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Tips on Buying a Home
If you're thinking about buying a home, you'll want to
carefully choose the real estate professional you work with during the process.
You should commit yourself to working with one sales associate
who can learn your likes and dislikes in homes to make your home-buying process
easier. Choose a professional who specializes in residential real estate and who
has specific knowledge of the local real estate and mortgage markets.
The person you choose should listen to you and be interested
enough in you to find out about your housing needs and preferences. Service
first should be the motto of the professional you choose with services going
above and beyond what you expect and need. Doing some preliminary planning
before you begin your home search will make the entire process more manageable
and less overwhelming. As part of your initial game plan, you should:
Check your credit rating
Even if you're sure you have excellent credit, it's wise to
double-check at the outset. Straightening out any errors or disputed items now
will avoid troublesome holdups down the road when you're waiting for mortgage
approval.
You may see disputed items, in addition to errors caused by a
faulty social security number, a name similar to yours, or a court ordered
judgment paid off that hasn't been cleared from the public records. If such
items appear, write a letter to the appropriate credit bureau. Credit bureaus
are required to help you straighten things out in a reasonable time (usually 30
days).
 | TIP: Make sure that any outdated derogatory
entries are deleted from your credit file. Adverse credit information is not
supposed to be reported or included on your credit report after seven years
(except bankruptcy information, which can be reported up to 10 years).
 | TIP: Officially cancel inactive credit cards.
If you have an inactive credit card with a $5,000 limit, even though you owe
nothing on it, some mortgage lenders will consider that a potential future
debt. Too many inactive credit cards with significant credit limits could
keep you from obtaining a mortgage loan. Don't just cut up your extra cards;
officially cancel them, and do it now so there will be time for the news to
reach the credit bureaus.
 | TIP: Hold off on making any major credit card
or car purchases while you're waiting to apply for a mortgage. Monthly
payments you're obligated to pay will be counted against you, and reduce the
amount of the mortgage loan you'll be offered. Even if you've been
pre-approved for a mortgage, that approval is subject to last-minute
evaluation of your financial situation, and a spending spree for appliances,
furniture and other goodies intended for your new home may wreck your
chances for buying it. |
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Pre-qualification and pre-approval on a mortgage
A real estate professional can help "pre-qualify"
you for a mortgage before you start house-hunting. This process includes
analyzing your income, assets and present debt to estimate what you may be able
to afford on a house purchase. Mortgage brokers, or a lender's own mortgage
counselors can also calculate the same sort of informal estimate for you.
Obtaining mortgage "pre-approval" is another thing
entirely. It means that you have in hand a lender's written commitment to put
together a loan for you (subject only to the particular house you want to buy
passing the lender's appraisal).
Pre-approval makes you a strong buyer, welcomed by sellers.
With most other purchasers, sellers must tie the house up on a contract while
waiting to see if the would-be buyer can really obtain financing.
The down side is that you must pay application fees to cover
the lender's paperwork in verifying your employment, income, assets, debts and
credit rating. If you later decide not to use that particular lender, you'd have
to start all over again elsewhere - with no rebate.
Pre-approval will also speed up the entire mortgage procedure
once you've found the house you want. The only remaining question will be
whether the house will "appraise" for enough to warrant the loan.
Become an educated buyer:
 | The web is one of the best ways to search for homes today.
With this website, you can
receive daily emails with new and updated listings from the towns and price
range of your choice.
 | Search the entire MLS for all homes, condos, land, multi
family, commercial properties, and past solds at your convenience.
 | View full listing sheets showing amenities, taxes, lot
sizes, beds, baths, rooms, siding, fireplaces, garages, room sizes and much
more.
 | Get property address and see where the properties are
located on MapQuest.
 | Check schools and community profiles of your preferred
towns.
 | Save preferred listings in your own file to view anytime.
 | Calculate approximate mortgage payments for specific
properties.
