Ten Things only a Buyer’s Agent Can Tell You #4
March 31st, 2011Something’s Fishy Here, Let’s Get More Information - Listing sheets don’t always have all the information a buyer needs. Sometimes the listing information is incorrect. It may be as simple as the square footage looking and feeling very different from what the listing sheet says it is. What’s right, the look and feel or what the listing sheet claims?
It could be the seller tells you the basement is dry but you see this white effervescent line near the bottom of the basement wall. Perhaps the owners are claiming their home is a four bedroom but two of the “bedrooms” don’t have any closets. How many bedrooms does this house really have? If it’s a private septic, how many bedrooms is the septic designed to handle?
Maybe the owner of a home you are interested in is hospitalized or in a nursing home and a relative is claiming they have the right to sell the home, but do they? You’re looking at a two-unit building but there doesn’t seem to be any egress from the second floor unit.
You’re looking at a condo and you love it, but one of the other unit owners happens to mention something about the association facing a lawsuit. Can you get financing on this unit? What are other reasons that might indicate this is a complex to be avoided?
It’s winter time and you wonder what’s under all that snow. But you like the house and are told there are no problems and that tree with no leaves will come back in the spring, no problem. Will it, or is it a dead tree you will have to have cut down?
The neighborhood seems nice enough in the daytime, but what’s it like after dark? Are there things I need to know about crime in the neighborhood or if there are any sex offenders living nearby?
It’s obvious some deeper investigation is necessary. Do you have the time and experience to address these questions or issues on your own? What’s that about an easement on the property? What if I want to expand the house? Can I?
A Buyer’s Agent will go to the City or Town Hall to verify and substantiate. Checking out the neighborhood and giving you access to neighborhood information is part of a Buyer’s Agents job.
Getting to the Registry of Deeds, and other sources to verify specific details on the home is an important part of a Buyer’s Agent’s due diligence.
Have you run into some other issues that make you think something is just not right? How is your Buyer’s Agent helping you with these concerns?
Ronn Huth (800) 25-BUYER