Been trying to buy a house because my rent is going up(and it will continue to do so) and a mortgage would be around the same as what my rent will become in a few years anyway so I figure I might as well build equity and have a house for my family.

Thing is the current housing market is nuts. Houses are put on sale with strict deadlines of “accepting all offers due 12pm 5 days from now” creating a false sense of urgency and to top is off the process is super opaque. You dont know what other people are offering so unlike an actual auction you cant start low and hopefully get a good value. Nope it’s a black box and the asking price isnt of any help because that was just an advertising tactic to get more people to look at the house.

So you have to do research based on past history of other homes sold in the area of the same type recently and then place a competitive bid based on that. Of course everyone else is also doing that so you have to make your bid “competitive” and give a little more. How much more is hard to say and you only really get the one bid. So 12 pm comes along and the anticipation in your stomach is insane because this could be it you could be a homeowner and you did put in a competitive bid, and then sometime between immediately and just before bed you get a message saying they went with another offer.

ITS SO DAMN FRUSTRATING! Houses that I bid $30,000 over asking price and someone still swooped in and bid even more. And of course since the process is a black box you dont get told what bid beat you out or what the other bids were(dont want the 2nd place bid to decrease their bid in the event the 1st place falls through). You’ll find out eventual final sale price a few months from now when everything finishes closing. I imagine the issue is other people got frustrated with the game over the last few months and now if they see a house thats ok they go all in with their max offer instead of a smart offer.

Oh and the market is limited, but somehow out of sheer coincidence after one round of sales is done the realtors manage to find another round of homes to put on the market. I’m convinced the realtors are limiting the supply on purpose and letting homes trickle in because the ACT NOW PUT IN THE BEST OFFER OVER ASKING tactic probably doesnt work as well if there are more than a handful of homes for sale at a time.

Its so frustrating I just want a house to live in and raise my soon to be born child, and Im willing to pay you what you’re asking for it! The worst part is the housing market in my area shot up a lot over the years. So these people playing bid wars are making 100k profit AT LEAST for a house they bought just 5 years ago! And then theres the old people who bought the house for pretty much nothing 30+ years ago

Sorry for my long wall of text rant

  • Linuturk@lemmy.onitato.com
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    For a whole new level of frustration, try to research any HOA before you buy a house. Their rules aren’t typically disclosed until after you buy the house put in your offer and enter escrow.

    • UsernameLost
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      The seller is required to provide a package with all HOA bylaws within 5 days of accepting an offer, at least in my state. If you disagree with anything in the HOA rules (or any other reason as long as the HOA is cited as the reason), you can back out of the sale with no earnest money forfeited.

      • Linuturk@lemmy.onitato.com
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        Yeah I miss remembered my experience. I still think an offer and escrow is too far in the process before the rules are disclosed.

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          I agree. Our HOA has a website with unofficial copies of the bylaws. After reading those and driving around the neighborhood, it was pretty obvious that they didn’t enforce much of it outside of keeping trash off the lawn. Talked to a few people that lived in the neighborhood to confirm, and it’s reasonable enough as far as HOAs go. Still not my preference, but it’ll do for 10-15 years

    • HumbleFlamingo@beehaw.org
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      I get everyone hates HOAs, but this is flat wrong. HOA rules are material facts about the property, they must be disclosed before buying. They will be disclosed in escrow, if not earlier. When they are disclosed, read them over and bail if you don’t like them or ask for a price reduction.

      • Linuturk@lemmy.onitato.com
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        You are correct. What I don’t like is you have to put in an offer on a house and get that far before you see the rules.

  • UsernameLost
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    Stick to a firm budget, and don’t go over it. We had a firm ceiling of $400k, looked at around 40 houses, and put in 7 offers before ours was accepted. It was listed for $375k, made an offer for $385k with a 24 hour expiration. Appraisal came back at $412k. We closed about 6 months ago, and it took us 7 months of looking at multiple houses every week to get to it. We were also using a VA loan, which turned some sellers off due to the added time for the VA appraisal and potential to either force them to fix things that aren’t an issue for most people, or back out of the contract.

    My wife was pregnant at the time (and miscarried two months later), so I get the added pressure of trying to find something NOW. Don’t dig yourself into a hole that you can’t climb out of for thirty years because of that pressure.

