
Stereodude
Senior Audioholic
You don't even need a real estate agent. They don't add anything useful to the process IMHO.
I am, but I am in a way stuck at work. Long story short, I signed contracts for hiring bonuses and student loan payment benefits that require me to stay there a couple more years. The other downside is my tuition assistance benefit is a lot, so I'd need a pretty high salary just to match it. If I leave early, I'd be paying back my employer about $23k right now.I'd give my best shot of finding job closer to your wife you,
In fact are you by any chance an experienced java developer ?![]()
PM me if you are...
The latter.Well, you could find new jobs or pay the piper...
So true!!!That's too bad; keep looking you'll eventually find something.
Part of the problem, is that real estate within a close proximity to NYC barely, or never dropped in price. You are paying for location and a short commute.
zillow.com, njmls.com, gsmls.com, homes.com, craigslist, newspapers.how are finding the houses you are looking at ?
LOL, I literally did LOL when I read this! Now she's asking to know what I laughed about... are you trying to get me in trouble?!?!?I don't get it....
Buy a house close to your office...hook up with an office girl that is renting...move her into your new house...get rid of the old wife...
You guys make things way more difficult than they really are...
No, you're right, I really only meant I wish I was closer to the age of not working. I won't complain about work, but it's frankly not fulfilling work.No, you don't wish you were closer to retirement age. That would mean the "retirement accounts" you have probably wouldn't be enough, as of three years ago. The uncertainty is killing people. literally and figuratively. A lot of people had a plan and now, that plan is out the window, even if they had invested conservatively.
As far as who your agent is working for- ask, specifically, if they're your agent or just out for the commission on the sale. I would bet that it's the latter. Buyer's agents exist- you just have to look for one.
Unless she used a Roth IRA for the house, she blew it, big time. The interest and penalties for doing what she did are far more than any benefits, unless it's used to literally save a life.
Agreed, thanks for giving me something else to think about.Who does a real estate agent represent? Follow the money; whom ever is paying them. If your agent is getting money from that sale's commission, they rep the seller.
You don't even need a real estate agent. They don't add anything useful to the process IMHO.
I want to look into foreclosures but I don't know how really.Exactly, ditch your Realtor and go direct to the seller. Your realtor just puts another open wallet in the mix. They get percentage of the sale, you'll have more bargaining power on your own. Keep searching the net - all houses are listed on the net. Or talk to any banker friend you may know about impending foreclosures - ya might get a line on something that way too.
You're right.It's just my opinion, but if you find a house you like but it is way overpriced, why not make an offer that reflects reality?
PM Sent ....I am, but I am in a way stuck at work. Long story short, I signed contracts for hiring bonuses and student loan payment benefits that require me to stay there a couple more years. The other downside is my tuition assistance benefit is a lot, so I'd need a pretty high salary just to match it. If I leave early, I'd be paying back my employer about $23k right now.![]()
And your Realtor will try to talk you out of this with the strangest explanations since they get a cut based on the final price. Which is precisely why you don't need one.It's just my opinion, but if you find a house you like but it is way overpriced, why not make an offer that reflects reality? What have you got to lose? They say no. So what? But if they are in deep, they may just bite or counter with something that is in your price range. You never know. At least they'll know someone is interested if they would only get real on the price.
You don't even need a real estate agent. They don't add anything useful to the process IMHO.
I agree...with a few comments.Exactly, ditch your Realtor and go direct to the seller. Your realtor just puts another open wallet in the mix. They get percentage of the sale, you'll have more bargaining power on your own.
Maybe we have different ideas of walking distance, plus I live here. Now. For many years. So yes, I have seen the houses and the ones I like are very nice houses to me.Have you actually seen any of the houses in the Ironbound that are within walking distance of Penn Station? I have. My wife is from there and she still has two brothers in that area. Neither one of us would want to live there.
...nice restaurants, though.