Tag Archives: Homes for sale in Des Moines

Des Moines View Home

Perched on the top of the North Hill of Des Moines, this home offers expansive views of Mt. Rainier, the Cascade Mountains, Puget Sound, the Des Moines Marina and more. Conveniently located to shopping, beach parks, freeway access, the light rail station and more. This boutique neighborhood is a hidden gem. For more information and additional photos: www.johnlscott.com/36669

What Do Buyers Want?

For buyers looking for a home during the Covid 19 Pandemic – it’s all about the work at home, learn at home and play at home space. This loft space in my new listing in Des Moines fits the bill for all three!

511 S 192nd Street, Des Moines, WA 98198 * MLS#1660443 * $600,000

This home has 4 bedrooms, 2.5 baths a 3 car garage and it’s close to freeways, shopping and the community park! Call for a tour today!

Getting a Jump On Spring By Listing Now? Here’s a few tips!

If you are considering making a move this year and plan on listing in the next few weeks, I have some great tips to make your potential buyers feel more at home. The challenges of winter are many:

·       The sun is lower in the sky and therefore light comes in your home at sometimes-unflattering angles.

·       Deposits from snow, ice, and rain can make the entrance dirty and uninviting.

·       Plants that are dead or dormant can be a challenge for curb appeal.

·       Heating and air intake grates may have a constant flow of air and may be dirty.

·       Homes that have great outdoor spaces may not show as well during cold, dark, or rainy days.

These are just a few issues that can make selling during the winter a challenge. However, there is a lot that you can do to counteract these:

·       Make sure all your windows and outdoor glass is squeaky clean and streak-free. This way, when the sun is low in the sky, light streams through those flawless windows, illuminating the space.

·       Hose down or sweep walkways and decks. Keep them free of excess sand, gravel, and moss.

·       Plant boxwoods or other evergreens to provide curb appeal and mask perennials that won’t look fresh again until spring. Trim back perennials and pull out dead annuals to make your landscaping look neat and trim. Also rake the beds and get rid of all dead leaves.

·       Keep all air grates clean by vacuuming every few weeks. Change your furnace filter. If your home is getting that burned-dust smell, have your ducts professionally cleaned.

·       Maximizing outdoor spaces, even when it is cold and rainy, is a great way for prospective buyers to be excited about the seasons to come and your home’s outdoor living potential. Make sure pots are brimming with evergreens, light outdoor lanterns and landscape lighting, and get some blooming plants in the ground (crocuses, heathers, hellebores, and primroses are good go-to winter bloomers). These steps will make your outdoors showtime-ready.

·       You can also accentuate the warm and cozy aspects of your home by turning on the fireplace, draping an accent throw over the arm of a couch or the back of a chair, drape a throw at the bottom of the bed, and put plush towels in the bathrooms.

·       Make sure the lights are on both inside and outside your home for every showing. Pull back the curtains and open the blinds. Yes, you may be spending more on heating your home with windows uncovered, but you don’t want your home feeling dark and drab.

There are opportunities to be had selling now. Interest rates have started to creep up, so buyers who were disappointed and decided to take some time and regroup may be back in droves, trying to buy before the interest rates increase even more. Questions about your selling strategy? Give me a call at 206-484-2777 and let’s chat. 

Cold Weather Ahead – Time To Protect Your Pipes

With cold temperatures – and even some snow! – in the forecast, it’s time to make sure you and your home are prepared to weather whatever Mother Nature sends our way.  Seattle Public Utilities Offers these Tips

Prep Your Pipes

Freezing temperatures can burst water pipes around your home, potentially causing serious property damage and wasting large amounts of water. Follow these tips to prepare your pipes for the cold;

  • Insulate outdoor pipes and faucets to keep them from freezing.
  • Disconnect garden hoses.
  •  When the temperature hits freezing, open cabinet doors to allow heat to get to un-insulated pipes under sinks and near exterior walls.
  • Insulate pipes in your home’s crawl space, attic, or basement.