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Home Inspection
Once you have made an offer on a home, you will need to
schedule a home inspection, conducted by an independent authorized inspector. It
is extremely import to hire a reputable inspector so that you know exactly what
you are buying. Do not hesitate to ask friends, family, and co-workers for
advice. If you are satisfied with the results of the inspection, then you can
proceed to the Purchase and Sales agreement. If the inspector finds problems
with the property, you may want to negotiate with the seller to lower the price,
or to pay for certain repairs.
Appraisal
Your lender will require you to get an appraisal of the house
you want to buy, to make sure it is worth the money that you are borrowing. You
may select your own appraiser, or you may ask your real estate broker to help
you with this task.
Homeowner's Insurance
Lenders require that you have homeowners insurance, to protect
both your interests and theirs. Like everything else, be sure to shop around for
insurance that fits your needs.
Settlement or Closing
Finally, you are ready for the closing. Be sure to read
everything before you sign! You should have both your real estate broker and an
attorney present at the closing to ensure that all is in order.
Finally make sure before you buy
Making sure you end up with the right home involves figuring
out exactly what features you need, want and don't want in a home. Before
starting your search, you should make a "wish list" to decide which
features are absolutely essential, which are nice "extras" if you
happen to find them, and which are completely undesirable.
The more specific you can be about what you're looking for
from the outset, the more effective your home search will be. Also keep in mind,
that in the end, every home purchase is a compromise.
Create your own personalized "wish list" and when
you're finished filling it out, share it with your real estate agent.

Home Selling Tips
If you're thinking of selling your home, keep in mind that
buyers appreciate a clean look in the homes they view. You can increase the
value of your home and decrease the time it takes to sell by making a few simple
improvements.
Aroma is the first thing prospective buyers notice when they
step inside a home. To eliminate odors, steam clean your carpet and wash walls
and floors with household cleaners and disinfectants. Keep your home smelling
fresh by burning candles or potpourri, boiling a pot of cinnamon sticks or
putting a dab of vanilla on cold light bulbs before turning them on.
Nothing makes a home look newer faster than painting. Painting
your walls and removing outdated wallpaper may be the best interior improvements
you can make. For broader appeal, paint in neutral colors such as beige, white,
off-white, or gray. These colors suggest newness and cleanliness and can
brighten a dull or outdated room. If your carpet is badly worn, outdated or
stained, consider replacing it. If your carpet is heavily soiled, you may want
to have it professionally cleaned. Brighten the interior of your home by
cleaning your windows and opening your curtains to let light in. Clean hanging
light fixtures and add the highest-wattage bulbs allowed. Below are 20
suggestions to help you sell your home.
- Make the Most of that First Impression:
- A well-manicured lawn, neatly trimmed shrubs and a
clutter-free porch welcome prospects. So does a freshly painted - or at
least freshly scrubbed - front door. If it's autumn, rake the leaves. If
it's winter, shovel the walkways. The fewer obstacles between prospects and
the true appeal of your home, the better.
- Invest a Few Hours for Future Dividends:
- Here's your chance to clean up in real estate. Clean up in
the living room, the bathroom, the kitchen. If your woodwork is scuffed or
the paint is fading, consider some minor redecoration. Fresh wallpaper adds
charm and value to your property. Prospects would rather see how great your
home really looks than hear how great it could look, "with a little
work."
- Check Faucets and Bulbs:
- Dripping water rattles the nerves, discolors sinks and
suggests faulty or worn-out plumbing. Burned out bulbs leave prospects in
the dark. Don't let little problems detract from what's right with your
home.
- Don't Shut Out a Sale:
- If cabinets or closet doors stick in your home, you can be
sure they will also stick in a prospect's mind. Don't try to explain away
sticky situations when you can easily plane them away. A little effort on
your part can smooth the way toward a closing.
- Think Safety:
- Homeowners learn to live with all kinds of self-set booby
traps: roller skates on the stairs, festooned extension cords, slippery
throw rugs and low hanging overhead lights. Make your residence as
non-perilous as possible for uninitiated visitors.
