Top 3 Reasons to Delay Purchasing a Home
Is there ever a time when you should NOT purchase a home?... This article evaluates the situations when it is best to hold off on purchasing a home.
So you have set aside enough funds for a down payment on a house and closing costs? And you are curious to know if there is ever a time when you shouldn’t buy? Regardless of all the benefits of buying a home, it is still a major and life changing purchase and a buyer should go forward with a cautiously optimistic but informed attitude.
An important thing to honestly evaluate before you purchase is the average appreciation rates of your local market and your own personal circumstances. Historically, the average appreciation rate for real property has been roughly 6%; however, as the nation is huge your local market appreciation rates can obviously vary. Your main objective should be to stay in your house long enough so that you are not placed in a position where you will have to sell your home at a loss. If you have to sell a home before it has appreciated enough to cover the costs and commissions of selling, you could find yourself in a serious, financial bind. This especially applies to those who buy a home with a down payment of ten percent or less. In the market of the past five years, many who purchased homes with zero down payments are finding themselves in exactly that position, basically "under" their loan.
Real estate commissions traditionally run around six percent of a home’s sales price. The seller’s closing costs generally amounts to about one and a half percent. Adding all the costs you would incur if you were forced to sell, you can see how this can easily exceed the first year’s appreciation of your home. If you made a minimal down payment (from 3% - 5%), you could actually have to come up with cash out of pocket to sell your home. In addition, if the value of the houses in your neighborhood has dropped considerably, you may also find yourself owing a deficiency judgment. A deficiency judgment is a judgment for an amount not covered by the value of the security (in this case your house) put up for a loan or installment payments. In general, with the final sale of the house, the owner is still left with a balance owing on the original amount of the loan and is liable by law to pay it. While this is the worst case scenario, it still is prudent to know that such situations can occur and realistically evaluate how you can avoid them.
The three occasions when it is much better to hold off on buying a home are the following:
New to the Area
A very good to reason to delay buying a home is if you have just moved to an unfamiliar area or region of the country. It makes sense to rent for a number of months before deciding on exactly which neighborhood you desire and can afford to live in. Often when people are too hasty to buy a home immediately, they find that they might have made a better decision if they had waited awhile and had become more familiar with the surrounding neighborhood and local community. They would have additional leisure time to evaluate home values and find the best bargain in the neighborhood they desired to live in.
Uncertain or Unstable Job Future
You could have just graduated from college or you are expecting a promotion and a transfer. Or perhaps, your company has announced an impending "restructuring¡± or "downsizing". If any of these apply to your situation, it might be best to forego buying a home until your job and financial situation stabilizes. It is much easier to dissolve a lease on an apartment or condo, than to try to sell a home in a financially difficult or pressing situation.
Marital Problems
While not advertised on national real estate ads, real estate agents are often participants in the real unfolding life drama of clients who have to sell their houses due to foreclosure, divorce, and deaths in the family. One of the saddest scenarios occurs when recent former clients undergo a divorce and are forced to sell a recently purchased house. For whatever reason, many couples in marital turmoil, are steeped in denial and often decide that buying a new home may help resolve their difficulties. Perhaps it is inevitable that such problems should then occur, but selling a home before it appreciates can create an additional emotionally draining financial burden in an already difficult situation.
While this certainly isn’t meant to discourage the prospective buyer, it certainly is intended to inform the buyer of the serious decision they are about to undertake and to evaluate his or her circumstances honestly. Taking the time to be forthright at the outset will assure a purchase they will be happy with in the long run. For more information visit http://www.nefcortez.com
An important thing to honestly evaluate before you purchase is the average appreciation rates of your local market and your own personal circumstances. Historically, the average appreciation rate for real property has been roughly 6%; however, as the nation is huge your local market appreciation rates can obviously vary. Your main objective should be to stay in your house long enough so that you are not placed in a position where you will have to sell your home at a loss. If you have to sell a home before it has appreciated enough to cover the costs and commissions of selling, you could find yourself in a serious, financial bind. This especially applies to those who buy a home with a down payment of ten percent or less. In the market of the past five years, many who purchased homes with zero down payments are finding themselves in exactly that position, basically "under" their loan.
Real estate commissions traditionally run around six percent of a home’s sales price. The seller’s closing costs generally amounts to about one and a half percent. Adding all the costs you would incur if you were forced to sell, you can see how this can easily exceed the first year’s appreciation of your home. If you made a minimal down payment (from 3% - 5%), you could actually have to come up with cash out of pocket to sell your home. In addition, if the value of the houses in your neighborhood has dropped considerably, you may also find yourself owing a deficiency judgment. A deficiency judgment is a judgment for an amount not covered by the value of the security (in this case your house) put up for a loan or installment payments. In general, with the final sale of the house, the owner is still left with a balance owing on the original amount of the loan and is liable by law to pay it. While this is the worst case scenario, it still is prudent to know that such situations can occur and realistically evaluate how you can avoid them.
The three occasions when it is much better to hold off on buying a home are the following:
New to the Area
A very good to reason to delay buying a home is if you have just moved to an unfamiliar area or region of the country. It makes sense to rent for a number of months before deciding on exactly which neighborhood you desire and can afford to live in. Often when people are too hasty to buy a home immediately, they find that they might have made a better decision if they had waited awhile and had become more familiar with the surrounding neighborhood and local community. They would have additional leisure time to evaluate home values and find the best bargain in the neighborhood they desired to live in.
Uncertain or Unstable Job Future
You could have just graduated from college or you are expecting a promotion and a transfer. Or perhaps, your company has announced an impending "restructuring¡± or "downsizing". If any of these apply to your situation, it might be best to forego buying a home until your job and financial situation stabilizes. It is much easier to dissolve a lease on an apartment or condo, than to try to sell a home in a financially difficult or pressing situation.
Marital Problems
While not advertised on national real estate ads, real estate agents are often participants in the real unfolding life drama of clients who have to sell their houses due to foreclosure, divorce, and deaths in the family. One of the saddest scenarios occurs when recent former clients undergo a divorce and are forced to sell a recently purchased house. For whatever reason, many couples in marital turmoil, are steeped in denial and often decide that buying a new home may help resolve their difficulties. Perhaps it is inevitable that such problems should then occur, but selling a home before it appreciates can create an additional emotionally draining financial burden in an already difficult situation.
While this certainly isn’t meant to discourage the prospective buyer, it certainly is intended to inform the buyer of the serious decision they are about to undertake and to evaluate his or her circumstances honestly. Taking the time to be forthright at the outset will assure a purchase they will be happy with in the long run. For more information visit http://www.nefcortez.com

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