Which space is more likely to appeal to
potential home buyers today?
Not exact matches
In the San Jose / Silicon Valley area, for example,
potential buyers should expect to see a monthly payment increase of more than $ 700 if they waited a year to buy the same
home they were considering
today.
As
buyers who are in the process of purchasing our 12th
home, we have been in the real estate game for 23 years and actually have found realtors
today DO do something very important — they keep
potential buyers locked out of the
homes they're interested in until the listing agent decides they're in the mood to show it.
Let us help, whether you are a
potential home buyer or lender, contact us
today at 800.658.2823 or fill out this short form for more information.
In
today's real estate market, more
potential home buyers are deciding on whether or not they would actually want to become
home owners.
In
today's digital world, 80 percent of
buyers search for
homes online, which is why agents rely on websites, social media, and email to attract
potential buyers.
«While we often think of dream
homes as being big and bold, that's not what we're hearing from
potential buyers today.
As well, casting a wider net is just the reality of
today's market — there are already regular junkets of
potential Canadian and Western European
buyers to see
homes for sale in hard hit South Florida and Arizona.
A
buyer today is much more likely to reach out to an agent with questions about neighborhood crime rates, the property's projected future value, or even data on
potential rental return on the
home, while 20 years from now,
buyers are going to have even more specific questions about the properties they're viewing and neighborhoods they're considering.
Your pool of
potential buyers has shrunk significantly and so has the value of your
home (unless you are able to find someone who has the exact needs you have
today!).
SANTA CLARA, Calif., Jan. 25, 2018 / PRNewswire / — Ahead of next week's State of the Union address, realtor.com ®
today released its own «State of the Housing Union,» which shows the strong U.S. economy and unprecedented housing shortage pressuring
potential home buyers striving to attain the American Dream.
«Builders are reporting increasing demand for new
homes as inventories of foreclosed and distressed properties begin to shrink in markets across the country,» says NAHB Chairman Barry Rutenberg, a
home builder from Gainesville, Fla. «In view of the tightening supply and other improving conditions, many
potential buyers who were on the fence are now motivated to move forward with a purchase in order to take advantage of
today's favorable prices and interest rates.»
As we continue to adapt to the «new normal» and make our way through
today's challenging market,
home inspections are becoming more prevalent, whether they're performed once a
potential buyer has made an offer on the
home or to lay the groundwork for future negotiations before the
home is even listed.
Purchasing a
home right now could help
potential buyers save more than $ 200,000 over the next 30 years, according to the inaugural Opportunity Cost Report released
today by realtor.com.
And before that happens,
potential home buyers would do well to capitalize on the
today's record - low rates.