Columbus Ohio real estate

The house you fell in love with today...

 

The house you fell in love with today...

This is a Re-Blog of a post written by Marcie Sandalow for buyers in her market.

"Good houses don't stick around.  At least, not in this local market. "

Sometimes in our market GOOD houses do stick around  but you are NOT the only buyer looking at it. I thought Pre-Inspections" was common in our market.

Thanks to Marcie for writing the post and allowing it to be Re-Blogged!

 

Via Marcie Sandalow - Evers & Co. Real Estate, Inc. DC/MD ( Evers & Company Real Estate, Inc. ):

The house you fell in love with today...  

broken heartedYou hear it all the time... "Oh- we made an offer on a great house, but we didn't get it."  The reasons can run the gamut:

  • We were overbid.
  • Our price was too low/theirs was too high,  and in the end we couldn't make it work.
  • The inspection came up with too many "items".
  • (and, my personal favorite) We thought about it for too long and it was gone before we were even able to present the offer...

We real estate agents have a saying:  "The house you fell in love with today, thought about tonight, and decided to write an offer on tomorrow....someone else saw yesterday."

Looking for a house can be a challenge.  Really!  Especially when you are just starting out.  You're trying to get a grasp on the pricing, your wish list, the market (that week/month/year), etc.  And while all of this is coming together, the perfect house might slip through your fingers.  Ugly, but it happens. 

Things you can do to take control of the situation:

  • Fine tune your wish list.  Figure out what is going to work for you, and what might be a deal killer.  Allow yourself a little flexibility.  Nothing is going to be absolutely perfect. 
  • If the bank tells you that you need to sell your current house before buying the next, don't assume the folks with the new house are going to be happy with a home sale contingency.  Consider putting your current place on the market before shopping yourself.
  • Get your financing in order.  Make sure you are approved for a bank loan prior to looking.  And be sure to check in with the bank on a regular basis to see if they have made any changes.  The  new loan program that was just introduced might allow you to buy something previously out of your range.  Similarly, that new car you just bought on a whim might make it difficult to stretch.  Keep it current and get it in writing.
  • Escalation Clauses and Pre-inspections.  These items might be necessary if there is competition.  Escalation clauses allow you to top the best offer up to a specific cap (that you decide).  Pre-inspections allow you to head into a competitive situation with your eyes wide open, and eliminate the home inspection contingency.  Cat-nip for sellers.
  • Know the market.  Your real estate agent can provide you with up-to-date comparable sales.  This will help you arrive at an appropriate offer price and help set boundaries.
  • And perhaps the most important advice I can offer you is this:  Try not to over-think it.  Be prepared to jump in and make an offer.  Especially if you like it.  Good houses don't stick around.  At least, not in this local market. 

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Marcie Sandalow is a realtor with Evers & Company Real Estate, Inc. in Chevy Chase, DC.   
With 10+ years in the business, and a sharp understanding of her client's needs, she serves Buyers and Sellers
in and around Bethesda, Chevy Chase, Washington, DC, Kensington, Rockville, Silver Spring and Takoma Park. 

E-mail:  marcie@bccdcrealestate.com
Cell:  301/758-4894

Website:  BCCDCRealEstate.com

Search the MLS

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

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Central Ohio Open House Advice

Real Living Open House e-Card

Real Living's Advice to Buyers on Open Houses includes this question:  

Q: I've heard that visiting an open house without my buyer's agent means s/he can't represent me in my home purchase. Is that true?

A: Perhaps.

Understand that Real Living is a company with brokerages from the east coast to the west coast and one size does not fit all.  Laws vary state to state and customs vary market to market.

Maybe rather than "Perhaps" it should be "Depends."   Real Living goes on to say (I corrected the spelling) of Realtor:

"Real estate rules of representation may prohibit you from being represented by your buyer's agent, under certain circumstances, such as, if you visit an open house without your agent or without immediately disclosing that a Realtor is representing you. Since your agent knows your particular set of circumstances, and is working to represent your interests, it's best to arrange your home viewings with your agent. Doing so should not only save you time, but it will also ensure your interests are protected."

Depends on our agency relationship and what you are looking for...

Resale

I tell clients you are relatively safe visiting Open Houses on your own.  There is NOT a threshold rule... you aren't married to the person who carries you over the threshold. 

You have the right to representation.  If the person at the open house is the listing agent, they have a fiduciary responsibility to the seller.  If they are willing to work with you as a disclosed dual agent they don't represent you or the seller in the transaction.

If we have a buyer agency agreement you should be OK. You should still have representation in the purchase of the home. 

We can schedule an appointment to see the home together too, before or after the open house.

New Construction  

This can be a different matter.  Let's try to visit together, or set it up to make sure you will not lose your right to representation. 

