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Five tips for online
house hunting
Terri
J. Bridgwater, Contributing Writer
When Tom Perry moved to Columbus, Ohio, for a new
job as a senior programming manager at Compuserve, his wife Ruth
stayed in west Texas to sell their house. Despite being 1,400 miles
apart, they were still able to look for a new home together by using
Internet real estate sites.
"I'd be online checking out the sites and find something
interesting, and I'd tell Ruth about it by e-mail or AOL Instant
Messenger," Perry says. "I'd send her the MLS (Multiple
Listing Service) number so she could pop it in the search and
go right to it."
In Perry's Internet search, he says, "we basically
used the ZIP code of the area we wanted, our price range, and a
requirement of a minimum of four bedrooms for our search. We looked
at hundreds of homes."
The Web puts about 30,000 real estate-related sites
and more than a million Internet-listed homes at your fingertips.
A prospective home buyer can easily visit homes in the next county
or in the next country. Numbers like that can be a little mind-boggling;
that's why Kathleen Sindell wrote The
Unofficial Guide to Buying a Home Online.
"There's so much out there, it's easy to get overwhelmed
and lost in cyberspace," says Sindell, a consultant in Alexandria,
Va. "But, people shouldn't be intimidated. Anyone with the most
basic computer skills can find a home using the Internet. Home buyers
can shop … 24 hours a day, seven days a week."
Searching online lets the buyer do lots of research
before they go out to look at homes, adds Christine Hanson, a Century
21 real estate broker in Fort Lauderdale, Fla. "That makes my job
easier because after the buyers have done some basic research, they
know what they like and what they don't," she says.
Hanson and Sindell agree on five basic tips for home
buyers using the Web to find a new home:
Step 1: Determine your price range
"Figuring out your price range is a very important
step," Hanson says. "Many people get started looking at houses on
the Web and think they can afford them. When they sit down and actually
look at the paperwork, they realize they can't."
Bankrate.com has a calculator that helps home buyers
figure out how
much house they can afford.
Prepare for this step by getting paperwork and documentation
organized, Sindell says. "A buyer is going to need income tax records,
check stubs, credit reports, etc. It's important to gather this
paperwork early and keep it organized."
Step 2: Figure out what you want … and what you don't
want
Do this by creating a reasonable "wish list." Have
the entire family participate in making two lists: one for the amenities
you must have and another for the things you'd like
to have. "It's important to evaluate your current lifestyle as well
as the lifestyle you expect to live five years from now," Sindell
says.
Step 3: Don't buy a house you've seen online without
seeing it in person
Web sites supply lots of positive information but
hardly ever any of the negative information, Hanson says. A buyer
needs to stay objective and investigate the property in person.
Perry recalls: "This was a five-bedroom home with
a four-car garage that looked beautiful from the outdoor photos
posted on the web. It was priced comparable to the other homes in
the neighborhood. When we walked in the place, I almost fell over.
It was like the movie Animal House. I haven't seen trashed
green shag carpeting since the 1970s, and I've never seen appliances
that old."
Step 4: Check out local and national realty Web sites
The Perrys used local realty sites to get specific
information about schools and Realtor.com for all the other information.
"Realtor.com
is great. It's got it all: crime statistics, cost of living comparisons,
and a breakdown of suburbs and regions within the city."
For more recommended real estate sites, see the links
at the bottom of this story.
Hanson says, "Buyers should also keep in mind that
not all homes for sale are online. It's still important to choose
a Realtor and work with them through the MLS listings."
Step 5: Increase your buying power with loan pre-approval
Buyers can go to Web sites to find the type of mortgage
best suited for them and the best
mortgage deals. Buyers can also save about 1 percent of the
mortgage amount by applying online, Sindell says.
She says loan pre-approval is essential. "If, in a
hot real estate market like San Francisco, a buyer with loan pre-approval
stands on the doorstep of a house they like along with another buyer
without pre-approval, whose bid do you think will be accepted?"
A buyer who has good credit (an A rating) can get
a loan pre-approval from an online lender right away. A buyer can
print off the pre-approval notice and take it along while looking
at houses.
Other advantages
The Perrys weren't comfortable getting their mortgage
online, but they chose their homeowners insurance that way. "I went
to InsWeb, put in the house information and within an hour I had
the best quotes from local agents," Perry says. "It was great."
Perry was able to look at 30 or 40 houses in an hour
on the Web. If he'd been touring neighborhoods with an agent, he
might have been able to see five houses a day.
Finally, the Perrys found some homes they were interested
in and went to look at them in the flesh. He recalls: "I had major
déjà vu when we'd go into houses that we'd seen in
a virtual tour on the Web."
Virtual home tours provide a 360-degree view of the
house interior and let your point of view actually move around the
room. Perry loved it. "I think it was well worth the minute or two
it took to download the scenes. I really felt like I'd actually
been in the houses."
Perry and his wife purchased three homes the traditional
way before using the Web for their fourth purchase. "It was great.
I'd absolutely do it again," he said. "I think this is the way [a
real estate search] should be done. It's convenient and efficient.
Why waste your time if you don't have to?"
-- Posted: May 18, 2000
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