November 21st, 2011
I would like to put my home for sale available to the residents of california who are looking to move to arizona. Is it legal to have a realestate agent from california sell my home in arizona?
Great thanks all.
Only if the agent you pick is licensed to sell real estate in both California and Arizona.
Usually a real estate agent is licensed to sell in one state only.
You would do best to list with an Arizona realtor, and ask them to advertise in California too.
Posted in realestate | 4 Comments »
November 15th, 2011
Theres a lot of online real estate advertising websites like homepages.com, housevalues.com/justlisted.com, realestate.com, etc. They charge a large fee and make you commit for a certain number of months. I wonder if it is worth paying the charges? Do you get a considerable amount of leads? Do you get your money’s worth? Is there anything that you think is missing from their service?
I hate paying for services, so my listings are on realtor.com, but I agressively use zillow.com and trulia. com along with Homegain.com as they are FREE and the still get results. I pay Dues to NAR so why should I pay to get stuff on their website?
14 years Full Time Realtor
Posted in realestate com | 2 Comments »
November 3rd, 2011
I am a independent Real Estate Broker in NYC. I am not a part of MLS…. I have a house for sale (short sale) in which the buyer and seller are actively ready to go. I am co-brokering with another Re. because they are apart of MLS–and the bank is requiring that the property be listed on MLS for a specific period of time. This realty is doing the short sale paperwork… the issue is that they are taking their time to complete their portion of the paper work.. This has been going on since June. Can I legally pull out from this agency? I really do not know what they are waiting for or why they won’t send the docs to the bank? I am just getting one story after the next. This is a well know realty in NYC. The owner has listed the property with me exclusively. This company did list the property on MLS. Can I pull out from them and get a new agency to work with?
A part and apart mean opposite things. And are you confusing the word realtor with realty? Or maybe agency?
What you can do will depend on what your contract with this other agent says. Seek legal advice – you don’t want to dig yourself a huge hole on this. Once you have that legal opinion, give them a final chance and if they dont produce, follow the attorney’s advice.
Posted in ready realty | 4 Comments »
October 24th, 2011
RealEstate Progress will bring up the economy rapidly, but the banks need to corporate,
especially the ones that took buyout. This should be a part of the deal.
I am not sure what your question is, but your statement is far more perceptive than most I see on Y!A. The bailout itself was heavily tilted by the power, wealth, and political influence of its benefactors solely in favor of those benefactors.
The callous greed of these benefactors is evidenced in their obdurate opposition to any contribution on their part to rebuilding our economy. We helped the wrong people.
We would have acted much more prudently had we bailed out most of the people who have lost their homes to foreclosure. The banks and other speculators holding questionable mortgages would have been paid off and thereby avoided bankruptcy without the hundreds of billions we poured directly into their coffers. Millions of homeowners would still have their homes; these houses would not be flooding the market depressing the value of residential estate.
With millions of people able to keep their homes and their equity, personal spending would not have fallen as precipitously as it did. Portfolios would not have lost their value; as a result, the big banks, insurance companies, etc., would have remained solvent and would have been able to keep all (or most of) their employees. With more people able to spend money, fewer businesses would have lost their customers. With more businesses solvent, fewer people would have lot their jobs.
The bailouts accomplished very little beyond quickly restoring to a few ultra-rich speculators and to monopolistic Corporate America the wealth (and much more) that they had lost in the early part of the recession. Now these corporations sit awash in $2 trillion, which they do not invest, their promises to do so notwithstanding.
We can still salvage our economy. Since the greedy elite will not invest this immense treasure without assurance of immediate profit, we should take much of that idle capital through taxation and spend it on rebuilding and modernizing our infrastructure. Doing so would not be MAKING work; it is doing work that is long overdue. In the process, we could put millions of Americans back to work–and back to spending and restarting our economy.
