Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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This is the only place that new homes are cheaper than re-sales. From personal experience, 70% over cost after 3 years is to be expected.[/QUOTE]
Preowned homes are more expensive because they have $25,000 or more to pay in closing costs. This gets added to the asking price. Not to mention the cost of upgrades they made to the home. Since many Villagers sell their homes within 1 to 3 years, I understand why their asking price is higher than new construction. Those who sold their homes 70% or more over cost were fortunate. Those who bought the homes are now sitting on homes they cannot sell. Their asking price is way above the market. On MLS we see many who bought homes during the covid craze who now must take a loss. Some 40K and more. My daughter is moving slow in buying. She wants to do everything she can to avoid a possible expensive mistake. It seems for every"I made a wad of cash on my home' story, there is a sad reality for those who paid the wad. This is happening because the Developer continues to build at marginal price increases and has no problem discounting hundreds of homes to suit his needs. A buyer has to be careful! Last edited by margaretmattson; 04-20-2024 at 11:02 PM. |
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#17
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We almost bought a fairly new preowned home 24 months ago and the closing costs were going to be around $2000. We ended up buying new but nothing related to closing costs, we still had to pay some fees to buy our new home. |
#18
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#19
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As a very satisfied and comfortable (in my surroundings) Villages homeowner, way up here in Poinciana, I see what the developer is currently developing, and continuing to plan on developing, having less and less impact on me, and on my "investment". More and more, what is being developed is separated from me by distance and concept. The more that is true, the less impact it has on my current lifestyle and on my anticipated lifestyle and the marketability of my home, when the day comes I or my heirs should decide to sell it.
I believe the marketability of my home will be more affected by things neither I nor the developer can control, like interest rates, and how affluent the pool of buyers may be at that time, which will be due to how well THEIR homes are selling, distant from TV, and how well the investment markets have done for the decade or so prior to their retirement, or their pre-retirement years. These quarterly reports are mildly interesting, but as for representing anything that affects me, personally, basically eye candy. |
#20
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Or, that same buyer can make more profit than the developer on the resale. Because of this, the developer does not allow a buyer to immediately flip his homes. He is interested in protecting himself. What goes in the Developer's wallet stays in his wallet. What goes in a buyer's wallet stays in his. Both accept a potential for a loss. It is foolish to try and compare when one has nothing to do with the other. Congratulations! The developer is making great money.This doesn't always mean good news for homeowners. Last edited by Randall55; 04-21-2024 at 05:00 AM. |
#21
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I personally think far too many overthink the property market.
The main reasons a house does not sell, whatever the market, or interest rate conditions are: Priced to high. It's a dump. Poor location, or a combination of any three. If the market deems you sell low, you will buy low. That has always been, and always will be. All commodities make their price level from market demand, and property is just another commodity. The expectation that you should always make a profit is nonsense. So many enter the housing market with expectations way above reality, just because historical sale prices were higher, or lower, if buying. All reports and figures showing sales, returns etc. from vested interests should be treated with a very large pinch of salt. My wife and I have bought and sold quite a few houses in our time, and all our best deals were in fallen markets. Go grab a great bargain! |
#22
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Where else is selling 2,000-3,000-4,000 houses. Some swings, but no market bust.
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Identifying as Mr. Helpful |
#23
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#24
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#25
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I have trouble trying to figure that out as well
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#26
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Lately, It has just been marketing jargon from the sales reps trying to make a bond payment seem inconsequential. Telling a would be buyer you do not need to pay it off helps immensely with a new home sale. I believe most on TOTV will agree the bonds are ridiculously high. Their advice has been don't buy new homes look at preowned instead.
Last edited by Randall55; 04-21-2024 at 06:01 AM. |
#27
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People filter information to be consistent with what they want to believe. |
#28
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There. I corrected it.
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#29
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If you buy a new home and pay off the $48,000 bond, do you think you can sell the home at a $50,000 higher asking price than same model homes? Most buyers wouldn't even look at your listing because they would instantly feel it is overpriced. They would have no idea you paid off the bond.
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#30
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No body is saying you can profit from paying off a bond.
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Identifying as Mr. Helpful |
Closed Thread |
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