The house that made me a better realtor

There is nothing wrong with this house that can’t be fixed.”

Being a young, inexperienced home buyer, these words were soothing to hear from the home inspector.

What I didn’t realize was that fixing everything would take all my time and all my money.

It was April 1st 2002.  Closing on April Fool’s Day should have been all the sign I needed.  I bought what was called a “Fixer Upper” back then.  Now we seem to have shortened it to just “Fixer.”  This was before HGTV, but I had the same aspirations as the home buyers always do at the beginning of the renovation shows.

My house had T-111 siding, which is like grooved plywood and lasts for about 30 years if maintained.  My house was 29 years old.  And it hadn’t been maintained.

It had the old crank out Pella replacement windows.  The kind that after about 20 years, you one day crank to open and the aluminum mechanism inside snaps.  That day had happened on all the windows long before I had ever seen the house.

The roof had two layers on it.  On a positive note, the HVAC was only 2 years old.

As if all this wasn’t enough, the house had a lot of settlement.  That is a nice way of saying STRUCTURAL ISSUES.  The seller gave me an $8k credit for putting piers under the foundation.  The structural engineer (A.K.A.-SALES PERSON) told me the house needed 20 of them.  They were $1k each.  I told him there was no way I could do that since I only had $8k to work with.  Suddenly, he decided that 8 piers would be just fine.

I got what I thought was a bargain. I paid $118,200 and other similar houses were going for $145-150k on the street.

The evening of April 1st, after moving in all day and getting the boy’s beds set up, I decided to take a shower.  As the steam from the shower filled the bathroom, the pea green tiles in the shower slowly started to fall off the wall.  Many had been glued on to what little drywall was left behind them.  It kind of looked like a pizza commercial where the cheese is stretching as somebody pulls out a slice.  The shower had some goofy accent tile that must have been trendy in 1973.  I keep the tile that is pictured below in my office.

Tanforan Tile

Then there was the time we had family over.  I slept on the couch in the basement.  I woke up, ready for my first cup of coffee.  I knew it wasn’t going to be a good day when I heard a splashing sound and my left foot felt wet.  Turns out the basement leaked too.  The seller said they had never had a water problem, although all the neighbors knew otherwise.

But I got a great deal, and there was nothing wrong with the house that couldn’t be fixed.

Oh yeah, now that I am a realtor, I realize that all the other bidders I was up against for this house were investors who were probably offering no more than $90k and wanting to flip it.

So, over the course of several years, I gutted all 3 bathrooms and remodeled them.  New roof.  Some new windows.  New siding. Added a fireplace. Completely gutted the basement since it was wet and moldy.  With some help from my dad and uncle, we turned 2 paneled rooms into one massive space with all new drywall, can lights, new electric and all new trim.

To solve the water issue, I had the leafguard gutters installed, the basement waterproofed with two sump pumps and brought in 3 dump trucks full of dirt and regraded the back and side yard.  Now the house next door gets water in their basement.  I didn’t feel too bad though.  If the builder had graded my yard properly, he would have been getting the water for 30 years.  It was his turn now.

I have always hated this house.  It is sort of funny that I still own it.  We moved out in 2007 and I’ve been renting it ever since.  Part of that is because houses were not selling back then.  Part of it is because after doing all this work to it, I wanted to be the one who benefited from it.

This house was sort of like real estate college for me.  I am a much better realtor having having had these heartbreaking, time consuming and costly experiences.  Having had a house that had just about every problem a house can have and fixing it all has benefited every client I have ever worked with.

And I will never recommend a home inspector who says “There isn’t anything wrong with this house that can’t be fixed.

Before and after (Circa 2008):

 

What makes a good location?

This week, I’ve been listening to several different buyers tell me what part of town they want to be in.  It has had me thinking about the whole “Location Location Location” thing.  I think most of the time, we as people like to reduce things down to a yes/no, for/against, good/bad scenario……Like this is a good location and this is a bad one.  I just don’t think it is that simple and here is why.

Just this week I’ve had two people tell me they really want to be in a location that many people avoid.  This is a high density area, so the buyers are looking for townhouses and condos.  See, the people that think this is an area to be avoided don’t want to be in that kind of density and are single family home types.  Both buyers mentioned that they had lived in that area before and liked how easy it was to get any where in town and that they enjoyed the 30+ acre park in the middle of the area.  When my wife and I were newlyweds, we lived in this area too…..we thought the same thing back then.

