A great neighborhood sells a home, real estate agents say. It also helps your home hold value and makes it easy to sell when you decide to move on. With all the pressure and excitement of home shopping, how can you know if a neighborhood is truly great? Here are 20 clues that help you determine if you have the right neighborhood:
Make a list of what you want and don’t want in a neighborhood, and shop for those qualities.
Become an expert on the neighborhood that interests you. Get a feel for it by attending open houses, walking the neighborhood’s blocks, spending time in restaurants and coffee shops, and looking for community gardens.
Have your eye on a specific property? Knock on doors and chat with neighbors on that street. Ask everyone who’ll talk with you about the crime, noise, traffic, neighborhood issues and general pros and cons.
Upscale chains and independent retailers are signs a neighborhood is well-established or on the way up. These businesses signal a degree of affluence. Also, they’ve typically done market research to assure themselves the neighborhood is stable and worth the investment.
Especially in warm months, look for activity that shows owners are keeping up or investing in their properties. Improvements like new gutters, painting, re-roofing, gardening and landscaping, replacement windows, new fences and decks tell you they have pride in their homes.
Block watches and neighborhood meetings are signs of a tight community. If you find a neighborhood group, attend a meeting or two to get to know people and ask questions. Subscribe to neighborhood newsletters.
Seeing people on sidewalks or children walking to school and playing in parks tells you that they feel safe.
Don’t think you know a place if you’ve only seen it in the middle of a weekday. Return repeatedly, at night and on weekends, to get a realistic picture.
Don’t buy into a neighborhood without checking its crime statistics. Check municipal police department websites for statistics or search local newspaper sites.
Where school test scores are strong, home prices are high. Search the GreatSchools website for ratings of schools in the neighborhood you’re considering. The nonprofit’s ratings are based on academic data such as standardized test scores.
Do cars dominate? Or do sidewalks and streets encourage pedestrians and bicyclists? Sidewalks wide enough for outdoor cafes, benches and strolling give a place a neighborly feel.
Look up an address or ZIP code on the Walk Score website or mobile app to obtain a “walkability” rating for neighborhoods or cities. Scores range from zero (“car dependent”) to 100 (“walker’s paradise”). They are based on walking distances to area amenities, population density and road metrics like block length.
Can you easily find buses, subways and rail lines? Homes with easy access to public transit fetch higher prices than similar homes without it, according to a 2013 study commissioned by the American Public Transportation Association and the National Association of Realtors. It found that the values of homes near “high-frequency” public transit fared about 42 percent better, on average, during the past recession.
So, a hip, edgy, gentrifying downtown district is your dream location right now? But will it work later, if you add children or an aging parent to your household? Or if you change jobs? Don’t count on being able to sell and move quickly.
A young couple I spoke to during the recession had bought a condo in what they hoped was an up-and-coming neighborhood. After a while, though, they grew tired of hearing gunshots at night. When she became pregnant, they felt stranded. They wanted to move but could not because their home was worth less than they had paid.
The lesson: Make sure the neighborhood suits your needs for at least the next five years.
Neighborhoods with high homeownership rates are more stable. However, there are exceptions. For example, you can expect renters to outnumber buyers in expensive places like New York City and San Francisco.
Typically, renters are more mobile than homeowners. Longtime residents watch out for one another, making for a safer community.
Statistics on homeownership in neighborhoods can be hard to find, although some real estate agents may have them. You can get a sense, though, by asking agents and locals about the renter-owner balance. Also, watch for apartment complexes that dominate a neighborhood, or large numbers of “for rent” signs.
Fast turnaround of homes for sale indicates a neighborhood in hot demand. A real estate agent can run “comps” (short for “comparables” or “comparable market analyses”) to tell you how quickly homes are selling.
Other clues to a neighborhood in demand include employers moving in with new jobs, a growing population and a limited supply of homes for sale.
In the housing crash of a decade ago, home values held up better in some neighborhoods than others. You can find historical sale prices in a county’s property tax records. Many counties put these online. Or ask your real estate agent for neighborhood sales trends.
If you’re considering a bargain home in a neighborhood of foreclosures, consider whether future homebuyers would want this neighborhood when you are ready to sell. Even if you don’t care about school quality or how many playgrounds are nearby, the next buyers of your home probably will.
Homes located close to major employers and in city centers are in high demand.
While most American commuters are still driving to work every morning, the pattern is shifting — with millennial and Generation X workers leading a trend toward public transportation, walking and other alternatives, according to a 2014 report by the Brookings Institution.
Is the trash picked up? Are streets paved and well-maintained? Beware of broken streetlights, cracked sidewalks and vacant homes with cracked windows and an overgrowth of weeds.
You don’t have to be religious to appreciate that churches, mosques and synagogues are signs of community strength and evidence that residents are connected and invested.
Find the nearest fire and police stations and fire hydrants. Nearby public safety services add to a sense of neighborhood security. Also, a firehouse nearby might mean lower homeowners insurance premiums.
Major economic development can change neighborhoods dramatically.
See more at…https://www.moneytalksnews.com/20-clues-youre-buying-home-the-right-neighborhood/
P.C. Location-location-location-real-estate.jpg