Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally very impressed with MoCo real estate. Last summer 4 houses close to mine(one next to mine) sold the same day or while they were "coming soon," and for more money. Outside of beltway. This summer, not so much. One house has been sitting on the market since May, and now they lowered the price by almost 50K, the other one is sitting and I get why, they overpriced ti by at least 45K. The other houses in nearby subdivisions, are also taking longer to sell. There is a huge house with 3 acres that is selling for 740K, except it is not selling at all. So, maybe haters of MoCo from NoVa are right, at least for this year.
This X100. Plus the GCAR data in May showed sales were down. So yeah after the low spring sales, price drops and delistings, July will look like it had higher sales than LAST July and that inventory dropped. The inventory drop is just people delisting that didn't sell. I hate how realtors present and cherry pick data to pump up a market. So gross and sleazy.
The house down the street from us sold for 1.2 M. The sellers had been trying to sell it since 2017. They bought it in 2003 for 1.4 M and sunk $$$ updating it. This is happening to all the large houses over 1M whether they are updated or not. However, a 1.2M house will raise the median sales price without revealing that it was a major loss in property value for the seller.
The only houses that I see moving quickly are ones in the low 800s-700s in good school districts or ones in mediocre school districts 600 or under.
Just out of curiosity, but where in MoCo do you find <600 houses that aren't in horrible conditions? Silver Spring? It certainly isn't on the 270 corridor unless you're going up past urbana?
You’re going to have to tell us what you think “aren’t in horrible conditions” means, because I and nearly everyone I know (North Kensington) lives in houses less than $600k. Lots of us have renovated kitchens and baths, nice floors, decks and patios, etc. What I’m hearing here is a circular argument: “there aren’t any nice houses out there for less than $600k, because I’m defining a nice house as a house iworth more than $600k.”
The median single family home price for the county is $526k: https://gcaar.com/docs/default-source/montgomery-county-market-reports/gcaar-mc-housing-market-update---january-2019.pdf?sfvrsn=7735fe93_2
Is it your assertion that all houses under $600 (so, a majority of all houses) are in horrible conditions?
Anonymous wrote:
Gaithersburg zoned for QO (perfectly good school, though DCUM likes to bash it bc it isn’t a “W” school) has plenty of nice neighborhoods with homes at or around $600k. The ones in good condition are under contract in days. Here’s an example https://www.redfin.com/MD/North-Potomac/12016-Apple-Knoll-Ct-20878/home/10608946
Argh! This is a PERFECT example of being dishonest like the realtors. This house did NOT go under contract in days. It went on the market in May, delisted in June and was then re-listed with a price cut at 573K, a month later in July it price dropped again to 559K and THEN it went under contract with a contingency for the buyer to sell their home.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally very impressed with MoCo real estate. Last summer 4 houses close to mine(one next to mine) sold the same day or while they were "coming soon," and for more money. Outside of beltway. This summer, not so much. One house has been sitting on the market since May, and now they lowered the price by almost 50K, the other one is sitting and I get why, they overpriced ti by at least 45K. The other houses in nearby subdivisions, are also taking longer to sell. There is a huge house with 3 acres that is selling for 740K, except it is not selling at all. So, maybe haters of MoCo from NoVa are right, at least for this year.
This X100. Plus the GCAR data in May showed sales were down. So yeah after the low spring sales, price drops and delistings, July will look like it had higher sales than LAST July and that inventory dropped. The inventory drop is just people delisting that didn't sell. I hate how realtors present and cherry pick data to pump up a market. So gross and sleazy.
The house down the street from us sold for 1.2 M. The sellers had been trying to sell it since 2017. They bought it in 2003 for 1.4 M and sunk $$$ updating it. This is happening to all the large houses over 1M whether they are updated or not. However, a 1.2M house will raise the median sales price without revealing that it was a major loss in property value for the seller.
The only houses that I see moving quickly are ones in the low 800s-700s in good school districts or ones in mediocre school districts 600 or under.
Just out of curiosity, but where in MoCo do you find <600 houses that aren't in horrible conditions? Silver Spring? It certainly isn't on the 270 corridor unless you're going up past urbana?
