Texas Proud
Give me a museum and I'll fill it. (Picasso) Give me a forum ...
- Joined
- May 16, 2005
- Messages
- 18,536
Also with house prices falling, land prices are too. New houses built on less expensive lots are now cheaper than older, in some places. Tougher competition with new and distressed properties.
Edit: also this is what I've heard, but don't take my word for it, that the average time to buy a house is one week and if a house hasn't sold in one month it is priced too high.
If you go now on some real estate broker sites advising buyers on which houses to look at, you see it says look only at motivated sellers. Looking at a an overpriced house is a waste of everybody's time because even if an offer is made the seller won't take it. And I have one anecdote, for what it's worth, where a seller did just this to my parents, and months later dropped the price $50,000. Here's one such site:
Make An Offer On An Overpriced Home
I just can not believe that the average time to buy a house is one week... heck, it took me over 1 year to find what I wanted at the right price... We had a LOT of people who just did not believe that there was not a crisis in our area... heck, the house that I bought was listed at $190K at first... I did not even want to take a look at it since it was above what I was willing to pay... one year later made and offer for $160K and bought it...
I still take a look online to see what is happening.. in my zip code there are a few HUNDRED houses that are listed with 'price reduction' on them... people still list them way to high and wonder why they do not sell... in our area there is a ONE YEAR supply of houses even if no new ones came on the market...
If you want to sell, you need to get the price down for the few buyers that are out there... live with the loss...