
Every few years the housing market rewrites the rules, and buyers who learned the last set of rules show up unprepared for the new ones. Right now, the rules have changed more than they have at any point in a generation. The buyers who understand that are finding deals. The ones who do not are making expensive mistakes.
The arithmetic here is brutal and worth understanding clearly. A buyer who financed a $400,000 home at three percent in 2021 pays roughly $1,686 per month on principal and interest. That same loan at a seven percent rate costs $2,661. That gap of nearly a thousand dollars a month is why transaction volume has fallen to levels not seen in decades. Volume collapsed. Prices mostly did not.
Here is what that creates for someone who has done the work before they start looking: less competition than you would have faced in 2021 or 2022. The panic buyers are gone. The buyers who showed up with desperation instead of preparation have mostly sat back down. What remains is a more functional market, even if it is not a cheap one.
Before you look at a single listing, get your financing fully sorted. Not a rough estimate. Not a verbal confirmation from a loan officer you met once. A full pre-approval based on verified income, tax returns, bank statements, and a hard credit pull. Without that letter, you are not a buyer, you are a browser.
If the report surfaces findings that change the financial picture of the deal, you have real choices, and walking away is a legitimate one of them. You can walk away if the scope of the problems makes the agreed price no longer reasonable. The one thing to avoid is accepting everything uncritically because you are afraid of losing the deal.
The offer price is one variable among several. The buyer who calls the listing agent before submitting, asks what matters to the seller, and builds the offer around that information wins more often than the buyer who simply goes the highest.
For buyers with a real reason to be in a specific place for the foreseeable future, this market is more navigable than the headlines suggest. The homes that are right for a specific buyer’s actual needs are still moving. They are going to the buyers who treated the process like the major financial decision it is.
Buyers who take the time to research properly tend to find that the market is more navigable than the headlines suggest. Current property listings and market tools at real estate listings and data are worth bookmarking before you make any major moves.
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