Foreclosures are No Competition for Smart Home Sellers

Foreclosure for sale 

The National Association of Realtors reports that 30%-40% of all homes currently on the market are foreclosures, bank owned or distressed property.    For the average home seller, that means a lot of competition from banks and lenders when they sell their home. 

While this fact may seem dire on the surface, smart home sellers see the silver lining.  The successful have learned to use the vacant, abandoned foreclosure home as a tool to sell their well-loved and cared for home.  

Smart Sellers Know:

The Comparable Sales Data for all competing homes on the market in their area because banks don’t do give aways.   Sales facts can quickly dispell the misguided shopper who believes they can purchase a Mac Mansion for $50,000. 

  • Contrary to the “Buy a Foreclosure and Get-Rich-Quick” late night infomercials, buying a foreclosure is usually no bargain unless the home is a dog, or medicore property at best.  
  • Banks list homes that are in good locations and condition near the full market value, so the upside is extremely limited.  The lender typically recoops their investment and the costs of the foreclosure sale, when the property is sold.  Many buyers falsely believe that foreclosures are deals of the century.   For the most part, they are certainly not.

Smart Sellers Know:

To make all home information readily available to buyers because foreclosures are a crap shoot.   This includes warranties, guarantee’s for work done, appliance and equipment manuals, details about workmanship and home improvements.  Utility bills and a list of contractors who have performed work or maintanence should also be prominently displayed for the buyer on the first showing. 

  • Foreclosures are sold as ”Buyer Beware” properties.  In other words, the Seller has no knowledge about the property or its condition, and full responsiblity for purchase lies with the buyer.
  • Lenders are exempt from disclosure laws that alert buyers to home defects and problems.    Meaning that the lenders often have no knowledge about the property and have no duty to disclose major problems, even if they are aware of them.

Smart Sellers Know:

Their home should be “in move” in condition because foreclosures certainly aren’t.   All repairs and maintenance should be done before the buyers inspection.   The home is free of clutter, freshly painted, landscaped and shows a geniune “pride of ownership”.

  • Abandoned, unkept foreclosed homes often sit vacant on the market for months.  They are overrun with weeds, dirt, vermin, and are as a whole, disgusting to imagine oneself living in.
  • Foreclosures are sold “As Is”.  The buyer can not ask the lender to pay for basic repairs.
  • Many foreclosures are complete wrecks.   The homes have been stripped, vandalized and abused.   Buying a neglected home is a gamble at best.
  • Most foreclosures can’t be properly inspected, if at all.  The power and water is disconnected.  Hidden water pipes were probably exposed to freezing temperatures last winter.   Cluelessly buying anything , especially foreclosures that offer no legal recourse or seller responsiblity, are deals for those with experience and high risk tolerance only.
  • Foreclosure buyers usually spend $400-$600 for a limited home inspection, just to find that the repair list is more terrifying than a late night horror flick.   When the lender refuses to fix problems, the buyer walks the deal.  The buyer is back on the street and the money paid for the worthless inspection is gone.

Smart Sellers Know:

To make the purchase of their home very certain, quick and easy for the buyer.   A “No Brainer”, if you will.  

  • Only 1 in 10 offers made to banks and lenders ever makes it to the closing table.   If a buyer needs a home to live in, odds are, a foreclosure won’t work.
  • There is always a problem getting accurate information about a foreclosure.  There could be liens, judgements or more than one note or deed of trust.   If buyers don’t know exactly what they are doing, they can lose their shirt.
  • Buyers have to deal with mounds of paperwork when buying a foreclosure.  Most of the added legalise pertains to covering the tail of the lender.
  • Buyer can not usually designate a closing attorney or title company to work with. 
  • Buyers often wait months to close on a foreclosure.   Contrary to common sense, lenders are in no real hurry to get deals done.  Weeks can pass before questions are answered or contract terms are addressed.  Buyers can count on additional problems with legal work, title insurance, appraisals and financing.  If time to possession is important, buyers would be well advised to avoid bank deals entirely.

While competing against banks to sell your home can be a challenge, smart seller realize that the sword cuts both ways.   Home buyers are not investors.  They buy a home from the heart.   

If you need to sell your home, show a little love for the ole ”Home Sweet Home”.  The bank won’t stand a chance.

Foreclosure Tour

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2 Responses to “Foreclosures are No Competition for Smart Home Sellers”

  1. Tommi Crow Says:

    Another great article on this topic also addresses the role of the Real Estate Agent in helping sellers compete with bank owned property.

    Check it out http://realestate.about.com/od/servingsellers/p/seller_vs_repo.htm

  2. Austin Home Loans Says:

    It is the number one job for an agent to help sellers!

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