- Make Room for Space:
- Remember, potential buyers are looking for more than just
comfortable living space. They're looking for storage space, too. Make sure
your attic and basement are clean and free of unnecessary items.
- Consider Your Closets:
- The better organized a closet, the larger it appears. Now's
the time to box up those unwanted clothes and donate them to charity.
- Make Your Bathrooms Sparkle:
- Bathrooms sell homes, so let them shine. Check and repair
damaged or unsightly caulking in the tubs and showers. For added allure,
display your best towels, mats and shower curtains.
- Create Dream Bedrooms:
- Wake up prospects to the cozy comforts of your bedrooms.
For a spacious look, get rid of excess furniture. Colorful bedspreads and
fresh curtains are a must.
- Open up in the Daytime:
- Let the sun shine in! Pull back your curtains and drapes so
prospects can see how bright and cheery your home is.
- Lighten up at Night:
- Turn on the excitement by turning on all your lights - both
inside and outside - when showing your home in the evening. Lights add color
and warmth, and make prospects feel welcome.
- Avoid Crowd Scenes:
- Potential buyers often feel like intruders when they enter
a home filled with people. Rather than giving your house the attention it
deserves, they're likely to hurry through. Keep the company present to a
minimum.
- Watch Your Pets:
- Dogs and cats are great companions, but not when you're
showing your home. Pets have a talent for getting underfoot. So do everybody
a favor: Keep Kitty and Spot outside, or at least out of the way.
- Think Volume:
- Rock-and-roll will never die. But it might kill a real
estate transaction. When it's time to show your home, it's time to turn down
the stereo or TV.
- Relax:
- Be friendly, but don't try to force conversation. Prospects
want to view your home with a minimum of distraction.
- Don't Apologize:
- No matter how humble your abode, never apologize for its
shortcomings. If a prospect volunteers a derogatory comment about your
home's appearance, let an experienced Real Estate Agent handle the
situation.
- Keep a Low Profile:
- Nobody knows your home as well as you do. But a Real Estate
Agent know buyers - what they need and what they want. Your Real Estate
Agent will have an easier time articulating the virtues of your home if you
stay in the background.
- Don't Turn Your Home into a Second-Hand Store:
- When prospects come to view your home, don't distract them
with offers to sell those furnishings you no longer need. You may lose the
biggest sale of all.
- Defer to Experience:
- When prospects want to talk price, terms, or other real
estate matters, let them speak to an expert - your Real Estate Agent.
- Help Your Agent:
- Your Real Estate Agent will have an easier time selling
your home if showings are scheduled through his or her office. Offer to keep
an eye on the brochure box attached to your sign and make sure it is always
filled with flyers. Try to accommodate prospective buyers when they want to
see your home.

Common Mistakes Sellers Make
- Basing the asking price on needs or emotion rather than
market value. Many times sellers base their pricing on how much they
paid for or invested in their home. This can be an expensive mistake. If
your home is not priced competitively, buyers will reject it in favor of
other larger homes for the same price. At the same time, the buyers who
should be looking at your house will not see it because it is priced over
their heads. The result is increased market time, and even when the price is
eventually lowered, the buyers are wary because "nobody wants to buy
real estate that nobody else wants". The result is low priced offers
and an unwillingness to negotiate. Every seller wants to realize as much
money as possible from the sale, but a listing priced too high often
eventually sells for less than market value. An accurate market
evaluation is the first step in determining a competitive listing price.
- Failing to "Showcase" the home. A property
that is not clean or well maintained is a red flag for the buyer. It is an
indication that there may be hidden defects that will result in increased
cost of ownership. Sellers who fail to make necessary repairs, who don't
“spruce up” the house inside and out, and fail to keep it clean and
neat, chase away buyers as fast as REALTORS® can bring them. Buyers are
poor judges of the cost of repairs, and always build in a large margin for
error when offering on such a property. Sellers are always better off doing
the work themselves ahead of time.
