
- General
Issues | Pricing
| Real Estate Contracts | Property Disclosure | Interacting
with Buyers | Dealing with Offers
|
- Handling
Real Estate Agents
| Issues of concern to buyers |
Can the buyer afford it? |
Across the Picket Fence
Dealing with Buyers
Seller: How do I go about pre-qualifying buyers? I don't want
to take my house off the market for someone who won't be able
to afford it.
-
-
- Simply request that the buyer provide you with documentation
from a lending institution within a certain number of days after
the contract is signed (five business days is customary) varifying
that they should qualify for the mortgage amount at the current
interest rate. This is no guarantee that the financing will be
approved, however. Rather, it is a statement from the lender
that the loan should be approved provided the borrower does not
have problems with his/her credit report, and that all the information
provided checks out (income, amount of debt, assets, etc).
- If your buyer come to you already pre-approved by a lender,
this is the best you can hope for. It means their information
has already been verified by the lender.
-
- Seller: The problem I'm facing is that buyers are automatically
offering
me 5-6% less than my asking price, arguing that since I don't
have to pay a commission I should be able to sell it for that
amount. It's priced very competitively now, and I can't afford
to go any lower. Should I raise my price 6% to avoid this confusion?
-
- No. If you raise your price, you'll lose your competitive
edge. First, are you sure you're "competitively priced"?
Have you had an appraisal done within the last year? If the answer
is yes, then you should have no problem convincing your prospective
buyers that the house is worth what you're asking. You may even
want to show them the appraisal document to demonstrate that
the asking price is fair.
- Also, explain to your buyers that the agent's commission
is typically added on to the seller's bottom line! Since you
didn't have to inflate you price to cover this fee, yours is
already at a bargain.
-
- Seller: I have a pretty nice house and would like to sell
it myself, but I'm not much of salesman. I can be honest to a
fault, and am afraid that I'll turn off interested buyers.
-
- An attractive, fairly priced home sells itself! A buyer's
decision to purchase is based upon theor space and location needs,
taste and style preferences, and financial capability. The buyer
looks to you for information, not a sales pitch! So relax...
no one knows your home better than you do. As for your honesty,
it is a plus -- not a fault. The buyer will be more likely to
trust you if he knows you aren't withholding the truth. Try,
however, to initially focus on the many positive features of
your home, rather than the negatives, when showing your home
to a prospective buyer. In any case, the less you say the better.
Let your house do the talking!
-
- Q: Buyer: The seller of the property I want to buy recently
had a professional appraisal done. Why does the mortgage lender
need to do another one (at my expense!)?
-
- Most mortgage lenders will accept a recent appaisal commissioned
by a second party (the seller, for example). It could be that
the particular appraiser is not someone that the bank usually
does business with. This does not mean that there is anything
wrong with the appraiser or the appraisal... just that the appraiser
is not on the lender's "list". It might be worth your
while to shop around for a lender that does business with this
appraiser, since it will greatly speed up your loan approval
process, as well as save you a couple hundred dollars (to have
another appraisal done).