5 Things To Do NOW If You Want to Buy A Home In 2012
Resolution-setter, and I have a pretty strong track record of making New Year’s changes actually happen – and stick. But what I know after years of using the New Year as a great excuse to set and meet some goals is that it’s very, very helpful to get a head start, ramping-up to new habits, behaviors and target goals achievements starting in December.If you’re one of the millions who has an eye on 2012 as the year in which you’ll buy a home (first or not), here are five things you can do now to put yourself on the right path:
1. Check your credit. Take my word for it: there is no bad surprise worse than a bad credit surprise. Okay, maybe there is one thing worse – a credit surprise you receive while you’re in the midst of trying to buy a home!
- Recent studies have revealed that a record high number of real estate transactions are falling out of escrow, and that credit “issues” are a leading cause of these dead deals. Your best chance at catching and correcting score-lowering errors and other derogatory items before they destroy your personal American Dream is to start checking and correcting while you still have time on your side.
2. Do your
research. The
more rapidly the real estate market changes, the more it behooves smart buyers
to study up before they jump in. And now’s the time – you can start doing
online and in-person research into topics ranging from:
- Target states, cities and neighborhoods. Whether you’re relocating or simply trying to narrow
down the local districts to focus on during your 2012 house hunt, December
is a great time to start your online research into decision-driving
factors like tax rates, school districts, neighborhood character and even
prices in various areas. Resident ratings and reviews sites like Trulia
and NabeWise can help you make the neighborhood-lifestyle match.
Once you narrow things down and start speaking
to local agents, ask them to brief you on the local market dynamics, including
how long homes typically stay on the market and whether they generally go for
more or less than the asking price, so you can be smart about how you search.
(And yes, Virginia, there are areas where homes sell for more than asking, even
as we speak!)
- Real estate and mortgage pros. If you don’t already have your pros picked out, now is the time to get on the horn or drop an email or Facebook message to your circle of contacts, asking them for a referral to a broker or agent they love. Follow up by: checking whether these pros are active in answering questions on Trulia Voices, searching for their name and seeing what sort of feedback on them you can cull from the web, then giving them a ring and launching a conversation about whether you and they might be a good partnership.
- Short sales and REOs. Distressed property sales are not for the unwary. If you want to target upside down or foreclosed homes, or are planning to house hunt in an area where many of the listings are described as short sales or foreclosures, get educated about what you can expect from a distressed property purchase transaction before you get your heart set on a short sale.
- What
you get for the money. Online
house hunting is a powerful tool – especially when it’s cold and wet! But there
comes a point in your house hunt where you’ve got to just get out into the
actual physical homes you’re seeing online in order to get a strong, accurate
sense of what home features, aesthetics and location characteristics correlate
with what price points.
- Mortgage musts. You can read a bunch of articles about mortgages and get yourself pretty far down the path toward qualifying for a home loan, but you can only get a personalized action plan for a smooth road ‘home’ by talking with a local mortgage broker and having them assess your basic financials. They might say you need to move funds around, pay a bill down or off or produce some sort of documentation from your employer. And the time to start all that is now.
3. Fluff up your cash
cushion. So, you’ve saved up
your 3.5 percent down payment. Perhaps you saved a little extra for closing
costs. Or maybe you’re even one of those uber-aggressive
20-percent-down-ers. No matter how much you’ve saved, you’ll find that
you could use more once you activate your home buying action plan. Mark my
words – after closing, you’ll crave extra cash to do some repairs, upgrade a
couple of things, buy appliances or even just to hold onto in order to minimize
your anxiety about depleting your savings!
So, if homebuying is on your personal 2012
action plan, don’t go hog wild on holiday gifts. Instead, wait until next year
and give yourself the gift of a home.
4. Shed some stuff. Sell it. Donate it. Give it to relatives who’ve
always coveted it. Just get rid of it. If you do it before year’s end,
you can kill three birds with one stone: (a) getting some cold hard cash to go
toward your savings, (b) getting some tax receipts so you can deduct the value
of your donations in January, (c) minimizing money spent on holiday gifts for
loved ones and these two bonus birds – clearing the mental clutter that
physical clutter creates and prepping for your move in advance.
5. Sit very, very still. Sometimes, the best way to further our goals is to stop tripping
ourselves up. In that vein, commit right now to refrain from making any
major financial moves until you buy your home. Don’t quit your job to
start that personal chef business (yet), don’t pull a bunch of cash out of your
savings account (without getting clearance form your mortgage pro first), and
don’t start buying cars and boats on credit – even if you do love the idea of
putting the red bow on the car you give your wife, like in the commercials.
I assure you, the bow you’ll be able to put on
that house or condo will be much bigger, redder and more tax-advantaged!
P.S. - You should follow Trulia
and Tara
on Facebook! Ask Tara on Trulia


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