Anonymous wrote:We’re in the NoVa burbs and houses are sitting on the market for a month or two and having to go down in asking price.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Piling on a little, even at the higher end, it seems like things are still frothy/frenzied....
$300K over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/4801-Rodman-St-NW-20016/home/9946536
$400k over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3203-Cleveland-Ave-NW-20008/home/9987925
Again, asking price is somewhat irrelevant, but none of these homes indicate things are slowing down.
The Cleveland Avenue is maybe a down-to-the-studs project with a projected $4.5MM+ completed price?
Here's hoping someone with common sense bought that house and doesn't do this as it needs very little work
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Piling on a little, even at the higher end, it seems like things are still frothy/frenzied....
$300K over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/4801-Rodman-St-NW-20016/home/9946536
$400k over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3203-Cleveland-Ave-NW-20008/home/9987925
Again, asking price is somewhat irrelevant, but none of these homes indicate things are slowing down.
The Cleveland Avenue is maybe a down-to-the-studs project with a projected $4.5MM+ completed price?
Anonymous wrote:Piling on a little, even at the higher end, it seems like things are still frothy/frenzied....
$300K over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/4801-Rodman-St-NW-20016/home/9946536
$400k over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3203-Cleveland-Ave-NW-20008/home/9987925
Again, asking price is somewhat irrelevant, but none of these homes indicate things are slowing down.
Anonymous wrote:Piling on a little, even at the higher end, it seems like things are still frothy/frenzied....
$300K over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/4801-Rodman-St-NW-20016/home/9946536
$400k over: https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3203-Cleveland-Ave-NW-20008/home/9987925
Again, asking price is somewhat irrelevant, but none of these homes indicate things are slowing down.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Bumping after looking at these recent sales, each $300K+ over ask for ~2750 sq ft. Asking price is obviously an arbitrary mental anchor in this market, so perhaps these prices are fair, but seeing them in my feed didn't make me feel like the "slowdown" I've seen discussed on many threads is happening.
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/3711-Northampton-St-NW-20015/home/9970590
https://www.redfin.com/DC/Washington/5342-Nebraska-Ave-NW-20015/home/9978173
Wow this is absolutely bonkers.
OMG - depressing for those of us still looking!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Idk if this thread is full of realtors or just folks that are kind of dim. An individual house going for some absurd amount over asking isn’t indicative of anything other than it being improperly priced to begin with. You can look up the average amount over list places in a particular area. In Chevy Chase, DC that percent is 9%. So most people are not going to get 300k over asking. Besides that the biggest jump in price appreciation has been on the lower end of the market as people whereas in nicer areas prices have increased more modestly. There probably isn’t a bubble (although as someone who spent a lot of money to be close in I do hope telework doesn’t hurt me) but I think that people need to be cautious about buying someplace crappy with no contingencies because they have been whipped up into severe fomo.
Nobody said everything is going for $300k over asking. I agree that amount over asking is not indicative of much. But if you look at the latest sales prices they are a good amount higher than last year for similar houses - admittedly I am looking on the "lower end of the market" (meaning, closer to the median sales price in the area rather than average prices allegedly paid by DCUM posters), when you see townhouses selling for $70k-$100k more than any other house in the same development did pre 2021, well the fact is prices are still up, even if some buyers are at the beach. My guess is the craziness will continue after Labor Day.