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Buying a Home to Renovate Can be a True Bargain…or Not!

By
Real Estate Agent with Samson Properties

 

If you’re an energetic Do-it-Yourself without much remodeling experience, Job One is to gather professional opinions to minimize the likelihood of costly discoveries.  But before you even get that far, there are some general concepts that veteran investors know.  These are disqualifiers that make it much more likely that buying a home will be a shrewd investment instead of dollar demolisher. 

 

Bad house, bad neighborhood 

 

Is it worth buying a fixer-upper in a rundown or otherwise somewhat undesirable neighborhood?  It can be tempting –especially when the asking price makes buying such a home a seemingly unbelievable value.  But ignoring the ‘location, location, location’ truism is risky business.  In many cases, such an investment may yield a diamond in the mud –a renewed structure that will never rise in value until the whole neighborhood rises in value (which could be never).  Safer choices will be found in neighborhoods that don’t need remodeling themselves. 

 

Bad house, good intentions 

 

Buying a home especially when the neighborhood is fine and the price is more than right –can give rise to overly emotional decision-making.  It can be tempting, when a property is almost okay, to make an instantaneous decision…but if you find yourself making excuses for this or that drawback, or finding yourself indulging in a bit of wishful thinking here and there, take a breath! Buying a home that needs major renovation is a probable mistake for home buyers who are uncertain about the money, time or construction expertise that lie before them.  A realistic mindset is the first ‘tool’ you need as you transform a fixer-upper into a winning investment. 

 

Bad House, bad budget

 

 

Sometimes, buying a fixer-upper seems exciting not for the challenge of the remodel, but simply because you can’t afford that much house in any other way.  Sure, fixer-uppers offer the tantalizing prospect of more house for less money, but down-to-earth budgeting for big repairs such as a new roof, a cracked foundation, or all-new floors will produce a realistic bottom line.  Sometimes less house (but good house) is the call that yields a lot more restful nights! 

 

Bad house, bad house 

 

Finally, buying a house that seems like a fixer-upper, but would more accurately be called bulldozer feed is actually pretty easy to avoid.  If your home inspector tells you about critical issues with a home’s bones (foundation, roof), infestation, or dangerous wiring issues, it’s most likely one of those.

 

 

Have faith:  Your home is out there!  Remodels can be (in fact, often) great investments.  With a clear vision and savvy team, you could be one renovation away from your dream home.  Give me a call to check out the best of today’s prospective properties.

 

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Denise Dimares, Realtor

Certified Default Resolution Specialist

The Agent who Informs, Inspires, Empowers and Transforms Lives

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