    We got lucky with this one because the previous owners were going through a nasty divorce. I get the frustration, and it was disheartening as fuck constantly being outbid, especially after you like a house enough to tie yourself to it for decades. Our realtor was great, and knew most of the agents in the area, so he was able to get us some inside info on a few of the houses we looked at. If your agent isn’t being transparent with you, find a different one.

    Treat the search as a business transaction. You have a list of criteria, you’re reviewing options within your budget that meet the highest number of your needs. If it doesn’t meet your nonnegotiable criteria, don’t bid. The most important one of those criteria should be that you like the house. Have a checklist to run down in your walkthrough (roof, crawlspace, foundation, visible water damage, age of HVAC and major appliances that will convey, etc), and try to weed out as many major issues as you can before paying for an inspection.

    It’s tedious, extremely frustrating, and disheartening. Eventually, you’ll find one. You may have to compromise on some things, and it’s ok to gradually improve the house after you buy it. Just make sure the basics are solid. Also, allocate way more time for painting than you think it’ll take, especially if you’re doing it without help. Everything will take longer than you think, be patient with yourself.

    Be stubborn as fuck during this process, and be willing to walk away. I get that you want to get out of a lease (I rented for years, and it sucks compared to owning), but once most sellers are motivated to get shit done once they’re under contact just as much as you are. They don’t want to start the process over again either, especially because if a major issue is uncovered during an inspection, they are legally required to disclose it (my realtor threatened their agent with this fact over some mold in our crawlspace when the seller wanted to walk away instead of fixing it. He told them that he has access to their system and would personally make sure the next offer received a copy of the inspection report and would report the agent if they didn’t disclose it).

    • Very_Bad_Janet@kbin.social
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      This was great advice. Re:

      Have a checklist to run down in your walkthrough (roof, crawlspace, foundation, visible water damage, age of HVAC and major appliances that will convey, etc), and try to weed out as many major issues as you can before paying for an inspection.

      I’d add to check out all of the mechanicals and find out when they were installed and last serviced. Usually mechanicals have an 8-12 year lifespan. Also find out when the roof was installed. These are pricey items to replace when you move in, so you really don’t want to have to do that right away.

      Also, check out a flood map for the areas you are planning to buy in and locate the houses you are interested in on the map. (This was one of the deciding factors for buying our house). Also, see if the land surrounding the house slopes towards or away from the house (obviously, sloping away is preferable).

      • UsernameLost
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        Absolutely, great points. If possible, go check the house out when it’s raining. Our first visit was during a massive storm, and we were able to verify that there was proper drainage/no water intrusion (crawlspace mold was from some mulch covering a crawlspace vent and some subsequent seeping).

        Our roof was original, 20ish years old, and had some minor damage. No leaks or evidence of previous leaks, but we had it replaced a few months after moving in before it became a problem. We knew about it ahead of time and could budget accordingly, and could take the time to shop around for a decent price from a reputable company.

        Side note: GO IN THE CRAWLSPACE OF EVERY HOUSE YOU LOOK AT. We waved off of at least a dozen houses because there were massive issues that I found in the crawlspaces (standing water, major cracks, infestations, temporary jacks holding up the house, you name it). Everything else can be perfect, but if the foundation is fucked, so is the house. Don’t waste money on an inspection if you see major issues. If you can see it with an untrained eye, it’s already expensive.

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      Thanks for the kind words and advice! My wife is pregnant as well which was part of why we started later in the season. Our old apartment rent used to be super favorable, but a change in policy caused our landlords to start upping rent to make yet more monies.

      We have been setting a firm ceiling for ourselves based on budget as well and going through things. We’ve got an expected hopeful ceiling of 230ish(give or take depending on home) for what we hope to spend and a cap of $250k if the house is super updated(in a tasteful welldone way) and we can expect few repairs in the near future. I can only hope that as august pushes on that we weed out the people desperate to throw too much money down before school starts and that as the season slows sellers will be more willing to give to sell quickly.

      Unfortunately the way things are I suspect people are more likely to just wait until next year unless they really gotta move.

      • UsernameLost
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        Good luck man, hope you find something soon! Inventory will probably drop next month, but like you said, most people aren’t going to move right after school starts, so competition should be lower.

