at it,” Eliades said. “There was something just not right. The yard was too big. The yard was too small. It was too far from town.” Eventually, he found the perfect Victorian home that met his needs and even had extras, like a wraparound porch, as well as an active, vibrant community with neighbors and a nearby grocery store. “Sometimes you have to shop around to get a firm handle on what you like — and dislike — and what your market has to offer,” Sager writes. “Don’t think of it as wasted time if it takes a while for the right house to appear; consider it time well spent honing your house-hunting skills.” Yet other buyers just can’t find the right home for them, even after plenty of online research, checking out home after home, for months or years on end. One couple, Lynne Freda and her husband, found themselves in this situation, and ended up buying a home that wasn’t even for sale. And this isn’t an uncommon experience. Freda just couldn’t find anything they wanted after an extensive and exhausting and time-consuming house-hunting process, until their real estate agent realized the listings of homes for sale were just too limited. One day, the couple was driving through an area with their agent, and suddenly Freda’s husband saw a house and exclaimed that it was “the one” — but the home wasn’t listed or on the market. “The real estate agent said she’d sold the house to the [current] owners and offered to check in to see if they were ready to move on,” writes Sager.
They discovered that the owners were thinking about moving
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