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Looking for guidance on a real estate/inheritance situation in Texas

My grandmother and her brother sold a house they inherited (no will, original owner was their mother). The property was never formally probated before the sale. The home closed in October 2025 through a title company, and funds were initially distributed to my grandmother and her brother. Before the sale, the buyer/title side was aware that another family member (their nephew) was living in the home. My grandmother specifically asked if his signature or involvement was needed, and she was told it was not required to proceed with the sale. After closing, the title company contacted them and said the funds needed to be returned, stating there was an issue related to the nephew’s claim. The money was sent back with the understanding it would be properly redistributed. Now months later, the funds are still being held in escrow because the nephew (who is likely also an heir through his deceased mother) is refusing to cooperate and is trying to negotiate for more money. Questions: Is it ...
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What would you do?

My daughter is starting a university program that will take her four years to complete. Both of us want me to be in the same city while she’s there. I can buy a condo for 100-125K cash; hoa + property taxes and HOI would be about $500-600/month, but local rents for the same sqft are about $1200-1500/month. I’d lose the $350/mo interest I make in that CD, but I’d also lose the taxes I have to pay on that income, and I’d pay half in housing per month. Basically I’d pay $60,000 in rent over 4 years but no maintenance. I’d pay roughly half that in property taxes/hoa/ins in that same period—and the property would increase in value. What would you do? I hate hoa’s but I also hate throwing away rent. submitted by /u/moschocolate1 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1suiwtr/what_would_you_do/

First time Seller

I’m selling vacant land for 25k and the buyer wants me to pay his portion of the closing cost roughly $700. I’m paying $1500 for the agent. Taxes roughly $200 And my closing costs $700. Total if I pay his closing cost should be around 22k flat. I bought the land 10 years ago for 10k Am I being greedy or should I pay for his closing cost to secure the sale? Any advice would be greatly appreciated. submitted by /u/qaboos246 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1su7fh8/first_time_seller/

Is professional staging actually worth it when selling a family home in Sydney right now?

We’re getting ready to sell our 4-bedroom house on the North Shore. It’s a 1990s build we’ve lived in for the last 9 years. The kitchen and bathrooms work fine but they’re definitely dated, the backyard is a decent size but nothing fancy, and the whole place could really use fresh paint and some updating. With three young kids the house is very “lived in” right now, toys everywhere, photos on every wall, and all the normal family clutter. I know how important presentation is when selling, especially in the current market. I’ve been looking into property staging sydney to make the photos and open homes look a lot sharper. Has anyone here sold a similar older family home recently? Did you go with full staging or just declutter and repaint yourself? Was it actually worth the cost in the end? submitted by /u/Dapper_Visual_4449 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1stoxsl/is_professional_staging_actually_worth_it_when/

Is professional staging actually worth it when selling a family home in Sydney right now?

We’re getting ready to sell our 4-bedroom house on the North Shore. It’s a 1990s build we’ve lived in for the last 9 years. The kitchen and bathrooms work fine but they’re definitely dated, the backyard is a decent size but nothing fancy, and the whole place could really use fresh paint and some updating. With three young kids the house is very “lived in” right now, toys everywhere, photos on every wall, and all the normal family clutter. I know how important presentation is when selling, especially in the current market. I’ve been looking into property staging sydney to make the photos and open homes look a lot sharper. Has anyone here sold a similar older family home recently? Did you go with full staging or just declutter and repaint yourself? Was it actually worth the cost in the end? submitted by /u/Dapper_Visual_4449 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1stoxj0/is_professional_staging_actually_worth_it_when/

How to get mandated repairs done in short timeline?

I'm currently renting an apartment but looking at the possibility of buying a foreclosed house from the city. (City foreclosed previous owners due to unpaid property taxes and now is trying to unload them if they can, otherwise they get demo'ed.) It has repairs mandated by the city to bring it up to code, which must be done in 180 days of closing. I've owned houses in the past and know that it can be hard to get contractors to even bid, depending on the size of the repair. So I'm curious, is it likely that the city has a list of contractors willing to bid and maybe do the work on houses like this (they have a list, only one of which I'm interested in) within the city's timeline? Especially since the mandated repairs are to bring it up to city codes and require permits (thus inspections). Edit for clarity: what I'm wondering about is the timeline for the repairs. 180 days seems very short. submitted by /u/JcWoman [link] [comments] source https:...

Will living on a double yellow street bother me?

I toured a house on Long Island on Monday, gave the offer 30 mins after we left and they accepted the next day. I grew up in nyc around the noise and played on the streets ( literally) would it be any different living on a double yellow street? The driveway is long enough for 8 suvs. submitted by /u/Slight_Suggestion_79 [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1sthzgq/will_living_on_a_double_yellow_street_bother_me/

Help with house value

We are in the midst of attempting to buy a new house for our family. My wife and I are both 39 and our third child is coming in May. We purchased our first house new in 2012 for $244,000. It is 2300 square feet which is a nice size. However, the square footage is used quite poorly. Huge family rooms, terrible closets and storage. The house we are looking at building is 3596 square feet and will cost around $695,000 all in. This comes out to about 193/sq foot. Slab foundation, 3 car garage, master on main, 5 BR, 4 BA, good school zone, not a bad lot (neighborhood greenspace on one side and behind and another house on other side). Does this seem like a good value? We think it is pretty good since most of the houses in this zip code are usually like $1,000,000+ nowadays. However, this is still a lot of money so wanted to ask. If this is not the place for this type of question , I will delete and move along. Tennessee. submitted by /u/PenguinRhin0 [link] [comments] source ...

Listed yesterday

In the PNW. Listed our 1800 ft2 1933 renovated house. Agent convinced us to list at a higher pr8ce than I would have. Have 57 saves in less than 24 hours, which I think is stellar. Two showings scheduled. Open house on Saturday if we get there lol. We are motivated sellers but own it outright. Being very bearish on the economy I want to sell it fast so told agent will look at any and all offers. This is my 7th actual house sale so we are not rookies. Will not accept any contingent offer (other than financing if pre-approved) No inspection contingency should keep the Karens away. Probably the last real-estate deal I'll ever do submitted by /u/TJMBeav [link] [comments] source https://www.reddit.com/r/RealEstate/comments/1ssmejz/listed_yesterday/