      • UsernameLost
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        Definitely. We still put about 10% down, and could have done 20%, but it would’ve drained our savings and kept us from replacing the roof and some aging appliances. Interest rate was close to market average, slightly below, but definitely put home ownership within reach for us

          • UsernameLost
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            Mainly put some down to lower the monthly payment/total amount of interest on the loan

            • Ejh3k@midwest.social
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              I get that. And we had been planning to save up for a deposit, but we were a couple years away from it. But she very quickly caught on to what we could do and jumped at it. At the time she was freshly divorced and remarried, and he ex had tanked her credit and depleted her funds, and I didnt earn much. Our financials have gotten much better, and we both contribute our fair shares to the household. We won’t ever miss a payment or anything. And we live in a semi-rural community, so for what our house is, we are doing very well.

              • UsernameLost
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                Makes perfect sense. We were fortunate enough to be able to live well below our means at my last duty station and save a lot of money. Glad you’re doing well!

  • nothingcorporate@lemmy.today
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    1 year ago

    Until the US passes laws designed to make the main purpose of homes to be housing, and not just profit for the already rich, millennials, Gen Z, and anyone else not already house-rich, will forever be locked out and forced to pay their hard earned wages to the rich just for the luxury of not being homeless.

    • HTTP_404_NotFound@lemmyonline.com
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      Eh, it’s not about people trying to get rich…

      There just literally, is a huge shortage of housing right now. Pre-covid, I could easily find 100-200 houses for sale, near my small town.

      Now? There are hardly 20 houses for sale at a given time.

      Everyone is looking to rent/buy, but, there is hardly anything for sale/rent.

      When COVID hit, builders basically stopped building houses. But- people didn’t stop reproducing.

      • Barry Zuckerkorn@beehaw.org
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        When COVID hit, builders basically stopped building houses. But- people didn’t stop reproducing.

        That’s basically a drop in the bucket, as they started building up again pretty quickly.

        The real problem goes back further than that. Builders really slowed down in 2008 and never really picked it back up. Meanwhile, construction costs have soared (both labor and materials), so a lot of construction starts have gotten delayed as the lag between housing starts versus housing completions started to stretch much longer than the historical average. We’ve got basically 14 years of backlog against the expected household formation (kids becoming adults and moving out), while also shifting economic activity even more urban, with regional migration trends towards the Sun Belt. That has led to some areas deepening their economic malaise (certain rural and small town areas, especially in the Midwest and Appalachia), while white-hot housing markets elsewhere completely wreck prices for new buyers.

        Meanwhile, policy has a huge role to play, too. The difficulty building in some cities/states prevents some homes from ever coming on the market, while a growing population competes for a fixed number of homes. Other more subtle policy decisions around property tax rates (especially those favoring incumbent homeowners getting grandfathered into old rates) prevent those homes from going on the market even when the home no longer fits that homeowner’s needs (empty nesters, etc.).

        Plus macroeconomic policy of trying to juice the economy since the 2008 recession led to a sustained period of low interest rates, and now incumbent homeowners have locked in interest rates that make it irrational to sell, so those homes stay off the market, too.

        We’re in a weird place right now, where there are a lot of homes in existence, but not a lot that are actually being listed for sale.

        • HTTP_404_NotFound@lemmyonline.com
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          incumbent homeowners have locked in interest rates that make it irrational to sell, so those homes stay off the market, too.

          That is the exact reason I want to move, and build… but, am not doing so. My current interest rate is under 2%. If I were to get a new mortgage, it would cost me a LOT of money due to the current interest rates… Especially when I want to buy a house worth quite a bit more than my current home.

      • NightOwl@lemmy.one
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        Interest rates probably plays a role with people having locked up mortgages at 2-3% and then seeing that if they sell and looked for a new home it’d be at like 6%.

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    You can put in escalating offers when you place your bid. Say you want to pay 400k, but you are willing to go up 500k to get the house. Your realtor writes up the offer with the escalation listed. “Our offer is 400k, but we will escalate past any bid you can verify by 10k, up to 500k.”

    We did this to buy our house. We got close to, but not up to, our limit.

    • wearebeautiful@beehaw.org
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      Yes, it’s called an escalation clause. I have been in the same heart-wrenching process for the last year. I closed on my home a week ago, and we had an escalation clause.

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    For another level of frustration, you are also competing with international buyers who may find your local market cheap investments. There are legit overseas organizations that advertises to rich people to buy real estate, they work with equally legit local real estate agents to gain access to these “easy” clients.

