NEVER Buy These Types of Houses

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  • čas přidán 27. 05. 2024
  • Searching for a home is daunting, and when you come across one that checks the boxes, people will turn the other way when red flags pop up. This is the largest investment you will ever make in your lifetime. So I want to tell you the type of home never to buy so you don’t make a huge financial mistake.
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    Jacqueline "Jackie" Baker
    NJ License 1541448
    Coldwell Banker Realty
    Allendale/Saddle River
    #realestate #jackiebakerrealtor #jackiebakersellsnj #homebuyingtips #homesellingtips #realestateinvesting
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Komentáře • 4,3K

  • @JackieBaker
    @JackieBaker  Před 27 dny +131

    If you need an agent referral in your area or if you would like me to help you with your real estate needs in Northern NJ click here➡www.jackiebakersellsnj.com/

    • @benjamindover5355
      @benjamindover5355 Před 27 dny +27

      Lots of flippers are slapping lipstick on pigs.
      Had to tell someone those $15 box of floor tiles and new cabinets and a fresh coat of paint are nice but the electric panel is original to the house and hasn’t been upgraded. So the cheap cosmetic upgrades verses a new roof, new garage doors, and new electrical vs. a refreshed kitchen is something to think about

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 26 dny +5

      @@benjamindover5355 very true!

    • @nomadbrad6391
      @nomadbrad6391 Před 23 dny +7

      I'll do you one better, I wouldn't buy a home built pre 1947, quality of construction was drastically improved immediately after the conclusion of WW2.

    • @Armistead_MacSkye
      @Armistead_MacSkye Před 23 dny +4

      Good tips.

    • @Armistead_MacSkye
      @Armistead_MacSkye Před 23 dny +6

      Who the hell waives an inspection?

  • @johndrago8370
    @johndrago8370 Před 22 dny +2176

    I bought a house that had 2 cat door exits. When I looked into replacing the doors I found out you couldn’t just buy a door , you needed to replace the whole incasement. High cost! I solved the problem by just getting a cat.

    • @heatherjay8802
      @heatherjay8802 Před 21 dnem +128

      But…..two cat door exits would mean two cats, wouldn’t it? 🤪

    • @Hooftimmer
      @Hooftimmer Před 21 dnem +81

      😄 Great solution.

    • @deb4578
      @deb4578 Před 21 dnem +54

      John...what a nice guy you are! 🐈

    • @jessicahatala4040
      @jessicahatala4040 Před 21 dnem +58

      Best solution ever.

    • @kathyfugere6085
      @kathyfugere6085 Před 21 dnem +60

      My cat got 6 field mice that crawled in the walls

  • @kortyEdna825
    @kortyEdna825 Před 9 dny +2376

    I’m in Ohio and the housing market here over the last 7-8 years is unlike anything I’ve ever seen. Homes that were bought for $130K in 2015 are now being sold for $590k. I’m talking about tiny, disgusting, poorly built 950 square foot shit boxes in quiet mediocre neighbourhoods. Then you’ve got Better, average sized homes in nicer neighbourhoods that were $300K+ 10 years ago selling for $750k+ now. Wild times.

    • @KaurKhangura
      @KaurKhangura Před 9 dny +3

      Home prices will come down eventually, but for now; get your money (as much as you can) out of the housing market and get into the financial markets or gold. The new mortgage rates are crazy, add to that the recession and the fact that mortgage guidelines are getting more difficult. Home prices will need to fall by a minimum of 40% (more like 50%) before the market normalizes.If you are in cross roads or need sincere advise on the best moves to take now its best you seek an independent advisor who knows about the financial markets.

    • @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io
      @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io Před 9 dny +1

      I wholeheartedly concur; I'm 60 years old, just retired, and have about $1,250,000 in non-retirement assets. Compared to the whole value of my portfolio during the last three years, I have no debt and a very little amount of money in retirement accounts. To be completely honest, the information provided by invt-advisors can only be ignored but not neglected. Simply undertake research to choose a trustworthy one.

