After a long vetting process, settled on wonderful local realtor. (I am in a relatively small community with low inventory/high demand. She is part of a large, well-respected agency.) Hadn't signed agreement yet, and after unusual (for her) delay in responding to a question, she explained she had a very serious health diagnosis that had caused her to be offline for a week. It has been several months (as I am still trying to get house ready) and I am wondering how realtors would advise addressing with her -whether in conversation or contract? I can see that treatments (if cancer) could deplete her for weeks at a time. I know she has taken on new listings and I know that no realtor would want to admit their limitations in such a situation. She does not have an assistant. I have already communicated that her health is what is most important. But, I have to be realistic about my interests when it comes to a 1.3 mill. listing. TIA. Edit: Thank you for the comments. They reveal to m...
A family member in Alabama works for a local TV station, so they just shared a news clip with me (see post title), and we’re dying laughing. 😂 Apparently they tried to interview 20+ home owners for over a month in the Birmingham area, and not a single family would talk to them. Reasons ranged from “we’re embarrassed that our home has been sitting on the market for so long” to “we don’t want to break down crying on TV because we can’t sell our house for the price we want.” Enjoy! submitted by /u/SisuSisuEveryday [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1r8uwal/the_birmingham_housing_market_sellers_facing/