Browsing Category Albemarle

Who Wants to Hear an Hour of Real Estate Radio? – 26 January 2014

If you’re thinking about buying or selling in the Charlottesville area or curious or interested in the Charlottesville (and regional/national) real estate market, you might find some value in listening to this Sunday’s WNRN Wake-Up Call.

Matt Hodges and I will discuss the current state of the Charlottesville area real estate market, mortgages, tips for buyers and sellers, etc. We’ve done this every year for the past six years and every year each time has produced conversations. If you’re interested in us talking about something specific, please leave a comment or let me know.

Matt’s initial notes of stuff to talk about:

– Ability-to-Repay and Qualified Mortgages
– Recent Bureau of Labor Statistics payroll releases, 2/6 release and what it means to borrowers out there + Federal Reserves tapering decision and what it means
– Predicted increases in rates to 5 – 5.5% and how that affects ability to purchase vis a vis today’s rates

My initial notes of stuff to talk about:

– Brief market update
– How new mortgage laws may impact buyers’ and sellers’ decisions
– Current massive growth and density in the City of Charlottesville
– What buyers should be doing right now who are planning to buy this year
– What sellers should be doing right now who are planning/hoping to sell this year
– Inventory levels in the Charlottesville MSA

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An Easy Way to Track if Your Foundation is Moving

Home inspections. I love them. I love being there with my clients, asking the leading questions that I know they should ask, crawling through crawlspaces (yes, I do that), climbing across trusses in attics (I do that, too) and listening. I like to listen to the questions from the buyers and the explanations from the home inspectors; I learn something almost every time.

Recently I had such a learning opportunity, and I asked Robert Foster with Trebor Home Inspections to answer it again – this time on video.

Come on, tell me you didn’t just learn something!

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Search for homes in Charlottesville – Now Draw a Polygon

I know. I’m a real estate dork, but this is something that I think will be tremendously useful if you’re searching for a home to buy in Charlottesville. Many areas of Charlottesville just aren’t well defined and thus not easily searchable. Searching by zip code is far too broad. There are 113 listings displayed in the 22903 Zip Code, but only 10 in the Fifeville neighborhood within the 22903 zip code. (see below) Searching by radius is still an option as well.

But really, search for homes yourself. (here are some tips on how to search)

Take North Downtown for example –

Search for North Downtown Search all homes for Sale in Charlottesville MLS - Charlottesville

Or this part of Fifeville –

Fifeville Homes for sale in Charlottesville.jpg

If you have questions about any of the homes you see (and don’t already have buyer representation) you could always ask me your questions.

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Vegan Resources in Charlottesville

From the Central Virginia Vegan Meetup Group to various restaurants and grocery stores, including a wonderful Vegan Guide to Charlottesville restaurants, it seems that Charlottesville offers an awful lot of options for vegans and vegetarians. I’m not nearly educated enough on this topic as I should be, but when incoming buyer clients asked me about Charlottesville options, I turned to the best resource available to me – Twitter and Facebook.

Practicing real estate is absolutely about representing buyers and sellers, but it’s also about educating and introducing clients to my town and providing local insight that they might not get from the google.

Click through to see the embedded storify with Charlottesville Vegan and Vegetarian resources.

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Brief Real Estate Market Update for January 2014

A snippet from my monthly note:

Market Update for Charlottesville and Albemarle:

Single family home sales in December 2013 vs December 2012: 87/89 – Same, as far as I’m concerned
Single family home sales in 2013 vs 2012: 1302/1215 – Up 7%

Attached home sales in December 2013 vs December 2012: 23/24 – Close enough to be the same.
Attached home sales in 2013 vs 2012: 441/339 – Same

Condo sales in December 2013 vs December 2012: 6/13 – Down 54%
Condo sales in 2013 vs 2012: 167/234 – Down 29%

Keep in mind that these stats are likely not completely up to date, as agents are still entering in closings from 2013. But they’re likely close enough to say that there were a few more Charlottesville/Albemarle single family homes sales in 2013 than 2012, attached home sales were about the same and condo sales were way down (mainly because Walker Square condos sold out in 2012). And you know what? We’re due for some stability, free of spikes and drops.

List sooner rather than later (Y’know, I’m a Realtor. You could call me . 🙂 )

I suspect that we’re going to see more inventory as the year progresses.

More inventory means more competition and selection for buyers. More competition means potential price appreciation for sellers is likely to be diminished.

Charlottesville MSA Listed, Contract, Sold.png

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Crozet in 2013

The more I’ve thought about this, the more I hope to make time to got back and do a wrap up for 2012, 2011, 2010 …

If you’re interested in what happened in Crozet, I went through the 2013 archives and chose what I thought to be the best and most relevant stories in 2013 . I’m posting this for two reasons:

1 – I think it’s a useful story.

2 – It’s an example of why I continue to write on this and that blog; putting together this type of year end summary as efficiently as I did would be impossible on any other platform (Facebook, G+, Twitter, etc)

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Fighting FUD – Charlottesville Real Estate Market in 2014


FUD: Fear, Uncertainty and Doubt. There’s going to be a fair amount of that in 2014, and more than ever, it’s going to take real estate consumers (and real estate pros, for that matter) more effort to distill the good information from the bad.

2013 is over. 2014 is here. Goodie. Reflecting on my “6 Things to Watch in 2013,” I’m satisfied that the six things were on point, and all six points – Quality Inventory, Home Prices, Fewer Distressed Sales, Confidence in the market, buyer frustration and a lot more apartments – will carry forward into 2014.

I’ve been practicing real estate since 2001 and each year i’ve said that the market is interesting and different – it’s one of the reasons I continue to practice; every day is a new day with new things to learn.

I’ll be posting individual stories on these “topics to watch in 2014” over the first two weeks of January:

QRM – Qualified Residential Mortgages (note that many of the rules have yet to be written). Will it be hard or harder to get a mortgage in 2014?

Interest Rates – will they go up or down or stay flat? This speculation always brings uncertainty into the market

Inventory – I predict there will be more – more resales and more new construction

(Un)Employment – this is going to be a key factor in the Charlottesville MSA

Home prices – Up, down, flat? Can sellers sell? Can buyers afford to buy?

I’m going to touch on these as well in my January monthly note, which, based on feedback, has proven to be equally valuable to those actively in the buying/selling process as well as those who bought years ago and remain in Charlottesville.

All told, I think Lauren at the Newsplex accurately quoted me in her story last week, and what I said well captures 2013 entering 2014:

“For Charlottesville/Albemarle we’re going to see a mix of cautious optimism and optimism,” says Jim Duncan, partner at Nest Realty. …

“This is going to be the second year where a lot of sellers are going to be able to have the legitimate conversation about whether they can sell and not lose money and that’s going to be a real shift in our market,” says Duncan. “I think that’s going to bring on more inventories which are going to be more competition for sellers and more choices for buyers.”

“Fewer people in the market are under water, meaning that they are able to sell and not lose their down payments or their savings,” Duncan explains.

But as many people continue buying homes in 2014, the amount of renters will also rise.

“We’ve seen people who used to buy now choosing to rent, because they don’t know if they are going to be here for more than four to five years,” says Duncan. “I think there has been a reevaluation of what it means to buy a home.”

Finally, my words from last January remain true:

My advice to my clients, whether they are buying or selling, (sounds silly, I know) starts with listening. Where are they now (in life, jobs, homes), where do they want to be (see previous notes) and where can they get realistically?

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