    • @Pamela.jess.245
      @Pamela.jess.245 Před 9 dny

      This is huge! think you can point me towards the direction of your advisor? been looking at advisory management myself.. seeking ways to invest and make more money with the uncertainty in the economy.

    • @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io
      @PatrickFitzgerald-cx6io Před 9 dny

      Certainly, there are a handful of experts in the field. I've experimented with a few over the past years, but I've stuck with ‘’Colleen Rose Mccaffery” for about five years now, and her performance has been consistently impressive.She’s quite known in her field, look-her up.

    • @Pamela.jess.245
      @Pamela.jess.245 Před 9 dny +1

      Thanks a lot for this suggestion. I needed this myself, I looked her up, and I have sent her an email. I hope she gets back to me soon.

  • @jimmycorbett4611
    @jimmycorbett4611 Před 10 dny +232

    Don’t buy a house on a severely steep hill or severely uneven land. Don’t buy a house right next to an airport. Don’t buy in an HOA.

    • @jong9379
      @jong9379 Před 6 dny +19

      Not buyinga house in hoa is seriously not possible today unless you want to live out of the city.... or if you are willing to drive long distance away from major city amenities.
      Most new housing development is sold with HOA conditions.

    • @vaderladyl
      @vaderladyl Před 4 dny +10

      @@jong9379 Depending. I live in the city and i don't have an HOA. Most older communities don't have one.

    • @sakurauchiha03
      @sakurauchiha03 Před 4 dny

      ​@@jong9379 In NJ? It's very possible

    • @RareGenXer
      @RareGenXer Před 3 dny

      HOA's and gated communities seem to be a regional thing. Big on the coasts and down south. Not so much in the vast interior (aka "flyover country") or the northern tier. @@jong9379

    • @yayayoma
      @yayayoma Před 2 dny +7

      HOAs can be a good thing. The devil's in the details. It pays to read the HOA covenant and bylaws before buying a house. Also, if there is community property in the neighborhood, you pretty much have to have an HOA to pay for and manage the upkeep. More upscale neighborhoods will typically have such property, such as a pond, clubhouse, swimming pool, park or tennis courts.

  • @karami8844
    @karami8844 Před 8 dny +75

    Something I realized as soon as my parents handed over their home to me, homeownership is truly liberating (don’t have to worry about being evicted) but expensive at the same time with all the upkeep. It seems like every year the home needs something done. 😑

    • @00inwiththenew00
      @00inwiththenew00 Před 6 dny +10

      You're fortunate to have a mortgate-free home! But yeah, it really does seem like every year the home needs something done and it's hard finding trustworthy and seasoned handymen/contractors who will do the job properly.

    • @zuzanazuscinova5209
      @zuzanazuscinova5209 Před 6 dny +8

      It's a never ending litany of repairs. Liberating? I don't know.

    • @00inwiththenew00
      @00inwiththenew00 Před 5 dny +3

      @@zuzanazuscinova5209 Better than being homeless, I guess. Condo Living is pretty carefree

    • @ericolens3
      @ericolens3 Před dnem

      @@00inwiththenew00
      as a person who also inheirited their parents home,
      theres lots of maintainence. ive just come to make my peace with a project each year.
      some are opt-in like cosmetics to keep the home youthful. others are a pain in the butt like electrical (was minor), plumbing (also minor), and structural (windows were dry rotted), roof was dirty and wanted to get the max life out of it.
      I will say this. learn how to do your own contruction work will save thousands if not tens of thousands on the many many many ankle biter projects.
      get your own shovel and up keep your own flowerbed, do your own lawn cutting, learn to paint, pressure wash you own driveway, and so on.
      the more you KNOW and DO, the less you pay someone else to do it.
      save your money for more major projects. idk maybe I'll raise my kids to be construction workers and contractors just so they can refurb homes and flip them.
      again im a TFK and my folks home doubled in value. but the only thing im paying is taxes and upkeep. which is still a pain but its pales in comparison if i had to buy the home for its current value. its a double edged sword. property values are nice to sell when they rise but its a pain to buy these inflated values.
      all in all, since i grew up in the home, i know every problem and which are minor, major, and the ones i need to get ahead of before they become a major pain.