    You the local resident is disadvantaged as are the local real estate agents. But it’s great for these overseas client. But the end result is what you see, rising housing prices that doesn’t make sense to local residents

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      Thankfully my rusty area isnt on their radar just yet. There are a lot of investment companies and of course absentee wannabee landlords from NYC/long island who buy up properties around here though.

    • tangentism@beehaw.org
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      This is one of the main issues with all new builds in London.

      There’s plenty of places going up but they’re all being sold to overseas investors as buy to let and do it keeps making rents exorbitant for locals.

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    In a seller’s market, you need to work backwards… Instead of spending a lot of time finding and falling in love with the house you want, you put in offers, sight-unseen, on any and all homes that meet your general criteria. Include a 10-day inspection contingency and a financing contingency.

    Only when a seller accepts your initial offer do you actually view (“inspect”) the property. If you don’t love it after your “inspection”, you exercise your contingency and walk away.

      • BrainisfineIthink@lemmy.one
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        The advice every financer/realtor will give you is:

        If you’re asked to waive the inspection, walk away and don’t look back. There’s always a reason they want you to skip it.

        Even flippers in my area won’t waive an inspection without lowering their offer significantly.

        • The Doctor@beehaw.org
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          The ones that do are telegraphing what they actually plan on doing: Razing the house, because the property is worth more.

        • UsernameLost
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          Exactly. Waiving an inspection is the single worst thing you can do while buying a house. Even if you’re a contractor or inspector, having an unbiased third party look at the house without the pressure you’re under can do nothing but positive things for you. Even if you’re waiving repairs or concessions, it gives you a complete picture of what issues exist (and there are always issues, even in new construction), which allows you to paint a realistic picture of what the house will cost you.

      • Scrubbles@poptalk.scrubbles.tech
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        NEVER DO. Everyone will try to convince you to waive it, DO NOT. Even my realtor told me I should waive it on my current house and I told her there’s no way I’m buying a house without one an inspection. She was like “Well, I guess we could have one done, but it’d have to be early tomorrow at like 7am…” and I was like “Great, I’ll be there!”

    • UsernameLost
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      I get where you’re coming from, but sight unseen in a sellers market is a terrible idea. I commented above about the details of my experience, but there are so many shitty houses with major problems that are evident the second you walk into them. This approach ties up earnest money and can potentially prevent you from being able to jump on a good house.

      • greenskye@beehaw.org
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        Yep. We ran into this issue and we didn’t even do it sight unseen, we were just moving so fast that we got sloppy. It’s hard to continue to be diligent after 30+ failed bids. Ended up with a bid for a house that needed significant and immediate repairs that we couldn’t afford. Ended up walking away and losing our earnest money instead of keeping the house, but we’re much happier for it.

        Our budget also continually increased throughout our search. The same houses we were bidding on at the start increased by 50k just in the couple of months spent searching. We only found inventory once we broke into not a starter home budget category. This has resulted in us being pretty house poor to start, but ultimately we plan to stay here for 20+ years so it hasn’t mattered after those lean first few years.

      • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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        Earnest money is customary, not mandatory. You can tell the seller’s agent you’re open to the inclusion of earnest money in their counter offer. Alternatively, you can specify that the earnest money be held by the buyer’s agent rather than the seller or escrow agent.

        Your earnest money also binds the seller. They can’t accept a better offer coming in later while they are under contract with you. I have seen sellers double the buyer’s earnest money so they can accept a significantly higher offer coming in later from another buyer.

        In a seller’s market, the buyer needs to get into the negotiation phase as soon as possible. Use inspection contingencies for a cooling-off period.

    • 1993_toyota_camry@beehaw.org
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      It probably depends on your area, but where I’m at there are no sale conditions. If you put conditional on home inspection, you just got rejected.

      • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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        Then you’re paying an extremely high premium to buy in that area. You’re almost certainly trying to buy at the peak of the market in that area.

        I would divide the average cost of the house I want by my annual pay, and use that number to go shopping for a job in another area. Even taking a fairly steep pay cut, you’ll have a higher lifestyle elsewhere.

        Look at a state whose population has declined, or lagged behind the national average. Generally speaking, those states will likely be in the trough of their housing cycles, and will likely peak when you’re ready to sell.