Like I said "Depends"

 

Central Ohio Open Houses Presented By Maueeen McCabe - Real Living HER Worthington

Free Online Tools to Find your Columbus Ohio Home

Creeping Real Estate Acronyms  & a glossary of R. E. Terms

The image is a Real Living e-Card.

Edit September 2011  due to changes in Real Living websites I broke the top link. 

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

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Doing "The Bump" in Columbus real estate

Bruno Girin's Disco Ball

"Bumping" someone is a real estate term in Central Ohio.

"The Bump" was a dance in the 1970's... in the era of disco...  "The Hustle"  and "The Funky Chicken" are a couple of other 70's Disco Dances...

I wanted to find a YouTube dance video to illustrate the dance "The Bump..." but the related videos on YouTube are downright scary...

In Central Ohio you as a buyer if you do not have a house to sell can "bump" a contract that is contingent on the sale of a home.  Other parts of the country they use different terminology. I think someplaces they use  the term "Kick Out Clause."

We bump, they kick.

If a property is in contract (another buyer has entered into a contract with the seller) there is nothing you can do to "bump" that contract, unless there is a contingency with an escape clause.  If the present contract on the property is contingent on the sale of a home you may be able to "bump" the contract. 

If you do not have a home to sell, you can "bump" the contract.

Bumping a contract makes me think of slang for killing someone gangster style... "bumping them off."  You kill off the other buyers contract by submitting a non contingent offer.

No rhythm or dance moves required.

 

First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit

Central Ohio Round Table Closing

Buying a Home it's about Time

 

Search Central Ohio Homes -   Maureen McCabe -  614-388-8249 - Real Living HER

*The 1970's disco dance, "The Bump" should not be confused with "bump and grind" which is a whole 'nother matter.

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Photo Credit: the photo of the disco ball is from Bruno Girin's photo stream

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

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Buying a home, it's about time

Buying a home is all about timing                                                                          

Finding that home is all about timing

Purchasing the home is all about timing - the *CBR real estate purchase contract is about timeClock in downtown Columbus

  • How long is that offer open to the seller. 
  • How soon you will close on the home. 
  • When you will have that pre-approval letter. 
  • When you will have your financing appproved. 
  • When you will do any inspections you feel are necessary before closing on the home. 
  • The drop dead time that the seller is going to know that you have released the inspection contingency in your contract after you and the seller have negotiated any repairs. 
  • When you will close on the home
  • When you will take possession of the home

*the Columbus Board of Realtors purchase contract

Financing the home is about timing too...

  • How long is that mortgage program available for?
  • What date does this change in the loan program go into effect
  • How long is your loan locked for?
  • How long is that pre-approval the lender you wrote good for?
  • How long will it take your lender to perform?

First Time Home Buyer Tax Credit  - ends December 1,  2009

No time to waste on Short Sales; Buy Something You Can Close in 30 Days!

Search Central Ohio Homes -   Maureen McCabe* -  614-388-8249 - Real Living HER Worthington

 

EDIT December 2011 *the link to search on my website on HER was going to the Real Living HER site.  I am hesitant to use the link that would take you directly to the home search on my Real Living HER site, that eventually it will go to a page that is not mine. Use the property search link once you get there.

 

 

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

Non Member comments closed due to heavy spam! 


 

Central Ohio Round Table Closings...

table setting on a round table from tracyhunter via Flickr

by Maureen McCabe

Round-table.  Rectangular table... usually the closing table is more of an oblong or oval shaped table, that way if there are extra people at the closing you can kind of wedge 'em in where they fit, on the buyers side or the sellers side. 

The Closing

Usually... not always but usually in Central Ohio we all sit around that table, no matter what the shape.  The buyers, sellers, real estate agents, attorneys, title company representatives... sometimes a lender or two... sit around a table while the closing documents are signed by buyer and seller.

Different parts of the country, different kinds of closing.  With relocation to Central Ohio people from all over who are used to different kinds of closings...  Real Living's information on Closing and Moving in for buyers*  has to be vague... Real Living is in many different real estate markets. Real Living says:

"Depending on the city in which your new home is located, your closing may or may not include the presence of the seller. In some areas, all parties come together in what is called a round-table closing. In other areas, buyers and sellers complete the process through individual appointments. Your Real Living agent can tell you which experience to expect at your closing."

Real Living HER is Real Living in Central Ohio... we do a round-table closing.  Sometimes buyer and seller can not be together for the closing... but usually this is how we do it in Central Ohio.

When I read nightmares about closings in other parts of the country... I always think thank goodness we do it round the table.  Yes I am sure a con-artist could play the part at a closing...  we've had plenty of mortgage fraud in Central Ohio...   Florida Nightmare... explaining a post from the day before about the closing notary running off with closing documents.

