Lexington Park Real Estate Online


Lexington Park FAIR MARKET VALUE


Setting the right price is an important first step in getting a home sold. Sellers often wonder if they should spend $200 to $400 for a professional appraisal of their Lexington Park real estate before placing it on the market.

WAYS TO DETERMINE VALUE IN Lexington Park


A professional appraiser's opinion of a property's market value is based on the recent sales of similar Lexington Park real estate. Different appraisers could come up with different numbers. Even if all of them agreed on a value, there is no guarantee that you would receive that amount for your property. An alternative to a professional appraisal is to ask a professional Realtor for a written market analysis of your property. This analysis will include information about recent home sales in your neighborhood, as well as how those homes compare to yours.

Lexington Park Home Buying Pitfalls


Buying your Lexington Park home whether you are a first time buyer or an ‘Old Pro’ involves legal, financial and emotional considerations. The more you know about the most common buyer mistakes in Lexington Park, the more likely you are to avoid them.

Make sure that when you put in an offer on any Lexington Park home that you have spent time narrowing down just what you are looking for. When the sellers accept your offer, you are involved in a binding contract that could cost you your deposit and other damages should you decide to back out. The opposite scenario, waiting for the 100 % perfect home can be an exercise in futility. With the thousands of variables available in housing, including location, style, size, amenities and condition, perfection is almost always an unreasonable goal.


Lexington Park Real Estate Cycles


One problem with attempting to time your purchase to the business cycle is that even experts have problems accurately predicting the future economy. Even when they can, the Lexington Park market does not necessarily move in tandem with the stock market or the economy as a whole. Lexington Park is a unique situation.

When the economy is doing well, interest rates are generally higher. The result is that fewer people can afford houses, and Lexington Park is no exception. When the economy slows down, interest rates fall, the "affordability index" moves up and more people can afford houses. The Lexington Park market will take the lead.


Lexington Park Disclosure Rule


Types of Material Defects for Lexington Park might include any known structural deficiencies or building code violations. Material Defects might also include defects in walls, ceilings, floors, windows, foundations or electrical or plumbing systems. If you are selling in the summer and the place usually floods in the winter that is a material defect that is not going to be obvious to a prospective buyer.

When you are contemplating the possibility of selling your Lexington Park you might want to ask yourself what you would want to know about the property if you were planning to buy it. If a condition or situation would be important to you, disclose it and disclose it in writing. As a seller, this is your strongest protection against future litigation.


Rent or Buy Lexington Park


For most people, the chance to trade nondeductible rent payments for mostly deductible mortgage payments is a powerful inducement to trade a rental home into a Lexington Park of your own. This is by far the single most important reason why people decide to buy their first Lexington Park.

However, whether you are considering your first Lexington Park investment or planning to move up, the number crunching necessary to figure out how much house you can afford depends on two calculations: one for actual monthly outlays, the other for the true, after tax costs.


The Benefits of Selling Lexington Park


If your Lexington Park holdings consist of both a personal residence and a rental, you can sell your personal residence and exclude up to $250,000 ($500,000 for a married couple) on the gain. Then you move into your rental, live in it as your personal residence for two years and then sell it, again benefiting from the $250,000 or $500,000 exclusion. This is true even though most or all of the increase in value occurred before you converted the property to your personal residence.

Ron Wimmer
Direct:  301-737-3636
Mobile 240-434-1471

23063 Three Notch Road
California, Maryland 20619