5. Choose a Home As a buyer, here's what actually happens. A home has been
placed on the market for which the seller has established an
asking price as well as other terms. In effect, this is an
offer. At this point, you have three choices: accept the
seller's offer and create a contract; reject it and not make
an offer; or suggest different terms and make a
counter-offer. If you choose this last option, the seller
may accept, reject or make a counter-offer.
No aspect of the homebuying process is more complex,
personal or variable than bargaining between buyers and
sellers. This is the point where the value of an experienced
REALTORŪ is clearly evident because he or she knows the
community, has seen numerous homes for sale, knows local
values and has spent years negotiating realty transactions. Is it THE house? How do you know if a house is THE one? Probably the best
approach is to look at as many homes as possible, something
made easy by Realtor.com, where you can quickly and easily
view huge numbers of homes, check prices, take video tours
and view extensive neighborhood information. Once your
choices have been narrowed, you can then contact a local
REALTORŪ to find specific information and options. How reliable is a preapproval? While preapproval is not a
loan commitment, it's still necessary for lenders to check
such items as appraisals and the latest credit reports.
Despite fluctuating interest rates, preapproval nonetheless
provides a reasoned, careful analysis of what you can
afford. After all, loan officers are routinely paid only
when loans are originated. It doesn't make much sense for
loan officers to suggest high loan limits that later can't
be delivered. |