So I'm buying my first house. We have a contract an my house inspector checked it out yesterday I'm very nervous
Any advice
So I'm buying my first house. We have a contract an my house inspector checked it out yesterday I'm very nervous
Any advice
I am not an expert in real estate and will bow to other posters. My recommendation, carry her over the threshold and enjoy. If you are not married, carry every one of your visitors over the doorway and enjoy. Regardless, every home will have sweet memories when we are in the nursing home. Congrats.
Whatever you do, don't skimp on an inspector, and the most important, have the sewer line inspected if it uses a municipal sewer. Also, don't buy ANYTHING until you walk out of the closing with the keys in your hand. A classic rookie mistake is to buy a bunch of furniture and other crap, and use a credit card for it. They will literally check your credit rating while you are at the table getting ready to sign the closing papers.
Make sure you can TRUELY afford it. Realize property taxes go up along with everything else. If I had to do it over I would of waited longer or bought cheaper. Good luck to you.
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I always try to have a lawyer on my side checkin' out the paperwork and knowing where to look if there are any encumbrances on the house and property. Cheap insurance for you.
Good move on the house inspector. He can check for things like asbestos insulation, crappy, very old or aluminum electrical wiring (and electrical panel), decent plumbing, rot in foundations, mold (grow op can cause this) bad roofing, exterior drainage, etc. Make sure he is licensed and insured.
Yah, and make sure you can afford it!!
But, as others have said, once you own it you can have tons of fun there and make some good memories!! When you own it, the only rules are your own!!
Jon.
Congratulations on your purchase. You've already done the very first thing that I would have recommended by hiring your own independent inspector. I made the mistake on my first house of using the inspector that the realtor used and recommended. That was $300 for nothing, many things that should have been fixed were conveniently "missed" by the inspector. When I bought my current house, I brought in my own guy and got results.
Other than that, just make sure the house will fit your needs, not only now, but in 5 years, 10, as long as you plan to stay there. I lived in my first house for nine years, and we had outgrown it several years before that.
Too many things to sort out just a couple. But one piece of advice would be to figure what is important to you and make SURE you have it covered. For instance, with the first house my current wife and I bought - we planned to use part of the finished basement for a bedroom. There was no sign of water leaking or damage but I had it put in the contract that water did not seep into the basement. SURPRISE - the basement flooded. We sued the real estate and won. It came out in testimony that the previous owners had revealed to the RE company that the basement leaked but the RE kept that from us. Otherwise, my advise is to take out or modify your loan to a 15 yr. You'd be surprised how little (relatively) it increases the payment (the percentage rate is less and the escrow for taxes/insurance stays the same).
People may laugh at me, but that's ok. I laugh all the way to the bank.
hire your home inspector to inspect the house. don't use the real estate's home inspector!! because theres is working for them not you. and will overlook the major problems so they can sell the house. i found out the hard way.
also take pictures any damage and such when you do walk through with the realtor before you sign on the dotted line.
Last edited by jmerritt; 01-25-2014 at 11:25 PM.
Around here they wanted $800 for a inspection. I did my own on both houses I have bought and never regretted it. Like said previously, make sure you have the money for it. I spent over 40k renovating a house last year, it gets expensive quick.
make sure you have a BUYERS agent...ie a real estate person working for you...use all your own inspectors where they are looking out for you.....I can help you with anything else in PM....
I hold a real estate brokers license in the state of Georgia.
Charles
Do an inspection yourself. Inspectors dont always know everything or miss things.
I always make sure the basement doesnt leak and i go up into the attic to check for evidence of leaks their too.
Always check flood plain maps to see if the house is in a floodplain. Dont buy if it is.
make sure it has a huge garage or outbuilding for all your scrap lol
That sounds like a real estate broker. You don't need a real estate broker/agent, YOU NEED AN ATTORNEY. This is the largest purchase most people make. To not pay 200.00-300.00 to a real estate attorney, in order to have him read the contract is just insanity. Talk about penny wise pound foolish. These real estate brokers/agents are ONLY concerned with getting a deal done so they get their commission. Despite all their talk, they really can't help you with anything. If you haven't done so, have an attorney look over the paperwork PRIOR to closing so he can help protect you.
If you're in the city limits, visit the Building Inspection Dept. There should be inspection records that are accessible, and you may learn a lot. If the home is new construction, ask the inspector about the builder. Also check with Planning and Zoning Dept. while you're there. Find out what may be built next door to you. Especially if there are vacant lots. You don't want a bad neighbor, ie; big box retail, munitions factory, etc. Don't laugh. It happens. Somebody mentioned flood plain. Also check for easements, drainage issues and so forth. These are just a few of the things I would check before I sign on the dotted line. Oh, one other thing. If you can get the mineral rights, it may pay off. Big deal here in Texas. Best of luck to you. I know it's a big step.-OFAR
That is BULL****...and I take offense to it. I have NEVER sold anyone something they could not afford. It all depends on the state you are in...you NEED a broker to NEGOTIATE the contract and tell you what to look for. I don't care what house you buy, but I **** sure will help let you know when something is crap. The attorney (DEPENDING on the state) will work for either you, the seller, or the BANK...you need to know which. I don't know the state so I can't advise. Oh and BTW and decent real estate attorney will run you $500-1000 depending on the state.
Sorry but your dismissal of my very helpful comment is offensive there Phantom....
Two toilets.
If you have found and paid out of your pocket for the inspection it may not be worth the paper its written on, no matter how many certificates he has. I got burnt bad on a house that had a certified VA/FHA home inspector. Trust your own eyes.
Crawl into the attic, basement(crawl space), check window for proper sealing around them.
If you have a friend that does home improvement have him go with you. Pay him to tell you what it will take to fix this house, I feel certain he will find repairs that are needed. Don't have a friend check Angie's List.
Hire your own lawyer to represent you though out the entire purchase which means get one now. There is always a lawyer at every closing, he/she represents the seller and real estate agency NOT YOU.
i love owning a house but its still my largest purchase and took 15 years to pay off. Hint a 15 mortgage saves lots of money. Good luck Mikel
"Profit begins when you buy NOT when you sell." {quote passed down to me from a wise man}
Now go beat the copper out of something, Miked
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