Buying Your Home - Finding the Right Home
What are the pros and cons of adding on or buying new?
Before
making a choice between adding on to an existing home or buying a larger one,
consider these questions:
* How much money is available, either from cash
reserves or through a home improvement loan, to remodel your current house?
* How much additional space is required? Would the foundation support a
second floor or does the lot have room to expand on the ground level?
* What
do local zoning and building ordinances permit?
* How much equity already
exists in the property?
* Are there affordable properties for sale that
would satisfy your changing housing needs?
Do we dig deep and buy a dream home or settle for a starter
home?
Choosing between a smaller house in an affluent neighborhood, an
older, bigger house in a more working-class community or a brand-new home is not
easy. If you're in this situation, start by examining your priorities and asking
the following questions:
* Is the surrounding neighborhood or the home itself
the most important consideration?
* Is each of the neighborhoods safe?
*
Is quality of the schools an issue?
* Do any of the areas seem to attract
more families with children or adult residents? And where do you fit in?
As for the return on your investment, home-price appreciation is hard to
predict. In the late 1980s, and again 10 years later, the more expensive move-up
housing appreciated wildly. But during the recession that followed, smaller
homes tended to hold their value better than more expensive ones.
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