2manyrocks
Super Member
- Joined
- Jul 28, 2007
- Messages
- 9,517
Makes sense to me.
For myself, a survey should be done before selling (if you actually want to sell) because that's just doing your due diligence before selling (as well as knowing what HAS to be done with the house per home inspection before selling knowing what kind of costs will be incurred by the buyer).Well... seller has met with their agent again, and asked us to pony up another $3k in cash, plus the survey. Spoke with wife, and we said nope. Survey is fair, I think, but appraised value and we pay for survey, not appraised, plus $3k cash, plus survey. Wife's words "they gonna come back again tomorrow and want another $3k, I'm sick of this, we already agreed verbally to something".
It may seem like small potatoes, but you have to say enough at some point.
You're probably smarter than me, and methinks you may be in the drivers seat on this sale.The extra 3K is because they didn't want to drop the price to meet the appraisal, and they or their agent figured we might say yes, so what's the harm. Now, I'm not a particularly smart man, but the seller has literally sold his furniture, bar stools, dog chages, and moved/sold/rehomed his live stock, and loaded the trailer with his package deal tractor. I think they are more committed than me.
End of the day something, is only worth what someone is willing to pay.To be 100% honest, I agree with the appraisal. Although we like the place, and it checks all of me and wife's mandatory items, and many of the want items, it is not anything spectacular. If we could fine the right piece of available property, we could recreate everything as well, or better for the same price. It just there really isn't a lot of 10-20 acre peices around; there are some very nice 40-50 acre pieces, but they are well outside our budget.
My guess would be the real estate agent is encouraging them to not drop the price.The extra 3K is because they didn't want to drop the price to meet the appraisal, and they or their agent figured we might say yes, so what's the harm. Now, I'm not a particularly smart man, but the seller has literally sold his furniture, bar stools, dog cages, and moved/sold/rehomed his live stock, and loaded the trailer with his package deal tractor. I think they are more committed than me.
Willing and able…End of the day something, is only worth what someone is willing to pay.
You've done your homework. You also stated "it is not anything spectacular" so I'd stick to your guns, particularly if you have no qualms walking away from it.
I missed it, who is paying for the survey?The seller backed off their demand for the additional cash, and we have already ordered the survey, but closing got pushed back 10 days. 1 surveyor said job too big, can't squeeze it in, other one said upto 10 days.
I am. I made payment yesterday, which was an ordeal, and allegedly the surveyors were onsite today. I told wife, just complaining but $3500 for 4 corners, and verify no encroachment, bet a 2 man crew had it done in less than 4 hours of field work... I literally found the corners (2 of them) during the intial tour, looking for deer tracks. It's pretty easy when the last survey was only 6 years ago.I missed it, who is paying for the survey?
For virtually Any mortage, yes, 100%. You mentioned a carve out; then at a very min a legal description would have to be submitted to the county, to request to split a parcel.Probably a stupid question, but I'm used to asking stupid questions....
Is an official survey, by a licensed surveyor a legal requirement? By this I mean, if you and the owner walk and set boundary markers, and agree on those boundary markers, write up a land sale contract, based on those measures and bounds, both sign the contract with notary, would this not still be a legal carve out, if the owner had no liens or other encumbrances? Don't know how one would then register a separate deed. I guess it depends on the state's rules and land use rules. I have always been surprised just how simple transactions like this can be if non-contested. I do know that there are people you just can't work with. There are folks that want to change it up all the time. In real property, verbal agreements don't mean that much.
Something happened that I didn't expect in domestic properties. There is no such thing as a local market any more. Anyone, in the world can buy property in the USA. It is an international market. And there are holding companies that will buy over the local market, for rentals, so that that they can establish a local monopoly. So they can raise rents."They" have been saying that it's going to crash since 2019. I've been waiting.
Just Google "real estate is going to crash" with a time frame April 1, 2018 through April 1, 2020 and you get plenty of links (example).
I'm still waiting. My mattresses are full.
Must depend on custom of the region.For virtually Any mortage, yes, 100%. You mentioned a carve out; then at a very min a legal description would have to be submitted to the county, to request to split a parcel.
If you are cash buying an entire whole parcel, I dont believe there is a requirement.
Rent Control, Vacant Home 6k annual extra tax are reality here…Something happened that I didn't expect in domestic properties. There is no such thing as a local market any more. Anyone, in the world can buy property in the USA. It is an international market. And there are holding companies that will buy over the local market, for rentals, so that that they can establish a local monopoly. So they can raise rents.
I consider myself lucky, I was able to by my property with out this out outside influence. Lucky now that that my land has quadrupled in evaluation. The hand built house means almost nothing. But this was before this international market was established. The internet changed this all up, to what it is now.
Your offer, means, very little, to a seller, if they see cash from some foreign buyer, that is just parking money. This is the true basis of the housing issues we face. politicians on both sides don't talk about it. But I've seen it, that every new inner city highrise, is mostly unoccupied and foreign owned as money parking strategies. They don't rent these out. They just pay the condo fees. I didn't think this would bleed out to rural properties, yet it has. I do expect another international crash sometime in the next five years. Its a cycle. And these properties will flood the market, back to something affordable to the locals. Which I took advantage of in '94. I had the cash. Some how we have been misdirected that there is a housing shortage.
I guess this turned political, I wish it wasn't the case. I've seen too many hard working, follow the rules people, out bid on their American dream of home ownership, by foreign flippers.
Being a seller, you can't fault them, if its a clear transaction for way more than your asking price based on local apprasials. What else do we have?
Post internet, I feel the pain, of any buyer that knows they can be out bid, by any one in the world. We should have better land buying rules.
Originally we were looking at having 6 acres or so along with 32 acres or so divided into 2 tracts so we could sell the home with 19 acres and keep 19 acres ourself to build on if we wanted to (actually pretty easy with a creek as a boundary with 19 acres on each side of the creek).I am. I made payment yesterday, which was an ordeal, and allegedly the surveyors were onsite today. I told wife, just complaining but $3500 for 4 corners, and verify no encroachment, bet a 2 man crew had it done in less than 4 hours of field work... I literally found the corners (2 of them) during the intial tour, looking for deer tracks. It's pretty easy when the last survey was only 6 years ago.
Yes, I 100% know that not all surveys are that easy.