Articles and Advice
Most buyers walk into their first showing without much of a plan, and it shows. They fall for a good paint job, then second-guess everything by the third house. Twenty minutes of planning fixes most of that, but many neglect it.
Before you book a single showing, split your list in two: what you need, and what you'd just like to have. A third bedroom might be a genuine need if two kids currently share a room. A soaking tub probably isn't. Skip this step, and you'll end up touring a house that photographs beautifully and solves nothing.
Write it down. Don't just keep it in your head. A staged kitchen or a fresh coat of paint has a way of clouding judgment mid-tour.
Square footage alone doesn't tell you much. A 2,200-square-foot home with a chopped-up floor plan can feel tighter than an 1,800-square-foot home with an open layout. Think about an ordinary day instead of the number on the listing. Where does breakfast happen? Where do the kids actually do homework, and would you need a spot to work from home a couple days a week?
Storage gets underestimated more than almost anything else, usually right around the time boxes are piling up with nowhere to go. Hobby gear, seasonal equipment, a home office setup. Put it on the list now rather than discovering the gap after closing. A closet in every bedroom sounds fine on paper until you're standing in one trying to figure out where the winter coats go.
You won't think much about the commute during a 20-minute walkthrough. You'll think about it every day for years. Check drive times during actual rush hour, not the estimate a map gives you. If schools matter to your family, confirm boundary lines before you get attached to a specific house. A house two minutes outside a boundary line is still a different school district, no matter how close it looks on a map.
Buyers stretch their list all the time to land in a location they love. That's fine, as long as it's on purpose and not something you realize after the offer's already in.
Every list has items you won't budge on. It also needs a few you're willing to let go of, and most buyers don't figure out which is which until they're already mid-tour. Rigid lists rarely survive contact with a real market, especially in competitive price ranges. Figure out now what you'd give up for the right price or the right neighborhood.
This isn't about narrowing your options. It's about not wasting a Saturday on a house that was never going to work.
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