House Hunters Question #3 - Does it really only take 1 piece of paper to buy a home?
TV Show may end up giving a distorted view to home buyers.
I have watched with interest the rise in popularity of shows like House Hunters, where a host takes you behind the scenes of the process of a home buyer or a family buying a townhouse who are shown around to 3 homes by a Realtor. After seeing the three homes and a regularly placed commercial break the home buyer comes to the Realtor office to fill out a one page contract form. After another regularly placed commercial, viola, the buyer has the home and we get the opportunity to drop in on them 1-2 months after they have moved into the property they selected. All of this half hour, made for TV house hunting got me to thinking, How authentic is the House Hunter to the actual home buying process?
Part Three of a Nine Part Series
Lets review. At this point the home buyer has already been working with a Realtor and has viewed only 3 homes and they are prepared to make an offer.
The buyers have made their decision and are prepared to make an offer to the seller. The viewers at home have been left in the dark as to which property that the purchasers are considering. This leaves us guessing which one that the buyers are selecting. What we are shown is that the agent has prepared a very thin folder that has a single page contract offer in it that is presented to the buyers. The buyers then sign this one piece of paper and we then are taken to commercial. This begs the question, Is it really that easy? Most first time home buyers that come to us believe that it is that easy and they along with the show could not be further from the truth.
The current standardized Regional contract form for the base regional contract is 10 pages long. When you consider all of the addendum and contingency forms to the overall contract offer, the entire pacakge is over 20 pages in length. Why so long? Lets take a moment and see what the contract offer is made up of.
The offer to purchase contains the names of all of the parties involeved in the potential transaction along with the names of the parties that they are using as their agents, the definition of the property and the legal description of what is actually being sold along with all of the items that will be staying or conveying in the house, condo or townhouse. The buyer will disclose what they are willing to pay for the property along with how they are planning on paying for the property with the down payment amount and the mortgage amounts and terms. The buyer may also ask for the seller to help assist the buyer with the seller contributing towards the buyers closing cost. The offer will also show the seller how much of an earnest money deposit the buyer is depositing with the buyer agents brokerage. The offer will also explain the terms for any home inspections to be performed along with the time frames that the inspections will be done within and the agreed upon remedies that the seller will take if the buyers home inspection reveals anything with the property. One of the most important factors of the offer is the proposed settlement date. This will establish when the seller will need to move out and when the buyer can expect to move in, along with when the buyers mortgage company needs to have the loan completed.
The show never lets you know what the buyer offered or how much the sellers ended up selling the property for. The Program also doesn't show you how they came up with the price that they offer.
How it really works: In the real world, an agent will take the time to do a comparative market analysis of not only what is active and available on the market, but more importantly, they take a look at what has actually sold during the past 3 to 6 months in the Northern Virginia Real Estate Marketplace and for the specific community that the buyer is interested in. This gives the buyer a true indication of what home have actually been selling for an what buyers are actually paying. We also get an indication of what subsidies in the form of repair credits or closing cost credits that the home sellers are paying on behalf of the home buyer. The last thing we want is for a home buyer to overpay for a property.
The 20 plus pages contract is mainly boilerplate, yet, most of the contract offers is designed to a). protect the parties and b). explain what will happen if one of the parties does not do what they promised to do.
Robert Earl - Founder of The Earl of Real Estate Team is a Real Estate Entrepreneur & Real Estate Coach based in the Northern Virginia. The Earl's Site features Reston VA Real Estate & Reston Homes for Sale
Published August 20th, 2007
Filed in Business, Real Estate




