A buyer's final walk through of the home they are purchasing in Palo Alto
can be done anytime before closing. It is ideal if it can be done after
the seller has moved out, but not essential, and sometimes that is not
possible.
The
purpose of the walk through is to make sure the home is in a similar
condition as when you made the offer. You want to make sure that nothing
new has happened and that nothing new is broken. It is not a
contingency of closing. So for example, if the stove has broken, you
would still be obligated to close, but the seller would be obligated to
have it fixed. You can do a walk through up to the day of closing but
early that day. It would have to be before recording, so that you could
prove that if something broke it is the seller's responsibility. If
something stops working after closing then the home protection plan will
get it fixed, but if it is very close to closing then they may want
proof that it was working when you closed. The walk through and the
inspection reports can be used as proof.
Another
purpose of a walk through is to allow the seller to show the buyer how
certain things work that may not be obvious. Every house has its own
little quirks, and sometimes there are complicated systems that need to
be explained. I once had a client who bought a 900 square foot Palo Alto home where the walk through took 3 hours because the seller had installed so many complicated landscaping systems.
So,
there is no absolutely right or wrong time to do the walk through, but
they should be done. You do not want to close on a house and discover
that the previous owners took the newly laid sod (true story) with them,
or worse yet, your Palo Alto house burned down and someone forgot to
tell you.
If you have any questions about buying or selling a home in Palo Alto please feel free to contact me.
Marcy Moyer
Keller Williams Realty
www.marcymoyer.com
marcy@marcymoyer.com
650-619-9285
D.R.E. 01191194
Sunday, May 27, 2012
What To Do When The Accepted Palo Alto Home Offer Does Not Appraise
This is a common problem. The market is appreciating and homes are selling for more now than they were 6 months ago. Good news for Palo Alto sellers, right? It can be, but there are pitfalls.
If the offer you accept is higher than the market value of closed sales, not the ones that are pending, and you know it sold for $300,000 over asking, then you may run into issues if that offer is contingent on an appraisal. The appraisal will look at closed sales in the last 3-6 months, not rumors about the house around the corner.
When you get your 10 offers, and one is higher than all the others but contingent on an appraisal, just remember it is not going to appraise at the offered value and there may be another round of negotiations.
There are several ways to deal with this that should be discussed with your Palo Alto agent at the time that you look at offers. You can:
If you have any questions about buying or selling a house in Palo Alto please feel free to contact me.
Marcy Moyer
Keller Williams Realty
www.marcymoyer.com
marcy@marcymoyer.com
650-619-9285
D.R.E. 01191194
If the offer you accept is higher than the market value of closed sales, not the ones that are pending, and you know it sold for $300,000 over asking, then you may run into issues if that offer is contingent on an appraisal. The appraisal will look at closed sales in the last 3-6 months, not rumors about the house around the corner.
When you get your 10 offers, and one is higher than all the others but contingent on an appraisal, just remember it is not going to appraise at the offered value and there may be another round of negotiations.
There are several ways to deal with this that should be discussed with your Palo Alto agent at the time that you look at offers. You can:
- Take a cash offer that is not contingent on an appraisal.
- Ask the buyer of an offer with a loan to agree to make up the difference between the appraised value and the offer price.
- Cross your fingers and hope the appraisal comes in at the offer price and if it does not, negotiate the price you are willing to take and the buyer is willing to give. There may be other things about this offer you like so it may be worth it to take the most the house will appraise for even if it is less than another offer that does not have an appraisal contingency.
If you have any questions about buying or selling a house in Palo Alto please feel free to contact me.
Marcy Moyer
Keller Williams Realty
www.marcymoyer.com
marcy@marcymoyer.com
650-619-9285
D.R.E. 01191194
Friday, May 25, 2012
New listing: Sunnyvale 4 Plex
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Sunnyvale Townhome Open This Saturday, 1-4PM
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Tuesday, May 22, 2012
Does The Amount A House is Underwater Matter in Menlo Park Short Sales
As a Menlo Park Short Sale Agent I get asked this a lot. My answer is a definitive sort of, especially if it is a Chase short sale.
Here is how it may make a difference.
Some homeowners owe more on their homes than the home is worth, the definition of being underwater. The home is not going to sell for what it is worth, it will sell at or around market value. The bank generally understands that. The bank as representative for the investor on the loan wants to lose as little money as possible, but knows there is going to be some loss.
The banks have procedures in place to approve short sales. At Chase they have the number of people who have to approve a short sale broken down by the amount of loss, not by the value of the house.
So if the loss is $250,000 or less, only one lowest level of negotiator needs to approve. If the loss is $250,000 to $350,000 the offer goes to the 1st negotiator and then a negotiator one level up. At $350,000-$450,000 it goes to the first 2 plus one level up in management. And so forth.
So the greater the loss the more people have to approve before it even gets to the investor and/or mortgage insurance company. Each person who needs to approve can ask for more documentation or just ok the file. All of this takes time.
The bottom line, the bigger the loss, the more time you should expect for approval and the more doumentation you may need to provide.
So knowing that, don't try to keep up with the Joneses. Just because your best friend's short sale was approved in 3 weeks, and you are still waiting at 8 weeks, it does not mean you got the B team looking at your file. You just may have more managers that have to approve that are gumming up the process.
If you have any questions about short sales in San Mateo or Santa Clara County please feel free to contact me.
Marcy Moyer
Keller Williams Realty
www.marcymoyer.com
marcy@marcymoyer.com
650-619-9285
D.R.E. 01191194
Friday, May 18, 2012
Sunnyvale Townhome OPEN Saturday/Sunday 1-4pm
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