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      , you put in offers, sight-unseen, on any and all homes that meet your general criteria

      yeah this is absolutely a nogo for me. They all have deadlines anyway and I live around here so it’s not like it costs me anything to schedule an appointment to see the place or pop over during an open house. Also offers are all accepted at the same time so they’ll just pass if theres a 10 day spiff on it, and in my state you have to sign some formal paperwork to make a deal. This implies a covenant of good faith, so I dont really know the legality of singing and sending out a bunch at once but I suspect it’s dubious(which sucks because they get the option to choose from multiples)

      Housing stock in my area is old for the US and these 100 year old homes can range from exactly what you see in the pictures to dangerously obsolete or just bad. The charming woodwork and hardwood floors photograph well and then IRL they areslanted, broken, there’s mysterious smells, and the basement is a disaster zone.

      Theres also just the issue of, I’m not trying to fall in love with “the perfect house”. I will make it a home and update, and paint, and replace cabinets and plant gardens, I know I can make it my own. But I also plan on living here and raising a family for the next few years and there dealbreakers. It’s a lot like taking a car for a test drive before buying it. You dont really know how it feels to drive or how enjoyable it is or how comfortable it is, or how the plastics on the dash feel until you actually get inside of it.

      But yeah otherwise I will never waive inspection.

      • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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        Also offers are all accepted at the same time

        That is rarely the case, and the only real reason to wait in a seller’s market.

        and in my state you have to sign some formal paperwork to make a deal. This implies a covenant of good faith, so I dont really know the legality of singing and sending out a bunch at once

        The “legality” of doing it is explicitly defined in the offer. The offer you made to the seller explicitly includes the right to withdraw from the deal if it doesn’t meet your expectations. That is the express purpose for the contingencies.

        There is potentially an ethical issue, if this negotiation strategy is so far out of the norm that it is completely unexpected, unreasonable, and causes some sort of harm to the seller.

        But, I would argue that this practice benefits the seller, in that they can actually consider your higher offer, rather than accepting a lower, earlier offer while you’re still waiting for your viewing appointment.

        Even if you decide not to move forward, it is typical in a seller’s market to receive numerous “backup” offers; they can proceed with another offer as soon as you back out.

        In a seller’s market, and assuming you aren’t introducing unnecessary delays, I wouldn’t call this unethical. It’s simply negotiation.

  • whatisallthis@lemm.ee
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    Yeah I bought a house 5 years ago and Zillow says it’s worth $100k more now. If I was looking for a home right now I couldn’t afford the one I’m living in. In the last 5 years I make $35k more than I did then but it still wouldn’t be enough to buy this house.

    Back when I bought my house is was considered aggressive to offer their full asking price, which is what I did.

    The whole system is beyond broken at this point.

  • shortwavesurfer@monero.town
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    Wait. With the interest rates as high as they are if you can give it a year or so the market will cool rapidly. All those people bidding way over the value are taking on way more debt than they can afford and once job losses start increasing we are going to see another 2008ish crash.

    • Overzeetop@beehaw.org
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      My expectation is that high(-ish) interest rates will not lower prices; it will lock more people into their houses - chaining them with 2-3% mortgage rates so that they can’t move up (since going from 2%-7% is something like a 40-50% increase in monthly payment). That will lower supply or, in hot areas, keep supply artificially low. Even for people who have to move, it becomes enticing (if financially feasibly) to keep the property as a rental as the mortgage with a low rate is almost certainly less than what you can command on the rental market. Even if you pay 10% to an agency and put aside another 10-20% for maintenance and replacement reserve, you can still break even on the mortgage, essentially having someone else pay off your loan while you keep the asset.

      There won’t be a bust like there was in '09 when everyone was forced to sell or be foreclosed. Ridiculously hot areas will fall back a small amount, but for the most part we’ll see a flattening of value increase over the next 7-10 years, with tight supply propping up values more than other inflationary pressures. By then we’ll be ready for another bubble. Younger Millennials and pretty much all of all of Gen Z are fuckd.

    • Lemmylaugh
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      People have been saying this for decades though

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      I was planning on doing this and waiting to see what next year brings, but with my rent increasing and then increasing again it felt like a good time to get out. If Im going to be paying this much I’d rather it go to my own mortgage. Plus those higher interest rates would impact me too, and since my area was historically undervalued the places I want to live are only going to go up in price, even if it is less competitive.

      • nieceandtows@programming.dev
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        Yeah we knew someone who couldn’t get approved for a loan because ‘they wouldn’t be able to afford to pay the mortgage’ so they’re still renting, paying close to double as rent.