- Over-improving the home prior to selling. Sellers
often unwittingly spend thousands of dollars doing the wrong upgrades to
their home prior to attempting to sell in the mistaken belief that they will
recoup this cost. If you are upgrading your home for your personal enjoyment
- fine. But if you are thinking of selling, you should be aware that only
certain upgrades to real estate are cost effective. Always consult with your
REALTOR® BEFORE committing to upgrading your home.
- Choosing the wrong REALTOR® or choosing for the wrong
reasons. Many homeowners list with the real estate agent who tells them
the highest price. You need to choose an experienced agent with the best
marketing plan to sell your home. In the real estate business, an agent with
many successfully closed transactions usually costs the same as someone who
is inexperienced. That experience could mean a higher price at the
negotiating table, selling in less time, and with a minimum amount of
hassles.
- Using the "Hard Sell" during showings.
Buying a home is an emotional decision. Buyers like to "try on" a
house and see if it is comfortable for them. It is difficult for them to do
if you follow them around pointing out every improvement that you made. Good
REALTORS® let the buyers discover the home on their own, pointing out only
features they are sure are important to them. Overselling loses many sales.
If buyers think they are paying for features that are not particularly
important to them personally, they will reject the home in favor of a less
expensive home without the features.
- Failing to take the first offer seriously. Often
sellers believe that the first offer received will be one of many to come.
There is a tendency to not take it seriously, and to hold out for a higher
price. This is especially true if the offer comes in soon after the home is
placed on the market. Experienced REALTORS® know that more often than not
the first buyer ends up being the best buyer, and many, many sellers have
had to accept far less money than the initial offer later in the selling
process. Real estate is most saleable early in the marketing period, and the
amount buyers are willing to pay diminishes with the length of time a
property has been on the market. Many sellers would give anything to find
that prospective buyer who made the first, and ONLY, offer.
- Not knowing your rights and obligations. The
contract you sign to sell your property is a complex and legally binding
document. An improperly written contract can allow the purchaser to void the
sale, or cost you thousands of unnecessary dollars. Have an experienced
REALTOR® who knows the "ins and outs" fully explain the contract
you are about to sign.
- Failure to effectively market the property. Good
marketing opens the door that exposes real estate to the marketplace. It
means distinguishing your home from hundreds of others on the market. It
also means selling the benefits, as well as the features. The right REALTOR®
will employ a wide variety of marketing activities, emphasizing the ones
believed to work best for your home.

Moving tips - before you leave your present address:
Eight weeks before
 | Remove unnecessary items from your attic, basement, storage
shed, etc. Use things you can't move, such as frozen foods and cleaning
supplies.
 | Obtain information about your new community.
 | Secure a floor plan of your new residence and decide what
household items you want to keep.
 | Start a possessions inventory.
 | Solicit estimates from at least three moving companies.
 | Call your homeowners insurance agent to find out to what
degree your move is covered.
 | Create a file for documenting all moving papers and
receipts.
 | Arrange to transfer your children's school records. |
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Six weeks before
 | Contact the IRS and/or your CPA for tax-deductible
information.
 | Evaluate your possessions inventory. Can you donate
anything? Do you need it all?
 | Notify your friends, relatives, professionals, creditors,
subscriptions, etc.
 | Subscribe to a local paper in your new community and
familiarize yourself with local government, community and social news and
activities.
 | Begin the off-site storage process (if applicable).
 | Locate high-quality health-care professionals and hospitals
in your new location.
 | Complete post-office change of address cards for the
following: banks; charge cards; religious organizations; doctors/dentist;
relatives and friends; income tax bureau/Social Security
Administration/union; insurance broker/lawyer/CPA/ stockbroker; magazines;
post office; and schools.
 | Clean your closets.
 | Hold a moving/garage sale or donate items to charities.
 | Choose a mover. Contact your mover to make arrangements and
inquire about insurance coverage.
