It
starts innocently enough... you pass a house in a neighborhood you like, you
hear someone is selling their home, you happen to look up home prices online. Before
you know it, you’re knee-deep in home shopping and open house visits. This can
actually be exceedingly dangerous to your financial future.
Falling
in love with a home before you actually know what you want in a home is risky.
To avoid the “buy first, think later” syndrome that burdens family finances,
marriages, and work life, ask yourself these important questions:
1. How much do we want to spend each month on home
expenses? There’s
a tendency for people who shop first to try and “make the math work” on
purchasing a home. Often this leads to stretching the home budget and ignoring
crucial expenses such as maintenance and property taxes in order to “make the
mortgage.” Determine a comfortable, conservative range for home expenses first.
2. Which neighborhoods make sense from multiple
angles? You may
love a neighborhood for its leafy streets and family-friendly atmosphere, but
what if it adds thirty minutes to your commute? Are the schools good? What are
the crime stats like? What’s the walkability score? Don’t view a neighborhood
with rose-colored glasses based on a single quality you like.
3. What’s a priority and what’s a nice extra? You may think you want extra
bedrooms for guests and a home office, but which one is more important? Rank
the must haves against the “nice to haves.”
4. What’s our long-term ownership picture look like? Are you settling in for ten
years, or do you suspect you’ll need to move in four? While you can’t predict
the future, you can make some estimates. Those estimates will help you
understand how much home you should buy, what kind of down-payment you’ll want
to have, and what the picture might look like in terms of renovations.
5. When can you move vs. when would you like to move?
Rental leases,
selling your current home, and job and schooling factors all impact the
timeline for a purchase. Wrap your head around the pragmatic timeline as best
you can.
I’m more
than happy to help you think these through. Contact me for help today:
Brook Simmons/Realtor
Keller Williams Success Realty
309 Richard Jackson Blvd #200
Panama City Beach, Florida 32407
Cell: 850-814-8259
Office: 850-249-0313
Fax: 866-869-8963
Email: BrookinPC@KW.com
Keller Williams Success Realty
309 Richard Jackson Blvd #200
Panama City Beach, Florida 32407
Cell: 850-814-8259
Office: 850-249-0313
Fax: 866-869-8963
Email: BrookinPC@KW.com
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