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K. Hovnanian Homes

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Real Estate Agent with Texas Premier Realty

K. Hovnanian Homes

Don't Buy A New Home Until You Listen To This Report!! It Can Save You Thousands Of Dollars!!

http://www.northdallaslifestyle.com/newconstruction.html

 

Buying From A Builder Tips

•·         The builder's sales agents are paid to represent the builder, regardless of what they may tell you. Many will use high pressure tactics to persuade you to sign the contract. Due to the high volume nature of brand new home sales, lots of builder's agents are paid less than a traditional commission; some earn a salary plus incentives, so turnover is important to their livelihood.

•·         Hire a Buyer's Agent to represent you. Your agent will be paid by the seller, but represents you. A good negotiating buyer's agent can save you thousands of dollars.

•·         Your own agent will represent you, be your fiduciary and is required to disclose the positives as well as the negatives about the transaction. Builder's agents don't discuss drawbacks.

•·         If your contract contains a contingency to sell your existing home before buying, again, hire your own seller's agent to list your home. Be aware that buying before selling is not always in your best interest because hard bargaining goes out the window when you've emotionally moved out of your home.

Don't Automatically Use the Builder's Lender

•·         Builders often prefer their own lender because the builder will be kept fully informed of your personal progress; it's one-stop shopping for a builder. But a builder's lender might not offer you the best deal. Moreover, the builder may own the lending company.

•·         Consider alternate sources to find a lender. Your own bank or credit union might offer you very attractive rates and terms, based on your banking history with that institution. Your agent may refer you to his or her private list of wholesale lenders.

•·         Shop around and interview your lender. Find a banker or mortgage broker whom you can trust and with whom you feel comfortable doing business.

•·         Ask to see a copy of your credit report and FICO scores. You can order your own free credit report before shopping for a new home.

•·         Insist that your lender guarantee its Good Faith Estimate. If the lender balks or makes excuses, go elsewhere, because reputable lenders will honor that request, even though it may not be required by law.

Verify Option and Upgrade Pricing

•·         Determine which options and upgrades you want. Bear in mind that for many builders, the profit margin is highest in upgrades. Some builders can sell a home for almost bare construction cost because they make the bulk of their profit in the upgrades.

•·         Find out whether your lender will lend on all the options / upgrades you have chosen. If your lender will not finance 100% of your selections, you will be required to pay for it in cash.

•·         Ask about cancellations and whether you will be held liable for items the builder cannot return to a vendor.

•·         Some contracts give the builder the right to choose your upgrades if you do not submit your request within a certain period of time.

•·         To save money, consider which upgrades you could purchase and install yourself after the home closes. However, realize that some upgrades such as CAT-V, DSS or security wiring inside the walls are easier to do before construction.

Check Out the Builder's Reputation

•·         If a buyer has a bad experience with a builder, the word spreads rapidly throughout a community. But you won't know if a bad rep is an isolated experience or if the builder repeatedly brings bad publicity to itself without checking and verifying the public records for lawsuits.

•·         Talk to the neighbors and scrutinize the construction quality of surrounding homes. Is the builder consistently building identical or larger homes in the area or is construction lagging and homes shrinking in size?

•·         Find out whether the builder sells to investors. Some builders require all their homes to be owner occupied. Others eagerly sell as much inventory to investors as profit margins will allow. If the market suddenly dips, investors are typically the first to bail and, besides, part of the reason you are buying in a new subdivision is to be surrounded by other buyers just like you, not tenants.

Hire a Home Inspector

•·         Always, always, always get a home inspection when you buy. And hire a licensed and accredited individual to perform the inspection -- not your dad or your buddy contractor, get a real inspector. Be there for the inspection and ask questions because a new home can contain defects. The HVAC system might be too small or the plumbing could be installed backwards. Construction workers make mistakes.

•·         If the inspector calls for further inspection by another professional contractor, find out if the inspector is telling you there could be a serious issue or if the inspector isn't licensed to address that issue.

Comments (1)

Anonymous
Andrea Benson

Its interesting K. Hovnanian is stating in their literature to always get a Home inspection, when they informed me they do not accept 3rd party (professional Home inspector) reports. Something is fishy with the business. Either they stand by they product or not. I was told they don't except home inspectors reports because they don't want to miss something in the report. What a joke I sent an email with 2 items that needed repairs on my home, the serviceman came by for one item; K. Hovnanian closed the ticket without addressing the other issue. One issue I reported K. Hovnanian told me not to vacuum and have a television on at the same time it would trip the breaker. The home inspection showed the design was incorrect to many outlets on one circuit. 

To be fair I have attached K. Hovnanian response to me:

" As of January 20, 2009 - K. Hovnanian Homes can no longer accept third party home inspection reports.  We certainly welcome you to contact a third party home inspector, if you wish to perform an inspection of your home, we just cannot accept the documents of the report that they give you.

  If you wish to submit the items from your inspection report, they need to be submitted to us either by handwritten correspondence or typed by you, the homeowner, of only the items that you wish to be looked at by a K. Hovnanian Homes Representative.  You may submit the items by email, fax or postal service.  Please do not send any pages from the home inspection report itself, as we cannot accept them and will decline them."

Jan 15, 2011 12:58 PM
#1