 | If relocating due to a job, contact your employer to see
what costs, if any, they will cover. |
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Four weeks before
 | Start packing!
 | Send furniture, drapes and carpets for repair/cleaning as
needed.
 | Gather auto licensing and registration documents, medical,
dental and school records, birth certificates, wills, deeds, stock and other
financial documentation, etc.
 | Contact gas, electric, oil, water, telephone, cable TV and
trash collection companies for service disconnect /connect at your old and
new addresses. Also ask for and ask for final readings.
 | Request refunds on unused homeowner's insurance, security
deposit with landlord, and prepaid cable service.
 | Notify your gardener, snow removal service and pool service
(if applicable).
 | Contact insurance companies (auto, homeowner's, medical and
life) to arrange for coverage in your new home. |
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Three weeks before
 | Make your travel plans.
 | Arrange to close current bank accounts and open accounts in
your new locale (if necessary).
 | Notify your state's motor vehicle bureau of your new
address.
 | Arrange for childcare on moving day. |
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Two weeks before
 | Arrange special transport for your pets and plants.
 | Service your car for the trip.
 | Contact your moving company and review arrangements for
your move. |
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One week before
 | Prepare detailed directions and an itinerary with emergency
numbers for your moving company.
 | Settle outstanding bills with local retailers. Pick up dry
cleaning, and return library books and rented videotapes.
 | Take pets to the veterinarian and get copies of their
records.
 | Drain gas and oil from power equipment.
 | Give away plants not being moved.
 | Cancel newspaper delivery.
 | Buy two-weeks worth of medication and have your
prescriptions forwarded to your new pharmacy.
 | Buy traveler's checks.
 | Make arrangements to pay for your move. |
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Two to three days before
 | If you're not doing it yourself, have your mover pack.
 | Defrost refrigerators and freezers.
 | Consider gathering all valuables and giving them to family
or friends to hold until the move is completed.
 | Disconnect all major appliances.
 | Contact your moving company for any updates.
 | Pack first-night items and a survival kit. Keep them in
separate boxes in your car. First night items may include: sheets, towels,
toiletries, phone, alarm clock, change of clothes and flashlight
 | Mover's survival kit may include: scissors, utility knife,
coffee cups, instant coffee/tea or a coffee maker, water and soft drinks,
snacks, paper plates, plastic utensils, paper towels, toilet paper, soap,
pencils and paper, local phone book, masking and/or duct tape, trash bags,
shelf liner and aspirin or ibuprofen. |
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Moving day
 | Be home to answer any questions your mover may have.
 | Record all utility meter readings (gas, electric and
water).
 | Stay until your movers are finished.
 | Complete information on the bill and carefully read the
document and the inventory sheet before signing it.
 | Keep your copies of the bill and inventory until your
possessions are delivered, the charges are paid and any claims are settled.
 | Take one final look around to see if you forgot anything.
 | Give movers the directions to your new home, and an
emergency number where you can be reached during the move. |
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At destination
 | Unpack first-night items and mover's survival kit.
 | Be at the destination to welcome the movers and be on hand
to answer any questions.
 | After the job is completed, pay what is owed. The driver is
obligated by law (a federal requirement for interstate moves) to collect
payment upon delivery.
 | Scrutinize the unloading of your items and account for each
one on your inventory sheet. Check promptly and carefully for any damaged or
missing items.
 | Place moving and other important documents in a safe place.
 | Go to the post office and collect held mail. |
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Shelley
Goes, Broker ~ Owner
Shadow
Lane Realty Group
Commercial
& Residential
Sales,
Purchases, Leases, Rentals
Cell:
617-719-9593 ~ Email: shelley@shadowlanerealty.com
Web:
www.ShadowLaneRealty.com

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Shelley
Goes
Broker/Owner
Shadow
Lane Realty Group
Have
Real Estate Questions?
I have answers !!
Contact me anytime. Local
& referral business always welcome !!
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