Buying and
Selling a
Home at the
Same Time
Buying your
new home and
selling an
existing
home at the
same time
each poses
its own set
of unique
challenges.
But with
careful
preparation,
you can
ensure
everything
goes
according to
your plan.
Teamwork
-
Teaming
up with
recommended
professionals
to ease
you
through
the
process:
REALTOR,
lawyer,
lenders,
appraiser,
inspectors,
movers,
etc.
-
Keep in
constant
communication
open
with all
those
involved.
-
Use a
notebook
to
record
the
dates
and
details
of phone
and
face-to-face
discussions
and
transactions.
-
Instruct
your
REALTOR
to let
you know
about
problems
as soon
as they
occur so
you can
work
them out
together.
Selling your
Home
-
Consider
having a
home
inspection
to
uncover
any
underlying
issues
that you
can
repair
or
adjust
for in
your
asking
price
before
you list
your
home.
-
List
your
house
for sale
as far
in
advance
as
possible
of
buying
your new
home.
-
Ask for
a long
close or
a
rent-back
option
-- you
stay in
the
house as
a renter
without
the
headache
of an
interim
move --
to allow
you more
time to
find
your new
home.
-
Require
the
buyer to
be
pre-approved
within
five to
10 days
of
accepting
their
offer.
That
way, if
the
buyer
can’t
proceed,
you
haven't
wasted
much
time
and,
when you
make an
offer on
a new
home,
you will
know
that the
financing
conditions
on your
existing
home
have
been
satisfied.
-
Don’t
overlook
a
slightly
lower
offer
that
allows
you more
flexibility
with
respect
to your
closing
date.
For
example,
if your
top
bidder
has to
sell
their
current
house
first,
you
might
prefer
to deal
with a
first-time
homebuyer
or
renter.
-
Get the
buyer of
your old
house
and the
seller
of your
new
house to
commit
in
writing
to a
specific
window
of dates
and
negotiate
financial
penalties
to
encourage
both to
stick to
those
dates.
Buying your
New Home
-
Check
what’s
available
in your
price
range
before
putting
your
home on
the
market.
If
there’s
little
available,
you may
want to
buy
first
and ask
for a
long
close.
-
Assess
what you
can
afford
and get
pre-approved
for a
mortgage.
-
Have the
property
thoroughly
inspected
and make
sure it
can be
insured
before
you make
your
offer.
-
Read all
documents
related
to your
home
purchase.
Ask your
REALTOR®
or
lawyer
to send
you the
closing
documents
you need
to sign
early
on, so
you have
time to
read
them.
Planning for
the Move
-
Sort
what you
need or
want to
keep
from
what you
can
donate
or throw
away.
-
Use
to-do
lists
and
home-inventory
lists
available
from
your
REALTOR®,
mover or
the
Internet.
Record
everything
you
pack,
and code
boxes as
you pack
them to
go to
the
appropriate
rooms in
your new
house.
-
Notify
all
utilities,
the
Postal
Service,
associations,
etc.
well in
advance,
and
reconfirm
start
dates
for
services.
-
Keep a
detailed
record
of all
moving
expenses.
Some may
be tax
deductible,
depending
on the
reasons
for your
move.
Consult
a tax
advisor
about
your
particular
situation.
-
Pack a
'ready'
bag for
each
family
member
with all
the
things
they
need
upon
arrival
--
bedding,
dishes,
medications,
toiletries,
work/homework,
change
of
clothes
-- plus
a
moving-in
toolkit
for
assembling
furniture,
etc.
Make
sure
it's
last in
and
first
out.
Have a
back-up plan
(just in
case)
Trading
spaces is
complicated.
What if
there’s a
hitch and
you have to
sell before
you find
something
you want to
buy, or you
find the
perfect
house before
you sell
your old
one? Both
will cost
you money
and
aggravation,
but there
are options:
Interim
housing
-
Research
short-term
rental
and
storage
options
(family,
friends,
storage
facilities,
containers).
Talk to
school
officials
in your
new
neighborhood.
They may
allow
your
children
to start
the next
semester
in what
will be
their
new
school,
if you
have an
offer
pending
in the
neighborhood.
Financing
-
Bridge
financing
is a
loan for
the down
payment
on a new
home
backed
by the
equity
in your
old
house,
typically
at prime
plus two
percentage
points.
-
If you
have
good
credit
but your
income
isn’t
high
enough
for you
to
qualify
to carry
a bridge
loan
plus
both
mortgage
payments,
consider
a
no-ratio
mortgage,
which
doesn’t
take
into
account
your
debt-to-income
ratio.
Rates
are
higher
but you
can
refinance
later.
-
Alternatively,
you may
be able
to draw
on a
home
equity
line of
credit
on your
old
home.
Rates
are
often
more
than a
point
lower
than on
bridge
loans.
But you
might
pay a
penalty
fee if
you sell
the
house
less
than a
year
after
taking
out the
line of
credit.
Find a
REALTOR to
help you
coordinate
your move.
Request a
mortgage
now and get
quotes from
up to four
lenders in
minutes.
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