Special offer

Find A Home Using Letters....Really?

By
Real Estate Broker/Owner with Don Sabinske, Sabinske & Associates Inc. 539MN

Someone forwarded me an email recently about an idea he had had passed along. 

The idea was that if you knew a neighborhood or area you wanted to live in.....

                                                  AA Neighborhood

you would mail letters to homeowners in the neighborhood asking if they were willing to sell in the near future. 

Nice idea. 

You are in no hurry and you want to buy without paying a commission and having any competition to buy a nice property where you want to live!

Sounds right.  However, the rest of it reads that once you reach a verbal agreement (which is worth the price of the paper it's printed on), you need to then hire an attory and meet all the requirements of your mortgage lender, hire an inspection, spar with the seller over the results of the inspection (if you were smart enough to have an inspection contingency written into the agreement that you verbally offered....hmmm....and make sure you have dug up comparable sales so you were knowlegable about what to offer, get an appraisal ordered, follow up with getting a title company to work with you and check the home's past history by getting a CLUE (Comprehensive Loss Underwriting Exchange) report.  and making sure your attorney (at $350 an hour) gets the title search completed  (for claims outstanding against the property), checks the tax records and ascertains the zoing laws. 

Easy.  Nothing you can't handle in your spare time and with some fairly generous cash outlay for the attorney.  But, look, you are saving money, right?  Money the seller would pay a buyer's broker to bring you to the table.  Money he will gladly fork over to you in savings to him, right?  Oh, that's right.  He's not paying any commission either.  So, why would he cut you a deal?  You aren't represented except by the attorney, not a negotiator on your behalf.  So, sorry, Charlie, you're on your own. 

Do the work....take the time....no saving on commission either.  Sounds perfect. 

Posted by

Moving in Excellence!

Don Sabinske, Broker, GRI

www.donsabinske.com

Sabinske & Associates Inc.

763-350-7960

Specializing in Sherburne, Wright, Anoka and Hennepin Counties...We can help you move!

 

Samantha Davault
Alexander Chandler Realty - Fort Worth, TX
Fort Worth, TX

Funny that the buyer most likely wouldn't be paying a commission anyway and  with this scenario he is paying an attorney and doing all of the footwork himself.  It is a no brainer.  Use a REALTOR(R).   DUH!!!!

Jun 25, 2010 04:43 PM
John Pusa
Glendale, CA

Don - Thank you for sharing a very good and educational blog.

Jun 25, 2010 05:39 PM
Don Spera
CR Property Group, LLC - East York, PA
Serving York and Adams County, PA

Don, your post definitely put things into perspective.  We are all out here to make a living, whether we are commissioned, salaried or paid hourly.  We want to save every dollar we have.  Time, convenience, consumer protection, safety, security, insurance all cost money.  Well so does hiring a professional representative.  Great points, thanks.

Jun 25, 2010 07:18 PM
Not a real person
San Diego, CA

Hey, Don. I left a surprise for you in my blog post this morning. Let me know when you find it. What? You thought I was going to tell you exactly where it is? Ha! This comment is a clue, though.

Happy Saturday!

Nov 19, 2011 01:55 AM
Debbie Laity
Cedaredge Land Company - Cedaredge, CO
Your Real Estate Resource for Delta County, CO

It still amazes me that a lot of buyers don't realize most of the time they aren't paying us, the agent, to work for them. Our pay comes from completing a transaction and from the sellers proceeds of the sale.

Jan 06, 2013 12:21 AM
Suzanne McLaughlin
Sabinske & Associates, Inc. (Albertville, St. Michael) - Saint Michael, MN
Sabinske & Associates, Realtor

Wow....an agent or broker would be so much easier.  Doncha' think?  Have a good one!

Jan 16, 2013 09:03 PM
Marshall Enterprises
Marshall Enterprises - Saint Michael, MN
Antiques, Lawn Care, and Trashouts

I guess that would be the hard way.  But, using Sabinske & Associates would be smarter!

Jan 21, 2013 03:43 AM