| Free online real estate aids: Sometimes you get what you pay for |
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Many homebuyers and sellers have lost trust in the mass media's ability to distinguish hype from fact when reporting on real estate. They have turned to the Internet as their information source of first resort. Mega information sites like Trulia and Zillow scan tax and sales records to come up with estimates (Zillow cutely calls them "Zestimates") that buyers use as a basis for negotiation and sellers use as a foundation for their listing prices. The problem is that the Zillow estimates can be misleading, sometimes dramatically so. Here's an example: I received a listing via email from Michael Kuss I visited Zillow.com for an estimate of the home's value. Zillow, which claimed to have updated the home's value a couple of days ago, indicates the market value at $1.409 million, or a whopping 36% below the asking price. Although the web site provides a possible range of $1.535 million on the high side and just a little over $900,000 on the low side, the difference between the asking price and Zillow's estimate is a head-scratcher. I contacted Daufuskie Properties' Mike Kuss. Mike is a grounded guy, The agent who represents you as the buyer is paid from the commission on the sale of the home, not by you. Unique homes on a private island may just be too much for Zillow's algorithms to handle. The lesson here is not to rely on such general pricing tools but rather to do your homework on the market you are considering buying into with the help of a well-qualified buyer's agent. I know many of them in the southern U.S., so if you are in the market for a retirement or vacation home, please contact me. Remember, the agent who represents you as the buyer is paid from the commission on the sale of the home, not by you. Sometimes the best things in life are free.
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| Thursday, 13 August 2009 02:01 | |||
| Last Updated on Thursday, 13 August 2009 02:20 |