Gaithersburg zoned for QO (perfectly good school, though DCUM likes to bash it bc it isn’t a “W” school) has plenty of nice neighborhoods with homes at or around $600k. The ones in good condition are under contract in days. Here’s an example https://www.redfin.com/MD/North-Potomac/12016-Apple-Knoll-Ct-20878/home/10608946
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally very impressed with MoCo real estate. Last summer 4 houses close to mine(one next to mine) sold the same day or while they were "coming soon," and for more money. Outside of beltway. This summer, not so much. One house has been sitting on the market since May, and now they lowered the price by almost 50K, the other one is sitting and I get why, they overpriced ti by at least 45K. The other houses in nearby subdivisions, are also taking longer to sell. There is a huge house with 3 acres that is selling for 740K, except it is not selling at all. So, maybe haters of MoCo from NoVa are right, at least for this year.
This X100. Plus the GCAR data in May showed sales were down. So yeah after the low spring sales, price drops and delistings, July will look like it had higher sales than LAST July and that inventory dropped. The inventory drop is just people delisting that didn't sell. I hate how realtors present and cherry pick data to pump up a market. So gross and sleazy.
The house down the street from us sold for 1.2 M. The sellers had been trying to sell it since 2017. They bought it in 2003 for 1.4 M and sunk $$$ updating it. This is happening to all the large houses over 1M whether they are updated or not. However, a 1.2M house will raise the median sales price without revealing that it was a major loss in property value for the seller.
The only houses that I see moving quickly are ones in the low 800s-700s in good school districts or ones in mediocre school districts 600 or under.
Just out of curiosity, but where in MoCo do you find <600 houses that aren't in horrible conditions? Silver Spring? It certainly isn't on the 270 corridor unless you're going up past urbana?
DP. Parts of Rockville, for example - you can find a small house in West End Park for 600K and less. Here's one: https://www.redfin.com/MD/Rockville/537-Brent-Rd-20850/home/10514409
Anonymous wrote:According to DCUM, MoCo is a desolate wasteland full of MS13 members and empty McMansions sitting on the market for pennies. [/quote
hahahaha
this forum is full of NOVA ppl
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I am normally very impressed with MoCo real estate. Last summer 4 houses close to mine(one next to mine) sold the same day or while they were "coming soon," and for more money. Outside of beltway. This summer, not so much. One house has been sitting on the market since May, and now they lowered the price by almost 50K, the other one is sitting and I get why, they overpriced ti by at least 45K. The other houses in nearby subdivisions, are also taking longer to sell. There is a huge house with 3 acres that is selling for 740K, except it is not selling at all. So, maybe haters of MoCo from NoVa are right, at least for this year.
This X100. Plus the GCAR data in May showed sales were down. So yeah after the low spring sales, price drops and delistings, July will look like it had higher sales than LAST July and that inventory dropped. The inventory drop is just people delisting that didn't sell. I hate how realtors present and cherry pick data to pump up a market. So gross and sleazy.
The house down the street from us sold for 1.2 M. The sellers had been trying to sell it since 2017. They bought it in 2003 for 1.4 M and sunk $$$ updating it. This is happening to all the large houses over 1M whether they are updated or not. However, a 1.2M house will raise the median sales price without revealing that it was a major loss in property value for the seller.
The only houses that I see moving quickly are ones in the low 800s-700s in good school districts or ones in mediocre school districts 600 or under.
Just out of curiosity, but where in MoCo do you find <600 houses that aren't in horrible conditions? Silver Spring? It certainly isn't on the 270 corridor unless you're going up past urbana?
Anonymous wrote:I am normally very impressed with MoCo real estate. Last summer 4 houses close to mine(one next to mine) sold the same day or while they were "coming soon," and for more money. Outside of beltway. This summer, not so much. One house has been sitting on the market since May, and now they lowered the price by almost 50K, the other one is sitting and I get why, they overpriced ti by at least 45K. The other houses in nearby subdivisions, are also taking longer to sell. There is a huge house with 3 acres that is selling for 740K, except it is not selling at all. So, maybe haters of MoCo from NoVa are right, at least for this year.
This X100. Plus the GCAR data in May showed sales were down. So yeah after the low spring sales, price drops and delistings, July will look like it had higher sales than LAST July and that inventory dropped. The inventory drop is just people delisting that didn't sell. I hate how realtors present and cherry pick data to pump up a market. So gross and sleazy.
The house down the street from us sold for 1.2 M. The sellers had been trying to sell it since 2017. They bought it in 2003 for 1.4 M and sunk $$$ updating it. This is happening to all the large houses over 1M whether they are updated or not. However, a 1.2M house will raise the median sales price without revealing that it was a major loss in property value for the seller.
The only houses that I see moving quickly are ones in the low 800s-700s in good school districts or ones in mediocre school districts 600 or under.