Help! Buying in the US?

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oregon woodsmoke

New Member
[[[......Buying REO or foreclosures is better?.....]]

REO, is real estate owned (by the bank). That is a foreclosure. Same, same. The banks will sometimes sell them for less than is owed. Often the properties are in a bad state of disrepair, as the person who lost the house is angry and does damage as they leave.

Pre-foreclosure is when you find a seller who is about to lose his property to the bank and he will make a good deal to get rid of it before the bank forecloses. Sometimes the seller will agree to a "short sale" where the bank agrees to accept less than is owed on the mortgage.

The seller has to agree to do a short sale, since he is very likely still going to owe the bank whatever amount of the mortgage didn't get paid by the buyer.

[[[......When buying these do we get to see a report of a survey about the exact condition of the house. The things you can't see in pictures Ie. plumbing, wiring, internal etc. ( to avoid surprises later which add cost and time for repairs).....]]]]]

HUD has a condition report. Some banks also do, some don't. The condition report might be accurate, or vandals might have broken in and done more damage after the report was prepared.

It's not a good idea to purchase a foreclosure without looking at it. They are sold as-is, with no recourse if you don't like what you've purchased.

You can put an inspection contingency into your offer so that you can back out of the sale if you don't like what you find in the house. The bank will not do any repairs; the house is as-is, but you can put a clause in the contract that will allow you to back out.

Assume that any system that can't be tested is going to have to be replaced and write that into your budget. If it doesn't have to be repaired, you win. If it does have to be repaired, you have the money budgeted for it.

[[[[.......Is it better to hire 1 contractor to do the whole renovation? Do they supply the material or do we need to buy separately?.........]]]]]]]

Are you going to be there? Someone has to coordinate the workers and see to the delivery of supplies. If you aren't on site to do that yourself, you will have to hire a general contractor, amd he will make sure everything is done in the correct order and that supplies and workers arrive on site at the proper time.

I do my own contracting, but I am on the job site every day. do a lot of the work myself, and have done enough houses that I know some good workers to call. I also know what shops to use to order supplies and who delivers good material on schedule.

I usually purchase my materials myself. I have accounts at the various building supply places. But if you aren't in the area to keep track of every detail, your general contractor will see to the purchase and delivery of materials. You will have to give the contractor advances on his pay if you expect him to pay for materials.

[[[.....How many bedrooms in a house for best flip potential?....

3 bedroom 2 bath are an easier sell than some other sizes. That's a standard middle class type of home.

1 bath houses are difficult to rent or sell. 2 bedroom houses have a very limited buyer pool. 4 bedroom 2 bath are easy to sell, but as the house gets larger, the price goes up, and as the price goes up, your buyer pool gets smaller as fewer people can afford the larger price.

[[[[.......How to know where the best location is? Is there any info online about home buyer's index/statistics in particular suburbs?.....]]]]]

Just rule of thumb, I am in America and I wouldn't touch the areas promoted on this site with a 10 foot pole.

There is endless information available about different areas on The States. The US Census bureau has lots of information, broken down by individual town. Population, income, industry, whether the population is growing or shrinking, and lots more.

Everyone's newspaper is on-line, so you can see the classifed ads for any town and read some of the information about thatarea.

Most towns have a visitors center or tourist information website, so you can google the town and get lots of information.

Craigslist will have information about rentals and houses for sale in the larger towns, usually with photos.

Realty Times, on-line, has local market condition reports.

HUD (housing and urban development) has a link to all sorts of foreclosures and you can easily find which areas have a lot of foreclosures.

There are several forums for USA investors and they would be the best ones to ask about specific areas. You will do better if you get the opinion of someone who is actually investing in the area instead of asking the person who is trying to sell you something.
 
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StarCross

New Member
PMBLUE57 if you would like to learn about the stable housing economy in Western North Carolina, let's chat.
 
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BellaVistaGroup

New Member
Buffalo

Ok, being a property manager in Buffalo (before that Houston, TX and Poughkeepsie, NY),I can say Buffalo has some of the highest returns on your money in the United States. Also, there will be an increase in rent for your tenants due to a drastic civil project by the Mayors Office called the 5-5 Plan.

August 2007 > Mayor Brown Announces Aggressive 5 In 5 Demolition Plan

Mayor Brown Announces Aggressive 5 In 5 Demolition Plan
Source/Contact
Office of the Mayor
Peter K. Cutler
Director of Communications
716-851-4841

Introduces New Deputy Commissioner of The Department of Economic Development, Permit and Inspection Services


Mayor Byron W. Brown today announced the launch of his new “5 in 5” Demolition Plan. The plan targets demolishing over 5,000 structures in 5 years.

The estimated cost of this initiative, over five years, is $100 million, with an anticipated contribution of $60 million from New York State, $20 million from the City of Buffalo, $15 million from the federal government and $5 million from a City-Community matching fund program (City will match goal of $2.5 million raised from community funding sources).


It's Pretty Drastic and covers alot. The price of housing is very low here, and the rent in the medium range of comparables. What you need to do is find and research is your realtor and management company, or you'll have a bad ride for sure.
 
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Brock 999

New Member
Hi,

I am an Australian resident looking to gain a loan of $40, 000 USD to purchase USA residental investment property. Can anyone in this network help me out as to where I can source such a loan? I have spoken to most of the large US banks and they won't lend as I am a non resident. Australia won't lend on international property. I dont currently have any properties to use equity from. Can some one help me please

Regards,
 
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joe1

New Member
Look into the Residency laws of the US first. Go to the US embassy and ask for the documentation requirements for purchasing real estate.
 
