Anonymous wrote:If you are doing a big project hire an inspector to check work at certain points, like before drywall goes up. A good independent inspector is your and your houses BFF.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't buy a house where the bordering neighbor planted bamboo.
Just walk away.
Oh good! The crazy is back!
Yes, def pay attention to who (not what) is next door, OP. LOL.
Anonymous wrote:I am on my fifth house in the D.C. Area. My advise is never pay full price for a realtor. Pay 1% for selling agent and 2.5% for buyers agent . If you are buying make sure you get cash back from your realtor. When a realtor does open house they do it more for marketing themselves .
With sites like Zillow and Redfin realtors are irrelevant.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do not trust realtors. Even if you've done extreme due diligence, interviewed a few, and picked one that comes with great referrals from people you know. Just don't trust them. They are playing with your money, and their incentive is much more to push you fast and to either bid high (if you're a buyer) or accept a low offer (if you're a seller). Get their input, but verify it is what is actually best for you.
Read the chapter in Freakonomics about realtors if you want proof.
My neighbor, a realtor, pretended to be a friend for 8 years while I lived in the house. I figured I would use him to sell when ready.
After I signed the paperwork, he began pushing for selling to the latest/lowest bidder. Day of closing, he somehow altered the contract to include some additional BS fees. I called him out on it, his face turned red, and everyone around the table was disappointed in him. terrible experience.
After the house sold, both him and his wife gave me the cold shoulder as if we are now strangers. what a long con he played.
Anonymous wrote:Buy a home warranty. Home warranty companies all suck. They make it tough for you to collect but still worth it. One house that I bought the entire HVAC system had to be replaced- not long after closing. I paid like $500 for my part (plus $400 home warranty) instead of like $8000.
Watch out for DIY houses and water problems.
Shop around for a mortgage.
Realtors suck.
Anonymous wrote:Don't buy a house where the bordering neighbor planted bamboo.
Just walk away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Do NOT let sellers stay in the house after closing. We were buying our first house & the sellers insisted they had to close by the end of the year due to tax purposes but claimed they would "definitely be out" after New Year's, the first week in Jan. We had an apt until end of Jan, so we said ok. BIG, EXPENSIVE mistake. By MARCH they were still not out, landlord rented our apt. March 1. We had to put our stuff in storage, live with parents and threaten to have them thrown out of our house. they paid us a nominal amount, so we were paying a lot for our mortgage and storage, plus we had to pay 2 moving costs. And a ton of aggravation.
This story is interesting to me. When I took Real Estate in law school, the prof was adamant that you should never do a lease back after sale. Particularly in jurisdictions (like DC) that have strong tenant protections. But you'll find that people on this web site wills say that's ridiculous, everyone does it, etc etc. I think it works out most of the time, but when it doesn't, it can be a major pain.
Just to clarify: It is not a lease but a post settlement occupancy agreement and the seller Has possession of the property at the sufferance of the new owner. The seller has no tenant landlord protections, particularly good in DC because of TOPA. The buyer above should have moved immediately to force the seller from the house. That said I agree that these types of agreement are to be avoided