You hear the stories about the closing that did not happen everywhere because he brought the girl friend to closing rather than the wife... ooops. 

Once long ago I went to a round bed closing... no the bed was shaped normally.  It was in a hospital room.  Maybe someday I will tell you about it.

More about closing and title on my website MaureenMcCabe.com - Title and Closing


Image Credit - The round table image is from tracyhunter's Flickr stream.  The image  is used to represent a "round" table... there are no knives, forks or stemware at the typical real estate closing in Central Ohio.  The photo is licensed with a Creative Commons License tracyhunter allowed commercial use of this photo.

Edit January 2011 - I apologize to anyone using an RSS for this appearing.  Old links forwarded to Real Living HER rather than me had to be fixed. Why  "http://www.realliving.com/Agent/AgentProfile.aspx?id=2030 "  would not forward to me?   We are still sitting round a table a year later... closings did not change drastically in 2010...

 

 

 

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

Non Member comments closed due to heavy spam! 


 

The Importance of being Earnest

Ernest Hemmingway

"Baby name meaning and origin for Earnest"

Is Earnest a first name? I seldom look very carefully in the spam on ColumbusBestBlog.com because I get a lot.  This was a comment left on  on a post called "Buying a House - Earnest Money Question"

Submitted on 2009/03/18 at 1:20am

[...] Buying a House - Earnest Money Question ” columbusbestblog.com reddit_url=’http://www.baby-xxxxx.com/baby/babyname/Earnest’ reddit_title=’Baby name meaning and origin for Earnest’ [...] 

Author Ernest Hemingway that's him above and below in the baby announcement...

Singer Tennessee Ernie Ford (spelling Ernest was the least of his worries.) His real name was Ernest Jennings Ford, he was from TN.  I have trouble with TN and CT.  Mississippi is a piece of cake for me.   Spell check fixed the mess of S's and N's that was Tennessee. 

Actor Ernest Borgnine

 

Baby names

Is the name as a first name ever spelled Earnest?  Isn't the name always spelled Ernest?  I am scared to look at the baby name site, it is probably just a splog.

Did you ever see "The Importance of being Earnest?"  In the Oscar Wilde play two men say their name is Ernest, but they are not acting in earnest.  I believe their real names are Algernon and Jack.... I must have seen the play long ago.  Or in another life.  Or read it.

There are earnest money changes coming in the Columbus Board of Realtors Contract... or maybe it is in our Real Living HER contract? Effective April 1, 2009 there will be some changes in Earnest money.

What is Earnest Money gives the definition from Real Living.com and more.  Earnest money is offered by a buyer to a seller in a transaction and shows the buyer is acting in good faith.

Earnest Money is relatively low in Central Ohio.

Search Central Ohio Homes -   Maureen McCabe -  614-388-8249 - Real Living HER

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Photo Credit The two photos of Ernest Hemingway are from Wikipedia.  According to Wikipedia both photos are in the public domain.  I was going to try to put the adult Earnest face on the baby Earnest body but I am just NOT that good with photos.

Spam link edited.  It is not a safe site. 

 

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

Non Member comments closed due to heavy spam! 


 

Buying a Short Sale Property

 

My buddy Liz Householder wrote this... this is a "re-blog" of Liz's post.

Liz wrote this about "Connecticut" the state where she lives and sells real estate and blogs...

It's pretty similar in many ways to "Buying a Short Sale Property" in Central Ohio but I am no expert...   :- ) The issued Liz writes about in her fourth paragraph, "If the buyer has an inspection and doesn't want to fix the problems that crop up, the contracts in Connecticut allow the buyer to walk away."  are dealt with in the contract we use here.  The Columbus Board of Realtors contract.

 

Via Liz Householder - TheSalemBlog (Prudential Connecticut Realty):

These days, more and more homes are coming on the MLS as a "short sale".  What does that mean?  It means the price the house is being offered at is less than what the owner owes his lender, thus it's short of the debt on the house.

A couple of things are different about short sales.  For one, the bank or mortgage company has to agree to the price before the contract is considered accepted.  This can take a long time, as in months, or it can be done fairly quickly.  It depends on the lender and how fast they will respond to an offer.

Houses in a short sale are usually offered in "as is" condition.  That means that if there are any problems that show up during the inspection, the buyer will have to fix them because the seller is already out of money and isn't going to agree to put any more money into the house in a short sale.  These houses are usually priced accordingly, at a lower-than-expected price in order to sell as quickly as possible.