 

For more information on preparing for winter weather, visit Seattle Public Utilities at  www.takewinterbystorm.org. 

Real Estate In The News…

HERE’S WHAT WE’RE TALKING ABOUT:

-Will our historically low interest rates finally start to move upward?  The recent US jobs report, paired with European Central Banking news has some experts thinking the Fed will finally start to increase interest rates in December.

Housing inventory is slowly increasing throughout King County providing some relief to buyers. Local real estate agents have mixed feelings about the news. Some see it as a normal seasonal slow down others as a slight shifting in the market. Either way, we’re still one of the hottest markets in the country.

Residential rents are rising faster in Seattle than anywhere in the U.S. according to Zillow.  Neighboring cities including Shoreline, Burien, Renton and Vashon have also seen 10.5%-14% increases in rental prices since August of 2015.

Appraisals – A Critical Part of the Transaction

When a buyer takes out a mortgage, or when a homeowner refinances their home, the lending bank or entity will conduct an appraisal to verify the market value of the home. This protects the bank’s interest in the home and helps verify the percentage of equity the buyer or homeowner has or will have in the property.

It is important to know that when a buyer and seller agree on a price for a home, the appraisal may not reflect that same price. Especially in areas where prices have appreciated rapidly, it may be difficult for the appraiser to find comparable properties that have changed hands in the last three months which can help guide pricing on the current property. For example, say there were two comparable properties that sold four and six months ago in the area and in the last year, sale prices have gone up 15%. That means those two comparable properties may have sold for 5%-7.5% less than the property that is being appraised and the appraisal could be lower than the buyer and seller expect.

This is especially problematic in a transaction for two reasons:

  1. The appraisal represents the maximum the lender will lend on the property. So if an appraisal comes in at $300,000, the buyer and seller have already agreed on a price of $340,000, and the buyer is taking out a loan with 10% down, obviously the math no longer works. Depending on the agreement between the lender and the buyer, the lender may not be willing to loan more than 90% which would mean the agreed-upon price would need to be lowered or the buyer may need to put more money down.
  2. In the event the buyer is putting 20% down to avoid private mortgage insurance (PMI) (typically required when buyers or homeowners have less than 20% equity in the property) and the appraisal comes in low, then there is the potential problem of the buyer no longer having that 20% because some of the reserves may be used to make up the difference in the appraisal as in the following example:
  • Agreed upon-price: $350,000
  • Buyer is putting 20% down: $70,000
  • Appraisal: $300,000
  • Buyers and sellers renegotiate on price: $325,000
  • Seller comes down by $25,000, buyer uses $25,000 of their $70,000 to make up the difference leaving them with $45,000 down payment which is only 15% of the loan, thus causing PMI to be assessed each month.

The bank may determine that the buyers have too many other monthly expenses to afford the PMI and denies the loan.

According to the National Association of REALTORS, in April of 2016, 12% of terminated sales failed due to appraisal issues which also led to delayed closings (28% of closings that were delayed were delayed due to appraisal problems). This is good information for you to know if you are a buyer or a seller, but rest assured I have tools for working with appraisals should the need arise. Please give me a call, text or email: 206-484-2777 or karenwi@johnlscott.com.

Puget Sound Real Estate In the News

Here’s the latest on our Sizzling Hot Real Estate Market

Washington home prices rose 10.6% in April compared to a year ago. It was the biggest jump of any state in the nation for the third month in a row. Home prices in Washington are growing at a rate nearly double the national average. -CoreLogic

Buyers are paying a premium to live in neighborhoods near a Light Rail transit hub according to Seattle Based Real Estate Company, Estately. We’ll vote on Sound Transit’s Light Rail Expansion in November.

Rock Star Steve Miller has just listed his home in the San Juans for $16.8 million. Yep – it comes with a recording studio!

Call me if I can help with your Real Estate needs!

Signature (3)