    • @dustinholmes3832
      @dustinholmes3832 Před dnem +11

      No eviction as long as you pay your property taxes. Government owns it, you rent it with tax money

  • @billygraham5589
    @billygraham5589 Před 21 dnem +1958

    Never buy an HOA controlled home - never buy a condo. Don’t buy a manufactured home to be installed in a rental park - only install on your own land.

    • @phylliselizahb1041
      @phylliselizahb1041 Před 21 dnem +80

      If you have ltd $, you have few options. Condos can be yer only option. Just avoid condo boards (Napoleonic clique mentality). Look for cap on % rentals allowed, too.

    • @nette9836
      @nette9836 Před 21 dnem +77

      My husband and I bought our first home and hate it. We will be moving to a condo in a few years. Hopefully, by the beach.

    • @skindippedingold
      @skindippedingold Před 21 dnem +30

      @@nette9836 Hi, Im curious about your experience! Do you mind telling about why you dont like the home and the advantages to having a condo?

    • @shain126
      @shain126 Před 21 dnem +61

      Agree with the HOA we bought a condo and try to contact the association the first time was impossible for a few months ( we don’t live in the condo) to set up our payments because the hoa is remote then finally we did but we missed certain payments .. we try to pay and sent check and was bounced back later on we found out the put a lien on our home and if you don’t pay the debts they can foreclose you home. Mind you we have been paying monthly the other months ..

    • @samiehayes8045
      @samiehayes8045 Před 20 dny

      @@nette9836 Hope you have a lot of money when you get assessed!!

  • @jinron24
    @jinron24 Před 26 dny +1900

    You don't mention new construction homes, I've seen many recently constructed homes with bad foundations and structural issues. New homes are mostly garbage stick structures that in 5 years the problems will start to show.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 26 dny +383

      I'll be doing another video about new construction in the near future.

    • @maryloufarnsworth8461
      @maryloufarnsworth8461 Před 22 dny +217

      I agree. I have friends who bought a lovely new townhome with a nice water view. Come the winter , they couldn't keep the home warm. My friend went up in the attic space and discovered that was no insulation. Also there were no firewalls between houses. They had to take the builder to court at get the needed work done.

    • @lkofie6670
      @lkofie6670 Před 22 dny +66

      Try less than a month... happened to my SIL when she and her family moved into their "new construction" home back in about 2006. The first thought that came to my head the moment my husband and I pulled up was the words of my aunt who's a realtor "... cheap materials used on rushed new construction of the millennium." It just looked like a human size doll house to me, meaning the siding just looked like cheap hard plastic. When we went inside, the worker men were still doing some work (?). Turned out they were repairing an issue that happened that week. Their entire ceiling caved under, filling up with water when my SIL wanted to take a bath and as her tub was filling up, so was the ceiling beneath the tub and needless to say, it caused a major leak. They were in their house for only about 3 1/2 weeks total. Fast forward about say a year or 1 1/2 years ago, my husband went over to his sister's house and when he came home, he reported that their kitchen caught on fire due to some electrical issues... and really who knows what other problems they've endured over the years of being in their house. Today, prior to or with the exception of her renovated kitchen, her house looks as old as mine, which was built in 1997 and had only one owner before us and theirs was built 9 1/2 years later than ours and they were the only owner.

    • @annassiter4087
      @annassiter4087 Před 22 dny +120

      @@lkofie6670 …. I was at a New Housewarming.. They had just moved the furniture in.. During the party, the front window of the living room, fell out of the wall and onto the front yard..

    • @tammybagwell1741
      @tammybagwell1741 Před 22 dny +32

      I honestly thought she was going to say this first. It was certainly the first thing that popped into my mind

  • @sandyjohnson8927
    @sandyjohnson8927 Před 19 dny +117

    So many new homes are junk.