If the buyer has an inspection and doesn't want to fix the problems that crop up, the contracts in Connecticut allow the buyer to walk away.  However, they must make that decision in a timely manner - usually within the confines of the standard inspection clause: Ten days after acceptance of the offer to have an inspection, and five days to respond to the results.  Buyers can't expect the seller and the lender to allow an open-ended refusal period that allows the buyer to change his mind a week before closing and walk away.

If you understand - and accept - the rules of a short sale, including the possibility that you may have to wait longer than usual for an answer to the offer, and for a closing date, then short sales can be a great way to acquire a home at a reduced price.  In the end, you could walk away when you sell the house with a nice profit in your pocket, and in the meantime be able to live in a house that is ultimately worth more than you could have afforded if it wasn't a distress sale.

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

Non Member comments closed due to heavy spam! 


 

1 commentMaureen McCabe Columbus Ohio real estate • February 21 2009 10:15AM

Build YOUR Central Ohio Dream Home for $304,933

New ConstructionRead all about it on ColumbusBestBlog.com.  ActiveRain member Kristal Pooler shared a Building Cost Calculator.

Building Cost Calculator  

I did one... I built a theoretical home in Powell Ohio 43065 with 3200 SF and the Building Cost Calculator priced it out at $304,933  In my mind  the 3200 square foot single family home was in Powell Ohio, a community where YOU can build new in Central Ohio.  I also could have visualized this new construction home in New Albany, Dublin, Hilliard, Lewis Center... 

I was not thinking of inside 270...  for some reason. 

A problem with the new home cost calculator is you don't get to choose WHERE the home is until the very end.  Powell 43065 was not a choice.  The very cool Building Cost Calculator uses Columbus 432_ _ as a zip-code. Oh I could choose other areaa... just not in Central Ohio. I could choose zip codes for  Cleveland, Cincinnati, Toledo, Akron, Dayton...  even Chillicothe, Zanesville and Marion... just not Central Ohio areas, with a zip-code that is not 432_ _.

Disappointment. My theoretical new build priced at $304,933 is in Columbus OH 432_ _.  Maybe my theorteical new home is in Columbus Ohio 43235, the West Wortington area (Worthington, Dublin or Columbus School Districts depending on where in the 43235 zip-code.)  I don't know Columbus Ohio or Central Ohio by zip-code.  I think of Central Ohio by neighborhoods.  I think of Central Ohio by school districts. 

Columbus 432_ _  leaves out many of the parts of Central Ohio where NEW HOMES... single family homes are being built.  When you look at homes in the 432_ _ zip-code too you discover single family homes on average sell lower than condominiums! Of course with all the new condo development in downtown Columbus, the Short North etc. that would be true.  

Visit ColumbusBestBlog.com's Build YOUR Columbus Dream Home for $304,933. Columbus here, really, really means Columbus, not Greater Columbus, not the Columbus Metro area, not even necessarily just within the Columbus School District, just those that have a mailing address (zip-code) that is Columbus (unless I am misunderstanding and 43085, 43065, 43035, 43016, 43017 etc. are included.)  However $304,933 seemed too low to me for Dublin, Lewis Center, Powell etc.  On the Building Cost Calculator you have to choose quality too... Best, Good, Average for various classifications... 

On ColumbusBestBlog.com I did a comparison with new builds sold year-to-date in 2007 in the Big Walnut, Columbus, Dublin, Hilliard, Olentangy School Districts.  I tried to compare new build homes in other Central Ohio School Districts as well Buckeye Valley, City of Delaware, Plain Local (New Albany), Westerville and Worthington but could not find comparable homes (not all new builds are sold through the Columbus Board of Realtors multiple listing service so don't show up in the data!) 

All in all it was a fun tool.  Maybe in other markets across the US they have more zip-code choices.  As Kristal said "Like all such calculators, it can provide a rough estimate at best. However it is still a very useful place to start and to understand the variables involved. According to the site - "you can develop a home construction or replacement cost that considers all the important variables: materials used, design features, quality, size, shape, heating, cooling and geographic area."

...Some geographic areas.  Or some zip-codes anyway.

"New Homes Search on the Real Living New Construction Portal

The Building Cost Calculator says: " The numbers used in this calculator are from the National Building Cost Manual, published by Craftsman Book Company."

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This post provided by Maureen McCabe of Real Living HER

Contact 614.388.8249

Website: MaureenMcCabe.com

Search Central Ohio homes Online


email: MaureenatMaureenMcCabe.com   @

Information is deemed to be accurate but should be verified to your satisfaction.  Information provided herein is supplied by several sources and is subject to change without notice.  Opinions expressed are solely those of Maureen McCabe.

Non Member comments closed due to heavy spam! 


 

4 commentsMaureen McCabe Columbus Ohio real estate • November 14 2007 08:54AM