my advice: name your price -- when they come back with a counter -- look at the counter in comparison to the whole price.
we said X in a sellers market -- they cam back with X+10K --- over the loan that was Nothing. As far as I am concerned we won.
And yes though it is scary you can afford that big number. And oddly, that number will become normal.
And if times get rough for you -- as long as you move carefully through home improvements -- your house can be your back up plan. In other words, if we had to sell now, even though prices have moved close to what we bought - we'd get out with a chunk of cash
One thing that helps with the panic is making the sale contingent on the report of a home inspector [link] The inspector's report got the previous owners to fix several things about my house, including the fact that the kitchen exhaust just blew greasy air into the attic, not outside.
My house was listed for $179,900. I was hoping to get it in the low $170s. My broker suggested going in at $170K as a starting point because psychologically, $170K sounds closer to their asking price than $169 or $168. I wasn't convinced, but I followed her advice, and they accepted that first offer. I couldn't believe it.
Two years later, there's an identical house on my street, albeit with more renos, on the market for $44K more than I paid for my house. I feel like I got a deal.
Oh Sail, oh sweet jezis... I can barely breathe.
I could barely watch that vid. DEEEsturbing.
I've taken my night meds and now must avoid another Ambiem/Rilutek postings. Thte sensible way is to turn off the laptop, but that goes against everything I believe in. Three machines on all the time.
And everything grammatically correct.
I should just close the laptop. But what if something interesting happens in the box?
Okay, closing now. See you on the flip side.
I didn't know turtles COULD make noise.
I prefer to think of turtles as silent