So, as you probably already know, My husband and I are searching for a home to buy. We have found three candidates barely in our price range, and are setting up appointments to go see them.
Do you ladies have any advice on specific things to look for? Like, stuff that maybe you didn't see, but found out when you moved in? I dunno, anything, really. What is something I maybe haven't thought of?
*Send me a PM or join chat if you want to see the potential houses....maybe would give a better idea.
Re: Any advice on purchasing a home?
We looked at a house months ago where the basement was covered in mold- no way, no thanks!
Pretty much everything you listed- roof, appliances, land grading towards house- all of those things are wrong with the place I'm living now! I feel bad for the poor sucker to buy this place when FIL decides to sell..
I Sent you a PM
Question. Is it wise to ask for a credit/discount because of something that needs fixing since these houses are way at the top of my budget? Because they're really my only options and I don't want the seller to hate me/back out. I will already have to ask one of them to bring the price down like 3k because it's slightly over budget. Should I just pay asking and deal with fixes later when we get some money for it?
Believe me, I would LOVE to get a nice house that's 20k under my budget, but it's not an option. My budget is 80-100k depending on property taxes. 100 is if taxes are only like $300. Rare
This is exactly what we want to avoid. If we get a house, we will be trapped under student loans for a very very long time, and we would just barely have enough left each month to eat. How can anyone live their life like that! I'd rather suffer here for another year and be OK paying a mortgage then.
I don't know why my husband got my hopes all up saying we could afford to get a house now. He totally forgot to mention the part where we wouldn't have money for anything else. And he was trying to persuade me to look at even more expensive houses.... WTF is wrong with men?
A house doesn't sound practical under those circumstances, as disappointing and frustrating as that must be. Any house that cheap is going to require work, which requires money. But if a year can make a difference, that's great.
When you negotiate a price do your own research on comps and as long as your offer is not insulting, you'll get a counteroffer. You don't need to pay list unless there's a bidding war.