Skip to content

Opting For New Home Construction?

Whether to buy an existing home or have one built is yet another decision to make during the home-buying process. If you decide to go with new construction, a real estate agent can be a powerful advocate in your corner as you negotiate upgrades, a move-in date and other terms with the home builder.

Below are some basic pointers to prepare you for the journey ahead:

Selecting A Builder
Shopping for a large production or custom home builder can be a daunting task. Start by defining what architectural styles appeal to you and then seek out the builders in your area who offer those styles. Due diligence is essential. Ask friends for referrals to get firsthand accounts; verify the builder’s state license status, if applicable; and check whether they’re certified by the National Association of Home Builders.

The Builder Representative And Your Real Estate Agent
A builder representative’s ultimate goal is to sell you a home. His or her role is to provide a wide range of information to help you in your decision-making, from building restrictions, roads and easements to inspections, warranties, rebates and upgrades. A real estate agent knowledgeable in new-home construction will be able to help you wade through all the data and point out the downsides and upsides of each line item. Your agent also can look out for your interests in reviewing the builder’s contract, which often contains more legal jargon than consumer-friendly language.

It’s All About Timing
Market conditions greatly dictate a builder’s incentive to make a deal you cannot refuse. When a builder has inventory on his hands, his carrying costs start adding up. When this happens, a builder might be more amenable to strike a favorable deal, whether it’s throwing in upgrades or taking a bit off the asking price. A real estate agent can help you know when market conditions are right for these benefits. Also, watch for builder close-out sales. Builders promote these special events when a new subdivision is near completion but empty inventory still remains.

A Word About Paying Up
While there are always exceptions, most builders require a deposit when a purchase agreement is signed. They also require that the buyer pay for any upgrades prior to closing. If you back out prior to closing, unless the agreement states otherwise, you will lose that money. Make sure you understand every detail in the builder’s contract before signing it.

How Can A Real Estate Agent Help Me?

Seven Main Roles Of Your Real Estate Agent

A Buyer’s Real Estate Agent:

  1. Educates you about your market.
  2. Analyzes your wants and needs.
  3. Guides you to homes that fit your criteria.
  4. Coordinates the work of other needed professionals.
  5. Negotiates on your behalf.
  6. Checks and double-checks paperwork and deadlines.
  7. Solves any problems that may arise.

Eight Important Questions To Ask Your Agent

Qualifications are important. However, finding a solid, professional agent means getting beyond the resume, and into what makes an agent effective. Use the following questions as your starting point in hiring your licensed, professional real estate agent:

  1. Why did you become a real estate agent?
  2. Why should I work with you?
  3. What do you do better than other real estate agents?
  4. What process will you use to help me find the right home for my particular wants and needs?
  5. What are the most common things that go wrong in a transaction and how would you handle them?
  6. What are some mistakes that you think people make when buying their first home?
  7. What other professionals do you suggest we work with and what are their credentials?
  8. Can you provide me with references or testimonials from past clients?

Contract Tips

1. Request E-Mail Listings & Updates

Most buyers don’t know that the information that they are looking at online may be dated for many different reasons. To avoid wasting your time, ask us to register your e-mail address so you can receive daily MLS changes of reduced prices and new listings. This is one way to gain access to the same data agents receive.

 

2. Tour Price Reductions

If you’re like most buyers, you will want to offer less than asking price. It’s just human nature. But if you plan to offer less then you’ll probably be unsuccessful at getting that type of offer accepted if the home was recently listed. Choose homes that have had recent price reductions or have been on the market for at least 30 days or more. These sellers are more likely to be receptive to lower offers.

 

3. Obtain Comparable Sales

When you find a home you want to buy, we will print out a list of similar homes in the same neighborhood over the last few months sorted by:

  • Active Listing
  • Pending Sales
  • Sold

The list should contain the following specifics:

  • Property Address
  • Age
  • Square Footage
  • Lot size
  • Bedrooms & Baths
  • Sales Price

Compare this data with online home value sites such as Zillow and RealEstateABC, and you’ll see first-hand why the data that we give you will be more accurate.

 

4. Ask For An Allowance Or Credit

If you find the perfect home but you don’t like the color or condition of the carpet, for example, ask the seller to give you a carpeting allowance in your offer. Check with your lender before you write the offer to find out how to word a credit clause that is acceptable to the lender. You can ask for more than it will cost to repair or replace an item to cover your “hassle” factor. Many lenders let borrowers receive up to 6% of the sales price as a cash credit against closing costs.

 

5. Reduce Your Closing Costs

Depending on your local area, there may be fees associated with closing that are customarily paid by the buyer such as title insurance, property taxes, recording fees or escrow. In a buyers’ market, you can ask the seller to pay these costs. Typically, they can add up to one or two percent of the sales price and are often paid out-of-pocket by buyers. Ask us if these fees are negotiable. Then ask the seller to pay them.

 

6. Renegotiate After Home Inspections

All buyers should obtain a home inspection. Most contracts give buyers the right to cancel a contract if the home inspection reveals repairs or defects that are unacceptable to a buyer. However, if the repairs are minor, you might want to renegotiate the sales price or ask for a credit against your closing costs. Caution: don’t ask for a price reduction if the repairs were evident when you first saw the home or the seller might not be willing to negotiate with you.

 

7. Request Extras

Sellers realize that in buyers’ markets, often they have to give a little something extra to the buyers to entice a sale. Don’t be afraid to ask for a home warranty plan that covers you in the event an appliance breaks down or the plumbing or heating malfunctions. Normally these plans protect you for one full year from the date of closing.

 

8. Ask For An Item You Don’t Want

Did you like the sellers’ dining room table? China cabinet? Fish tank? Ask for it in your offer and use it as a negotiating tool. Often this draws the sellers’ thoughts away from price and directs those thoughts toward the personal property. If the listing stated the washer and dryer are not included in the sales price, ask for them. If the sellers balk, then tell us to say, “OK, if we leave the washer & dryer, are you then ready to sign the offer?”

 

9. Shorten Acceptance Period

There often is no reason to give a seller more than 24 hours to make a decision about your offer. There are a lot more homes on the market and you deserve a fast answer.

Deciding How Much House You Can Afford

Your lender decides what you can borrow but you decide what you can afford.

Lenders are careful, but they make qualification decisions based on averages and formulas. They won’t understand the nuances of your lifestyle and spending patterns quite as well as you do. So, leave a little room for the unexpected, for all the new opportunities your home will give you to spend money, from furnishings, to landscaping, to repairs.

Historically, banks use a ratio called 28/36 to decide how much borrowers could borrow. An approved housing payment couldn’t be more than 28 percent of the buyer’s gross monthly income, and his or her total debt load, including car payments, student loans, and credit card payments, couldn’t be more than 36 percent. (In Canada lenders apply similar formulas to determine how much a buyer can afford. The Gross Debt Service ratio, or GDS, is not to exceed 32 percent of the buyer’s gross monthly income, and the Total Debt Service ratio, or TDS, is not to exceed 40 percent of the buyer’s total debt load.) As home prices have risen, some lenders have responded by stretching these ratios to as high as 50 percent. No matter how expensive your market though, we urge you to think carefully before stretching your budget quite so much.

Deciding how much you can afford should involve some careful attention to how your financial profile will change in the upcoming years. In the long run, your own peace of mind and security will matter most.

Moving? Connect with Live Recommended Real Estate Agents in your target area.

X