        • elouboub@kbin.social
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          And yet, come voting time, a bunch of people like this are either absent or voting “get the immigrants out” aka “get the less fortunate out”. Not saying it’s what your someone is doing, but it’s common.

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        The idea that prices only go up is exactly what creates bubbles. I would be careful with that assumption. I do believe that governments will go to great lengths to prop up the value of homes as it has done in the past, but birthrates are declining in the developed world.

        Also, when you get a mortgage, it takes years of paying interest before you start to make a dent in the principal and build equity. You’re paying mostly interest until about 13 years into a 30 year loan. The bank always gets paid first.

        • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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          1 year ago

          Unfortunately it’s no bubble. My area popped 60 years ago and it’s only just recently started very slowly turning around. Climate change combined with good old bones are making the area a lot more appealing over time and for the first time in a long time we’ve started gaining population again. I can see the market slowing and the bidding wars stopping if the economy slows up, but it would take an absolute catastrophe to get prices to go down again.

          • henfredemars@infosec.pub
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            1 year ago

            it would take an absolute catastrophe to get prices to go down again

            I fear you are correct. While I believe the market is overvalued, I don’t see a correction coming without extreme fallout. People are struggling and for many their home is their life savings.

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      1 year ago

      Its not even firms where Im from. A good chunk of the homes Im looking at were individual owned or occupied, I just think the realtors in the area have a nonaggression treaty to make as much money as possible. Obviously the supply cant be that big to start with if theyre doing this but the way these houses come and go is definitely convenient.

      • Pseu@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        And the percentage of homes for sale is quite small compared to the total number of homes. So if investors are buying even a few percent of the homes, that can still be most of the homes that are for sale.

      • HumbleFlamingo@beehaw.org
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        1 year ago

        Realtors get paid when they sell a house, but it’s only 2.5%-3.0% of the sale price. Getting someone to pay an extra 10% on a house nets them an additional 0.25%-0.3%, it’s chump change to them. Selling a one million dollar home for $1.1 million nets them $27,500. Selling 2 one million dollar homes for $900k nets them $45,000.

        • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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          1 year ago

          The realtors in the area Im looking at sure as heck arent representing the 1.1 million dollar homes and 3% out of that 10% or more increase can get you close to or over an extra $1,000.

          In addition to that its not even just about a 10% increase it’s about creating a sense of urgency and scarcity and as a result inflating prices above 10%. It’s can’t just be coincidence that the fully renovated modernized variants of the house in an area seem to only pop up once a week after the other one goes off market.

          Maybe I’m assigning more credit to them than they deserve, but they do control the rate of listings and even if they arent working together if you see something that you know will be off market by monday afternoon, it’s just good strategy to wait until then to do it.

          Of course the supply cant be that big to begin with for this strategy to make sense, but it is a way of making the issue worse.

  • Anticorp
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    1 year ago

    Yeah, it’s fucking depressing. At least you guys still have reasonably priced houses. House values have tripled here in the last decade. Some areas have doubled just in the last 2 years. Owners are sitting on $700,000.00+ in equity. Rental owners are making an entire average income just because they happened to buy a house before we entered the bizarro timeline. My landlord owns 3 houses, 2 that she’s renting. She’s getting about $70,000 per year in equity from renters. Her mortgages are under $12,000 per year on each house. It must be nice to be just a few years older, or have become stable in your career just a few years earlier, and get rewarded with two million fucking dollars in make-believe house money. What’s even more frustrating is knowing this is an unsustainable bubble that will eventually come crashing down. We’ve been taking it easy for a few years hoping some sanity would return to the market, but it just keeps going up. So that’s a constant fear while looking, that it’ll all come crashing down right after we finally buy something, and we’ll be left holding the bag while the wealthy go find some other market to plunder.

  • SatanicNotMessianic
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    1 year ago

    I’m not sure what market you’re in or what your budget is, but the pains that you’re talking about (other than the actual price of the houses) can be mitigated by working with a competent realtor. You want someone who both knows that particular market and also knows how to identify comparable sales. That means knowing the neighborhoods you’re looking at as well as prices and trends.

    I’m not a realtor, but I did buy a house fairly recently in an extremely hot market. People here will bid $300k over asking and waive all contingencies. That’s just the nature of the market right now - at least in some areas.

