1000 from an agent and one who has been saying for over a year to clients, wait. This is a bubble. This too shall pass.
And it's not $200, more like $500 - $600 on a house. That's a lot of cash, though an excellent time to be a home inspector.
Anonymous wrote:Waiving these are a sign of Bubble 2.0.
Of course all the DC boosters will declare that now it's different, that DC is such a great place to live and that EVERYONE wants to be where the action is ... but come on, is it really worth dropping $200 a pop on places that you might be interested in?