How to buy a Real Estate at Auction..? this is not an advertisement. It is just a conversation on how you may buy a home or piece of land if you see the property advertised that option. Maybe I can help you out with some insight. I’ve been seeing a massive surge of the buyers interest in real estate auctions lately (especially with people trying to find deals in this market). But there is a terrifying blind spot happening right now: Many traditional real estate agents have absolutely no idea how auctions legally work. I can help clarify… you do not have to fire your Real estate Agent, just ask them to get informed… If you are looking to buy a property at auction, even though I can’t give you legal advice maybe I can give you some guidance…? Anyone , butler..? submitted by /u/AmericasAuctioneer [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1tyjews/questions_about_real_estate_auctions_unconfused/
First-time home buyer here having signed a contract on a property for $188K in WA with a pass/fail inspection (period runs through Monday). Inspection this week uncovered that the hot water heater broke and the space it's in and the subfloor are damaged with some mold. A quote to repair the space + install new hot water heater is ~$3K. My agent first suggested the seller would cover 1K, and I would cover 2K. Now she's suggesting an even split, and the selling price increases to $189,500. It seems like she's really not acting in my best financial interest. For one, she is the listing agent's mother. Furthermore, at the mention that I was thinking about getting an inspector outside her recommendation, she asked if she had offended me, and then claimed in a raised tone that "I am very ethical", which was pretty embarrassing, extremely unprofessional, and a manipulative pressure tactic even at its most generous. I did end up going with her inspector because h...