Buying A Home
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DH and I found a house that we really like. Right now, it is listed more than $60,000 over what it has been appraised at, and over $30,000 the fair dale price (all the numbers came from the government property appraisal site). Even if we were to offer them the fair sale price, that is still 15% under asking price. I have read that is considered an insult, and that you shouldn't low ball that much.
My question is, how low can we offer without seeming like we are insulting the home owners, all while making sure we can, possibly, get a fair price for this house?
Re: How low is too low?
Do you mean the tax assessment? That is much different and is unrelated to the appraised value.
I don't think so, but I am admittedly not very educated in this area. The house is listed for $225,000, but Just/Market Value is listed at $163,587 and the Sales Comparison is $192,500.
How did you get appraisal value information? Usually a lender does not order an appraisal until an offer has been accepted. If you are talking about tax assessment value, then you are looking at the wrong number. Assessment value is not the same as appraisal value.
Have your REA run sold comps and base your offer on that information.
Yes, I've sold a house, and yes, it's emotional and I could say I was "insulted" by the first offer - but the reality is it's a BUSINESS transaction and honestly..... I wouldn't worry all that much about "insulting" them.
If they actually did price themselves significantly above comps and what it would appraise for, are you really going to pay more for the house just because their feelings might be hurt because THEY feel their house is worth more than it actually is?
~Benjamin Franklin
DS dx with celiac disease 5/28/10
I really like this response! Remember a home is only worth what someone is willing to pay for it, regardless of what the seller thinks. I never worry about insulting a seller. If they don't what to negotiate with me, that's fine. There will always be another house.