I guess my point in all this is that what makes a good location is really a subjective thing that varies greatly.  Age, income, property type, etc, all greatly have an impact on what makes a location appealing.  There is one common thing that all people tell me they want in a location:  Proximity to work, businesses they shop at, restaurants they eat at, and things like parks/sports/ or places they frequently go.  People with kids like to be in a good performing school district too.

Lexington is big enough to support all these different opinions about what makes a location good.  It is all in the eye of the buyer, and if enough of them think it is a good location, then it must be.

When do you know you’ve found the right house?

“We pretty much know as soon as we walk in.”

I was covering for an agent that was on vacation this week.  This is what one of her buyers said to me when I commented that they didn’t spend much time in the first house I showed them.  I often hear this from my own buyers.

You know what this means?

A lot of people base their decision on how they feel.

I’ve always said you could find a house with all of the items on a buyer’s must have list, but they still might not buy it.

This is why that first impression when a buyer walks through the door is so important.  If your house isn’t perfect, you are better to have the the rooms a buyer sees in the first few minutes looking better than the last few rooms they see. If a buyer likes what they see at the beginning, they are more forgiving of little things they don’t like later.  It doesn’t work in reverse.

I recently sold a house in one of my favorite neighborhoods.  It sold for about $3-4k more than it should have.  Sure, the market is hot, and we did get multiple offers…..but I think we got TOP TOP dollar for it because the seller’s decor was so attractive.   They had the right colors, the right furniture and everything else just right.  The house felt good.

And I bet the two buyers who made offers the first day on the market both  knew they wanted it as soon as they walked in.

 

Where is the market RIGHT NOW

Ok.  It has happened.  I think we have hit a ceiling with real estate prices in and around Lexington.

The market has slowed down a bit in the past few weeks.  You can get a photographer or home inspector quicker than you can a neurosurgeon lately.  Could be because 15% of the whole town is on vacation on any given week this summer.  Could be more than a normal seasonal slowdown?

Slowing down isn’t a bad thing, so don’t freak out.  This is kind of like when you are doing 100 MPH and slow down to 80.

I am starting to see more price reductions than I have in the past 6-8 months too.  I don’t think that values for those houses have declined.  I think that sellers were pushing prices higher and higher and buyers are pushing back a little now.  Mr. Overly-Optimistic Seller, you won’t be getting above market value for your house.

It all reminds me of early 2013.  That is when the market made a sudden shift from bad to good.  For about 6 months there it seemed like houses were selling as soon as they hit the market and prices were going up for the first time in years.  The market changed so fast it reminded me of being a kid on a swing and somebody giving you a swift push that causes you to hold on tight as your neck snaps backwards.

The rest of 2013, all of 2014 and 2015 were good markets, but less frenzied.  Then early 2016 gets crazy again.  It was the first time in my career of over 11 years that I waited in line to show houses.  If the frenzy is over, that is one thing I won’t miss!

Bully sellers and what happens to them

I just got a call from an agent who I almost sold a house with several months ago.  This agent wanted to see if my client had bought anything yet.

My client had a contract to buy this agent’s listing.  My client had it inspected.  There were two pretty big things wrong that needed some attention.  We were told by this agent that my clients needed to take it like it is or walk away, because we were being crazy…..AND that we had to decide by 7:PM that night or the seller was walking away from us!

We walked away since the only other option was unacceptable.

The listing came back on the market.

Sold again.

Back on the market again.

Reduced.

Still hasn’t sold.

The funny thing is that I saw all this coming.  I knew that any buyer would have the same concerns that we did.  We used a good inspector.  My clients were reasonable.  I was being reasonable.  It should have worked out.  Problems with the seller’s house don’t disappear if the buyer moves on.  They just sit there until the next inspection.

The best thing this agent and the seller could have done is thrown us a bone-meaning offer us something to have stuck in the deal.  Negotiate.  Make a good faith effort.

Didn’t happen.

Must not have happened with the second buyer either.

Meanwhile, my clients are enjoying their new home that we closed last Friday and this agent and her seller are waiting for a third buyer.  It is a nice house with two solvable problems.  It just needs an agent and a seller who would rather solve problems than give ultimatums.