Buy or Sell
First?
If you are considering looking
for a new house, and are a current home-owner, then chances are you’re
wondering what your strategy should be: do you wait to find the
perfect new home before you put your current home on the market, or
do you sell first and then look around? You have a few options.
Use the following as a guide to explore what might be the best move
for you.
Sell First:
There are several benefits
to selling your current house before searching for your next home.
First of all, once you have sold your house, you will know precisely
how much money you have to work with. With a concrete price range,
you’ll be able to narrow the pool of houses before you begin looking,
and negotiate accordingly. This will allow you to immediately
make firm offers on houses that you are serious about purchasing.
You can be first in line with an unconditional offer you know you can
afford, and this will grant even further negotiating leverage as Sellers
tend to take unconditional offers more seriously. When they counter
or turn down an offer that’s conditional on the sale of a home, they
usually think the Buyer will come back with a better and more firm offer
once they have sold their current home. However, if you make an
unconditional offer, the Seller will usually give you more consideration,
as they realize you’re probably looking at other properties and will
move on if your offer is rejected. Likewise, if you have already
sold you house, you probably do have a wider opportunity to look
around, negotiate, and find the best deal and fit for you and your family.
The flip side of this scenario,
however, is that if you don’t find the right property before the closing
date of the house you’ve already sold, you may have to look for temporary
housing until you do find what you’re looking for.
So, before you opt to sell
first, you should determine whether you have alternate, temporary options,
in case you have to move from your house before you’ve found a new
one. How would you and your family deal with living in a transition
home for an undetermined period of time?
Buy First:
Buying a new house without
having sold your current home may occur if you are interested in a specific
property and will only sell your current home if this property comes
on the market. It may be a matter of timing—grabbing hold of
the home before it’s too late. The same might be said of a property
you haven’t had you eye on previously, but that catches your attention
due to its uniqueness or unbelievable price. If buying first means
you don’t miss out on the real estate opportunity of a lifetime, it
may be the best move.
However, be careful. If you
buy another property and aren’t able to sell your current home quickly
enough, you could end up having to finance both homes and shoulder the
extra debt until you sell. You can get a financial appraisal or
market evaluation of a home prior to selling, but this doesn’t guarantee
the price you’ll ultimately receive for the home after the negotiation
process has run its course. Since your selling price will be an
unknown, jumping into a purchase could be a gamble, particularly if
your budget is tight.
Make sure you’re familiar
with all aspects of the financial reality this scenario would create
before you purchase another home. You may be faced with owning
two homes at once. What type of financial stress would this bring
to your life and how would you deal with it? Consider the fact
that if your current house doesn’t sell quickly enough, you may be
forced to sell it off at a reduced price in order align the closing
dates of your two properties. What effect would this have on your
financial situation?
Conditional Offer:
An additional option involves
making your offer to purchase conditional upon the sale of your current
property within a specified period. Conditional offers usually
include a clause that allows for the Sellers to keep their property
on the market and remain open to other offers while you try to sell
your home. If the Sellers receive another attractive offer before
you’ve sold your home, they may accept and ask you to either remove
your condition and firm up your offer, or to back down from the offer.
A conditional offer forms a kind of middle ground, an area of compromise,
for those who are afraid to sell or buy first—but doesn’t hold the
advantages of the other two options.
One of the drawbacks of the
conditional offer is that Sellers tend to take them less seriously.
They definitely give stronger consideration to firm offers. This
leaves you with less negotiating power. In fact, some Sellers
will simply turn down or counter a conditional offer. Other Sellers
will believe the Buyer will come back with a more serious offer when
their home has sold. So, you may end up having to increase your
offer in order to have your conditional offer accepted and keep your
foot in the door of your desired house.
Even if your conditional offer
is accepted, there is no guarantee another Buyer won’t step in and
overthrow your offer before you have sold your current home, which would
put you back at the starting line. Also, consider the fact that
you cannot withdraw your conditional offer until the end of the period
specified in the contract—which means that if a better deal comes
along, you will have to wait to jump at it.
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