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americandream

New Member
To help you in this circumstance, I would suggest that you should not rely all the works to real estate companies and property management because it would turn out that you are paying more than that you are supposed to pay.

Take some share of the load and do the homework by yourself, though hiring those guys can be a lot easier but more pricey.

just my 2cents.
 
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bretheridge

New Member
At Carolina Mountain Sales, we feel honored to welcome you to this special place.
Whether you are looking to buy your first home or second home in Western North Carolina,
 
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kmacadam

New Member
With the pound strengthening against the dollar and a bottoming out of house prices, is it time to start buying in Florida and the US again?

Up until now the lack of mortgage finance for foreign nationals was a problem.

Finally we had some good news this week regarding a lender that will lend to foreign nationals wanting to buy in short term rental zones in Florida.

Typically this had been an area of lending that had ceased following the credit crunch. However through an exclusive scheme with one of our business partners there, we are now able to offer mortgages in the short term rental zone and for the rest of Florida and the US.
 
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irishrussian

New Member
can you please tell me more about your deals or where i can find them. Are you managing these yourself or who looks after them?
I would be looking quality property with good rental and obviously managed.
If this is possible lease send. If it is jusy holiday homes for sale. Unless they are really low priced and very well located i would not be interested.
Thanks to you
 
JimDandy

JimDandy

New Member
I have a list a nice homes on the west Gulf Coast of Florida if interested.
 
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fiege1224

New Member
can you please tell me more about your deals or where i can find them. Are you managing these yourself or who looks after them?
I would be looking quality property with good rental and obviously managed.
If this is possible lease send. If it is jusy holiday homes for sale. Unless they are really low priced and very well located i would not be interested.
Thanks to you
Be careful of chinese dry wall in homes built from 2003 to 2007. There is about 35000+ homes with this problem going on now. Most in ft myers cape coral area. Orlando and tampa somewhat around. Watch your insurance rates they are very high and hard to get along the coast. Taxes have come down in tampa area but not in the fort myers area yet. I justed turned down a very nice small home with a pool and hot tub 2/1/1 on the water gulf access for 110,000 us. Insurance was 5,000 to 6,000 a year. When I had my home it was 1300.a year. To much!! I sold a home in this same area 4 years ago for 300,000us and was told I would never be able to come back for less than that amount.So much for realtor advice. Good luck Steve
 
JimDandy

JimDandy

New Member
I suggest getting your own free website here: dubya bubya dubya.realestateheavyweights.(com) and then networking through it's backend features to truly find the opportinities. You need to be on the inside to get the deals.
 
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Jack111

New Member
Foreclosed home info

Hi :ciao: am happy to enter here. Sorry for interruption here. Can any body provide some detailed information about the foreclosed homes in Canada as i construction my home there i like to get some detailed govt procedure about foreclosed homes happening in Canada. Thanks
 
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karaman

New Member
Buying property in USA

Hi,

for sure the USA offers now great opportunities for foreign investor buying property. I would suggest you to find first some good location (city) which is hit by the foreclosures but also has a perspective for the future.

Such a market is Las Vegas in my opinion - they are actually the worst hit metro by foreclosure rate, but I believe that people will be coming back, because everybody wants to have fun in Las Vegas, right? :laugh:

I am a foreign investor who bought a property in Las Vegas this year, so I know what I am talking about. Other areas I was thinking about was Florida (miami),Chicago and Phoenix. California seems to be still pretty expensive if you compare the rental yield and house prices. You don't want to wait 20 years until you will get back your invested money, but rather 5-6 like it will probably be in Las Vegas.

Then you should use some researching tools to find good area within the city you have chosen - with cheap properties but good rents. Good websites are zilpy.com for rents or zillow.com for house prices.

http://www.buyingpropertyinusa.net/
 
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NetLease

New Member
Yeah! I've noticed that. The only reason that I can think of is they buy them as a holiday home and accept that it will cost them £*** and anything they get back is a bonus.

Personally, I wouldn’t invest for that reason.

I certainly would invest unless the incomings covered the out goings.

I like the idea of buying in the UK! But I’m a first time buyer for a reason! It’s because I’ve never been able to afford a place here.

I like the idea of repos! Never really looked into it! Any ideas for contacts?
I am curious if you still follow this forum and more curious on what you decided to do. I am in Florida. I do commercial properties, but the residential side is quite attractive now.
 
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mikephillip17

New Member
Do you guys know about the cost of flats in San Jose, California...
 
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stevejones

New Member
hi

I’m hoping that I can find a company that will help me find, buy and let a place (one company does all) in maybe Florida (open to suggestions).

I’ve never done this before so any advice or contacts would be much appreciated! PLEASE!
Its the best time to purchase the property in florida Florida property direct are specialists in property sales in the florida region.
 
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sugarmaple

New Member
US Investments

Hi, I am very new to this site and hopefully I am responding correctly. I am a broker in Vermont; Vermont is a beautiful state, continues to be a "move-to" state with both primary homeowners and secondhome/investors.

Vermont is a very overlooked market and there are some excellent opportunities for investors including multiunit properties; land; commercial, office buildings w/tenants, etc.

If you want additional information about Vermont, I will be happy to help you.

Again, I want to reiterate that I am new to this site and hope my response is appropriate.

Thank you.
I’m looking to take advantage of the weak dollar and falling house prices in the US.

I live in the UK and I don’t own any property anywhere, just rent. And as I don’t have a pension I really need to sort some kind of investment out for my future.

I’m hoping that I can find a company that will help me find, buy and let a place (one company does all) in maybe Florida (open to suggestions).

I’ve never done this before so any advice or contacts would be much appreciated! PLEASE!
 
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