Posted in realestate | 2 Comments »
October 7th, 2011
in areas heavily controlled by Democrats and big government. Is this because the unemployed and criminals are highly attracted to these areas, or is the Democratic control causing the situation?
check it http://realestate.yahoo.com/promo/americas-most-dangerous-cities-2011.html
If we ignore politics and race, and only consider the humanity of all concerned, what is the real cause of this ?
The cultures attracted to cities are less self-disciplined and more inclined to favor the socialist and progressive policies of today’s Democratic Party than the cultures outside cities.
Posted in realestate com | 1 Comment »
September 26th, 2011
I am looking for tips on what questions I should ask a realtor when I am looking for a home. I am also looking for tips on what questions I should ask when looking to get a home loan. I am a first time buyer. So any helpful tips will be appreciated.
First of all, find out WHO she is representing. Is she working for you, the seller or neither?? Don’t give away much info if she says "the seller" since it is her duty to let the seller know everything she knows about you (like if she knows you’ll pay more or if you have bad credit) Ask her to represent you…most will be happy to at no fee to you but you have to ask. She can also point you in the right direction for a loan. Make sure you get a Realtor who has experience and a good reputation. Ask bank tellers and lawyer’s office help or the store clerk. There are a lot of good loans out there for first time home buyers. Your Realtor can arrange things for you.
Posted in realtor | 4 Comments »
September 24th, 2011
How can I buy a condo from someone without a realtor?
I am thinking to buy a condo from my friend’s classmate’s girlfriend. She owns the condo. Can we handle the whole purchase process all by ourselves without a realtor? How can we do that? What should we do ? what’s the procedure ? Or we have to find a realtor ?
Thanks a lot! Praying for Haiti!
No, you don’t have to have a realtor to make this transaction happen. You can have an attorney assist you with the property purchase. Be sure to hire an attorney that has extensive experience with property transfers, as this area of law can be rather complex, and you want to be sure that everything goes smoothly.
Posted in realtor | 1 Comment »
September 12th, 2011
Whats required to become a realtor in the state of NC. Are there any classes I have to take?
Rose, I don’t understand what you just wrote.
Here is everything you need to answer the question:
http://www.ncrec.state.nc.us/
You have to take classes and state exam to become licensed.
Check out the website for all pertinent information.
Good luck!
Posted in realtor | 2 Comments »
September 10th, 2011
The complex has a sign that says no soliciting… but someone said that just meant people going door to door selling stuff. This was just a flyer for another realtor promoting themselves, wouldnt an apartment complex get ticked off at this?
No it is not illegal for anyone to leave a flyer for their services, Now if they were to knock on your door and want to try to sell you something and your neighborhood or apt complex has a no solicitation sign,then that is another matter. You really couldn’t do much but complain to the apt complex and let them notify whoever it was who left the flyer.
Posted in realtor | 11 Comments »
September 7th, 2011
How can I buy a condo from someone without a realtor?
I am thinking to buy a condo from my friend’s classmate’s girlfriend. She owns the condo. Can we handle the whole purchase process all by ourselves without a realtor? How can we do that? What should we do ? what’s the procedure ? Or we have to find a realtor ?
Thanks a lot! Praying for Haiti!
Two things:
1) Why would you not want to use a realtor? There’s no charge to you, the buyer. All costs are paid by the seller. You will need a real estate attorney otherwise, if doing a transaction by owner. The seller should definitely pay those costs, because they will be far less than real estate commission if using a realtor.
2) More importantly, why in the world would you want a condo? Do you have any idea what you’re buying (or not buying) when you buy a condo? In a nutshell, you’re just buying air. You don’t own one wall or any part of your unit of the building. You only own the space inside the unit. Yet you will still be liable for property taxes. That’s right, you’re paying property taxes when you don’t own any real property or anything tangible. In addition, you’re paying a monthly association fee that can be as much as $200 a month, something you wouldn’t have if you bought a house. That $200 a month is much more than it would cost you to hire lawn/snow maintenance for your house. I would advise you to reconsider any condo purchase, and seriously look into buying a house. There are plenty of good deals on houses out there in this market.
Posted in realtor | 1 Comment »