Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your agent encourage you to submit without an inspection contingency? Why didnt you preinspect?
Yes and to overbid.
Was it a competitive situation?
Don’t know. I initially offered ask with cash and the sellers agent laughed. I bid enough to get before the open house, but that’s bc I’ve been looking for a year and been outbid 5+ times.
That was rude of the seller’s agent. Can you make a complaint? Don’t offer what you can’t afford and come up with your max #. My spouse and I lost out on multiple homes, but refused to go more than our max. One home we loved someone else bought for just $10k more, but we had already been going up and wouldn’t go more and we went above our max for that house. I’m glad we didn’t, and we ended up buying in the same neighborhood.
Don’t get emotional. People get attached to homes and then pay way over ask or what they can’t afford.
I’m sorry you didn’t have a different agent. Lesson learned.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your agent encourage you to submit without an inspection contingency? Why didnt you preinspect?
Yes and to overbid.
Was it a competitive situation?
Don’t know. I initially offered ask with cash and the sellers agent laughed. I bid enough to get before the open house, but that’s bc I’ve been looking for a year and been outbid 5+ times.
Anonymous wrote:I've done it before. Called an informational inspection. Nothing revealed in the inspection could be used to get out of the sale
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me understand -
You put an offer on a house without an contingencies.
Your offer was accepted.
Now you are having cold feet
You think the offer you made (that was accepted) was materially above market value
You are concerned there are maintenance issues that you can not afford
You want to walk away from the transaction and just lose you EMD?
Essentially except: I can afford them but if there are big ticket things and I already overpaid it will not be worth the money on this house which by the way also requires renovation of 2.5 baths and a kitchen, plus landscaping of a 0.4 lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your agent encourage you to submit without an inspection contingency? Why didnt you preinspect?
Yes and to overbid.
Was it a competitive situation?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me understand -
You put an offer on a house without an contingencies.
Your offer was accepted.
Now you are having cold feet
You think the offer you made (that was accepted) was materially above market value
You are concerned there are maintenance issues that you can not afford
You want to walk away from the transaction and just lose you EMD?
Essentially except: I can afford them but if there are big ticket things and I already overpaid it will not be worth the money on this house which by the way also requires renovation of 2.5 baths and a kitchen, plus landscaping of a 0.4 lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Let me understand -
You put an offer on a house without an contingencies.
Your offer was accepted.
Now you are having cold feet
You think the offer you made (that was accepted) was materially above market value
You are concerned there are maintenance issues that you can not afford
You want to walk away from the transaction and just lose you EMD?
Essentially except: I can afford them but if there are big ticket things and I already overpaid it will not be worth the money on this house which by the way also requires renovation of 2.5 baths and a kitchen, plus landscaping of a 0.4 lot.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Did your agent encourage you to submit without an inspection contingency? Why didnt you preinspect?
Yes and to overbid.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adding, according to online value estimators I also overpaid by $50-75K.
You mean like the Zestimate? None of those online estimates are even remotely reliable.
Then what is?
I mean, in this market, a house is worth what someone pays.
It sounds like you have cold feet and are looking for a reason to get out. Is the inspection a way to do that, or do you just want an informational inspection? If you want out and know that now, talk to your agent to see what can be done. It's possible they had a back up offer and would be willing to negotiate. Also possible they'll want to keep you EMD. Or sue you. In which case you're up a creek.
Reading between the lines, it sounds like there was a contract in August that had a bad home inspection and THAT buyer walked. It sounds like the seller addressed the inspection items and shared the inspection with subsequent buyer. My guess is they'd be in NO mood to let someone else walk without consequence. And I doubt there is a backup offer under the circumstances.
OP, it's normal to have cold feet. It will almost certainly be fine. Ignore the online valuations. They're all utter bullshit.
If you're really curious, pay for an actual appraisal (which you may be doing anyway if you're going to have a mortgage).
OP here. Wow. I’m a first time buyer and my agent didn’t even suggest that this was the scenario.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Adding, according to online value estimators I also overpaid by $50-75K.
You mean like the Zestimate? None of those online estimates are even remotely reliable.
Then what is?
I mean, in this market, a house is worth what someone pays.
It sounds like you have cold feet and are looking for a reason to get out. Is the inspection a way to do that, or do you just want an informational inspection? If you want out and know that now, talk to your agent to see what can be done. It's possible they had a back up offer and would be willing to negotiate. Also possible they'll want to keep you EMD. Or sue you. In which case you're up a creek.
Reading between the lines, it sounds like there was a contract in August that had a bad home inspection and THAT buyer walked. It sounds like the seller addressed the inspection items and shared the inspection with subsequent buyer. My guess is they'd be in NO mood to let someone else walk without consequence. And I doubt there is a backup offer under the circumstances.
OP, it's normal to have cold feet. It will almost certainly be fine. Ignore the online valuations. They're all utter bullshit.
If you're really curious, pay for an actual appraisal (which you may be doing anyway if you're going to have a mortgage).[/quote
OP here. Wow. I’m a first time buyer and my agent didn’t even suggest that this was the scenario.
Or - the seller wanted a quick sale and paid for their own inspection.
And in good faith shared the inspection with potential buyers in order to accelerate the process.
You can see online if there was a previous offer on the house - just ask your agent
Would a previous offer be listed if they didn’t use an agent? I know it wasn’t listed for sale on any public site bc I check all day every day.