    Basically, look at the asking price but use something like redfin or zillow to get their estimation of what the selling price of the house will be. The sites will also (try) to show you comparable houses. The sites tend to err on the high side with estimated values, but if you’re not in a market that’s open to bargain hunters it will be close.

    It’s a big step - probably bigger than it should be. I believe that the majority of American families have the majority of their net worth invested in their house.

    Closed bidding is how it’s always worked, though. Generally, the people selling the house will pick the top two or three offers and make a counter-offer or otherwise solicit additional offers. When a market is hot, they can additionally push for a quick closing. As a rule of thumb, you’ll probably spend less for houses that have been on the market for a while, but you can likely expect the same kind of issue when it comes time to sell it. If you buy in a desirable market where houses sell within a few weeks, you’ll again probably see that kind of thing when you sell. Bargain hunting in real estate - waiting for the chance to get a smart offer approved - can lead to you being frozen out - or worse, getting taken for a ride that more informed buyers are staying away from. It can be like buying stocks in that way, except with hundreds of thousands to millions on the line with a single investment.

    Anyway, find a realtor you can trust - possibly through a referral. Ask around at work or something if none of your friends has someone. It makes the process a lot smoother. This depends on the state, but the seller may pay the realtor’s commission, and in any case should be considered part of the cost of buying a house.

  • Muller@startrek.website
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    1 year ago

    I just went through this over the 3 years of the pandemic. Saw maybe 250 houses. Put bids on at least 8. It’s absolutely insane and I can’t see how it can continue.

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      Unfortunately covid taught the real estate industry in my historically undervalued area how to game the system. Its hard to complain because even “overpaying” these houses are less than some other regions in the sate, but they definitely know how to make it a frantic process that takes away all power from the people buying.

      Im certain theyre drip feeding the supply too in order to make the supply even more limited.

    • Rivalarrival@lemmy.today
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      1 year ago

      In a seller’s market, you have to reverse the process. Instead of viewing a dozen houses then bidding on the one you fell in love with, you want to put in a dozen offers, then view only those homes where the seller accepts or counters.

      Your offers should include a 10-day inspection contingency. This is where you actually view the home. If you don’t fall in love with it in that 10-day period, you exercise your contingency and either renegotiate a counter offer or walk away.

  • HumbleFlamingo@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    Houses that I bid $30,000 over asking price and someone still swooped in and bid even more.

    Asking price is such a lie. But also keep in mind that it’s not just about price, it’s also about contingencies. Hyperbole but if I have 2 offers, one is $450k all cash no inspection, and the other is $550k contingent on their cat liking it, I know which I’m going with. That being said DO NOT waive the inspection. Unless you’re a contractor who can handle anything that goes wrong, you don’t want to risk it. You could get a great house, or you could buy a money pit.

    It’s crazy, I got my offer accepted because their realtor liked my realtor better than the others. They talked to my realtor on the side, said they had another offer for 4% more than ours but didn’t like the other realtor and if we met it they’d accept with no counter.

    • lemillionsocks@beehaw.orgOP
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      Only contingency I offer is inspection and I’d rather spend an eternity looking than risk not having an inspection done. I’m handier than average, but there are some construction/contractor level things that I am just not capable of handling. Thankfully the number of people waiving inspections has dropped quite a bit, but theyre still out there ruining it for the rest of us.

  • HTTP_404_NotFound@lemmyonline.com
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    1 year ago

    Ya know…

    Around a decade ago, I picked up my house for around 110k USD. Nothing fancy, a nice little house, with a decent amount of room inside and outside.

    These days, the exact same house is worth over double that. Supposedly, its worth 200k.

    Now, that sounds absolutely fantastic, except for- the process to build my dream house, went from costing 200k, to nearly 500k now.

    Guess, i’ll be stuck in my now tiny house (kids. lots of kids)… until the damn housing market returns to somewhat normal.

  • nieceandtows@programming.dev
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    1 year ago

    I thought the housing market was crazy in 2020, so waited till 2021. I understood what crazy really meant in 2021 but ended up buying a house at the peak of the crazy market in 2021. Or so I thought. It was crazy in 2022, and it’s still crazy in 2023. What the fuck is going on?! At least I managed to buy before the crazy interest rates came by (2.875). I’m making calculations, and at the current mortgage rates, even if I buy a house for 100k less, I would still be paying more per month.