Charles McShan - untitled

The point here is that every buyer’s home-search process is different. What happens or works for one buyer won’t necessarily be the case for another. Don’t feel pressure because of something that worked out for someone you know. Purchasing a home is likely going to be the largest financial investment you will make in your lifetime. Don’t settle, don’t make a hasty decision based on pressure or weariness, and definitely don’t choose a home that you’re not 100% sure about or comfortable with, because you’ll be paying that thing off for the next 20 or 30 years.

So where do you start?

MAKE A LIST

So you have an idea of what your dream house would be like, but this impression in your mind of what your new home will look like — or, to be more precise — of what you hope your new home will look like, will be much clearer and more useful if you actually put pen to paper and make a complete checklist of both your needs and your wants. It’s a good idea to start from the outside in, instead of inside out. This would mean considering location first. Location could be a need vs. a want. For example, if you got a promotion that requires you to move out of the city, then location is top priority and your highest need. But if you would like to stay in your area of your city, then location becomes closer to a “want” — such as a preferred neighborhood for its specific amenities. Or for parents with young children or adult children with elderly parents, or broken families, location would be a need. It would be more of a desire if those factors don’t apply. Here’s another example of how location applies: Let’s say you fall head over heels in love with a certain home, but it’s on a busy, loud, or annoyingly unfinished road; you might eventually regret your

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