Building Your Custom Home For Dummies. Peter Economy
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Small houses on large parcels of land can also be a problem in neighborhoods where bigger houses are now being built. Lenders want to finance houses for living. House lenders want a property that conforms to the neighborhood, even if the borrower is well qualified. Many people, when faced with unwilling house lenders, look to lenders that lend on land only. If the property has any structure on it at all, most land lenders won’t provide a land loan. Talk to your real-estate agent and loan officer about the ability to lend on a particular property before you make an offer. Remember: The finished cost estimates of your project need to account for the purchase cost as well as the demolition cost in order to be realistic.
Buying Your Land
After you find your dream lot, you need to buy it. Whether you pay cash (a big no-no — Chapter 8 explains why) or finance, you can’t just write the owner a check and ask for a receipt. Okay, you can but you need to follow certain steps and make specific choices if you want to get the most for your money.
Understanding the purchase process
If you’ve ever purchased a home, you’re at least somewhat familiar with the process of buying real estate. Buying a lot is just like buying a house, but without all the house stuff. You can find a detailed explanation of the purchase process and the players involved in Kevin’s book What the Banks Won’t Tell You: How to Get the Most Out of Your Mortgage (Grady Parsons Publishing). For beginners, here’s a general step-by-step look at the process.
Step 1: Determine your offering terms and price
Using the information in this chapter about evaluating a property, you need to determine a price in your mind of what you’re willing to pay for the property. Your real-estate agent can give you additional information on the local market for land and examples of finished houses in the area. If you aren’t using an agent, you need to access this information through the local title company. You also must decide on the length of time until closing, as well as any other necessary terms, such as your desire for the owner to loan you the money in what’s called a seller carryback. This term means the seller, after transferring the property, retains a note or loan that you must pay them at an agreed time with interest. We talk more about this topic in the “Finding other land loan alternatives” section later in this chapter.
Step 2: Present the offer and negotiate
You or your real-estate agent has to complete an offer form accompanied with some sort of good faith deposit check from you. The deposit amount can be anywhere from 1 percent to 3 percent of the purchase price. The check is deposited in an escrow account upon acceptance of the offer and held in escrow until you close the transaction. The offer and copy of the check are then presented to the seller and negotiations begin.
You and the seller can negotiate the deal through subsequent documents called counteroffers. The seller’s willingness to negotiate is relative to how hot the real-estate market is at the time. A hot market usually translates to less willingness to negotiate. The seller isn’t obligated to accept any of your terms and can always choose to say no. Of course, you can always choose to walk away. Ideally, you’ll each give in a little and come up with a workable compromise. As Kevin’s mom, a 30-year real-estate-agent veteran, said, “An offer is an opening of a conversation.” The fewer emotions in the conversation, the more easily the negotiations proceed.
Step 3: Make an application with your lender
We explain various financing options in the next section. After you’ve determined which lending approach is right for you, you’ll fill out a loan application with the lender of your choice. The lender orders an appraisal from a certified appraiser. You’ll probably have to pay for this appraisal up front. The cost can vary depending upon location and the lot’s value, but usually it’ll cost between $300 and $600. You’re entitled to a copy of this appraisal, which will be based upon comparable lots in the area that have sold in the last six months to a year. The original appraisal goes to the lender along with the application and any credit documentation you provide, such as bank statements, W-2s, and tax returns.
At this time (or likely within three days), your lender will give you the loan estimate, a document outlining all the fees and closing costs associated with your loan and the purchase transaction. The costs vary based upon the loan amount and type of loan, but you can anticipate a range of 3 percent to 6 percent of the purchase price as an estimate of all the costs involved.
Step 4: Open escrow with an escrow company or attorney
The term escrow means depositing money and property with a neutral third party to be disbursed upon completion of all terms of a related agreement. Each state has its own process for escrow. Some states use attorneys to act as the escrow agent while others use title insurance companies. If you’re in a wet funding state, you, the seller, and the escrow agent all pick a day to meet and sign the paperwork at one time. In a dry funding state, such as California,