Search
Recommended Sites
Related Links






   

Informative Articles

How to Make Money in Real Estate Investing
How to Make Money in Real Estate Investing Lower Your Taxes Tax incentives for real estate investors can often make the difference in your tax rates. Deductions for rental property can often be used to offset wage income. Tax breaks can often...

Marketing Tips for Real Estate Agents
1. Add value to your message The more value you build into your offer, the more likely prospects will be to respond to it. Give your prospects a reason to call you. Offer a buyer's or seller's information kit. Know an interior...

Pattaya Thailand, Real Estate Boom?
Pattaya in Thailand, whilst a favoured tourist atrraction to many a Thai soulmate seeking Westerner, it is also becoming a booming real estate network. If you ask any real estate agent here in Pattaya if this is just the current fad, and if that...

Real Estate - Condominium or Fee Simple Ownership
Generally, apartment-style buildings are called condos, two-story row houses are known as town homes, and free-standing homes on small lots are referred to as garden homes. Unfortunately, this description creates some confusion about real estate...

Straw as real estate building material
In the famous kid's fairy tale 'The Three Little Pigs' one of the pigs built a house of straw that made him almost pay with his life. The pig was blamed in the tale for choosing the wrong building material. But his material was definitely the right...

 
The Consequences of Over-Improving Real Estate


So you've found the home you want to grow old in. The location is good, the neighbors are great, and the price was just right. Now like most homeowners in this situation you begin doing minor improvements or upgrades to your home. A little paint in a few rooms, wallpaper there, new flooring in this room, granite in that room, a fixture here a fixture there. Finally you are satisfied with your now remodeled home. Time passes and you decide you want to refinance for one reason or another. Let's assume you realized you could get a much better interest rate. (For the real truth behind current mortgage rates head to www.current-mortgage-rate.com) You tell your lender about all the upgrades in your home and how great it looks yada yada. Your lender goes on to tell you about how much equity you must have in your house and due to your great LTV they could let you cash-out some of that equity. Regardless of whether you try and task-out equity, your trouble comes when the lender goes to order an appraisal. The appraiser comes out and inspects your home and heads back to the office to write his report. After analyzing the data he realizes there is problem, your home is great . . . TOO great for your area.
Your house now becomes what appraisers refer to as “Functionally Obsolescent Due to Super-Adequacy”. What this basically means is that the upgrades you've made to your home are superior to the houses in your neighborhood and thus the law of diminishing returns has just kicked you in seam hard. No homes in your area have sold anywhere close to what your home SHOULD be worth and without comparable sales data to prove your home's value you're stuck. An appraiser is not going to be able to give a value to your home any higher than the highest sale price in the area. This might not be terrible for some, but for those looking to cashout or with low LTVs this could be a deal killer.
The lesson here is to always know your market area which is usually defined as your immediate and surrounding neighborhoods up to 1 mile away. Know what homes sale for and what type of construction quality or amenities they posses before you start major renoations. If you must be Mr. and Mrs. Jones and over do it then be well aware of the law of diminishing returns.

About The Author

Copyright © R. Chandler Smith, a successful real estate and IT professional. He manages www.mortgagedump.com and www.cpappraisals.net.

Sign up for PayPal and start accepting credit card payments instantly.