    • @walterwhite1
      @walterwhite1 Před 3 dny

      Pure junk. So geeedy capitalists can make a fat profit

    • @tallflguy
      @tallflguy Před 3 dny +1

      That’s not true

    • @GailG74
      @GailG74 Před 2 dny +7

      Yup! Many of them are put together with tape and glue

    • @LuisRamirez-ln3cj
      @LuisRamirez-ln3cj Před dnem +1

      In California old homes have to be retrofitted to meet the standards of earthquake insurance companies. I know this because I got a letter in the mail a few weeks ago. Fortunately my home was built in 2014, so I don't have to worry about that.

    • @ABC1701A
      @ABC1701A Před dnem +3

      @@tallflguy There is a reason US homes are generally known as being built out of cardboard compared to other countries where they are expected to last - at least - for a century or longer. My grandparents home was built in the 1300, I've rented a house built in the 1820s (relatively new in comparison) and another built in the 1920s and ALL were far better than those built much more recently (after the 1980s for example).

  • @christinaduncan8285
    @christinaduncan8285 Před 19 dny +54

    Re the Seller's Disclosure, I sold a house thinking it was going to a first-time homebuyer, so I typed up seven single-spaced pages of info about the house for them, believe it or not, so they would understand absolutely everything, including in a major rain storm where the water in the alley flows and how to prevent drainage problems on the site. Turns out, the buyer was actually a flipper. He worked on it for three YEARS (while working on other properties) before putting it up for sale, so potential buyers thought he just updated his house. Posing as a potential buyer, I asked for a Seller's Disclosure from the real estate office, and was very surprised at how much important info he didn't disclose, including where (and what type) the French Drain pipes were located, info about having upgraded all the outlets, including the GFCIs, etc. Had he been honest, he would have simply handed the buyer the info I typed up and told them what he did since purchasing the property. So, in closing, a Seller's Disclosure doesn't always tell you everything you need to know, but most often is the best info you can get.

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 Před 2 dny +5

      As a renovator I began photographing everything after digital cameras and colour printers became available. I mean like photographing opened wall and joist cavities while pipes and wires are exposed. Documentation which could save a lot of time and trouble to a future electrician or whoever. Always affixed a large envelope beside the breaker panel, containing such "x-rays" of the house including floor sketches of the circuits keyed to a responsibly marked panel. Should be law this info must stay with the house, but my city hall has yet to even archive such voluntary documentation, and it took them twenty years to figure out an emailed photo can often save the cost of an inspector visit.

    • @vikkiflaig4735
      @vikkiflaig4735 Před 17 hodinami +1

      Buyer beware. I always have an acceptable home inspection as a contingency . Ie only looking for huge problems so i can get out of the contract if something expensive is found that i don't want to deal with. Unless the seller wants to pay for the repair .

    • @vikkiflaig4735
      @vikkiflaig4735 Před 17 hodinami

      ​@@pong9000nice. Most would appreciate that.

    • @fuzzypumpkin7743
      @fuzzypumpkin7743 Před 11 hodinami

      My house had bad leaking in the basement shortly after I moved in. Not in the seller's disclosure, yet they just happened to have placed a rug right in the middle of the basement in a low spot and under that rug you could see damage to the paint job. When we ended up ripping out this ridiculous man-house in the basement (seriously, it has windows...inside the basement) we found the damage and could tell it had been going on for quite some time. No way they couldn't have known. But they were idiots who ruined their water fixtures by never repairing a broken water softener (thankfully that was super evident so I knew what I was getting into) so it's just par for the course.

    • @ravenlake9873
      @ravenlake9873 Před 4 hodinami

      Flippers are parasites. We went into serious debt thanks to one of their disgraceful ilk and their mold infested lipstick on a pig disaster. The inspector sucked, btw, and caught none of the very obvious things our later contractor pointed out in under fifteen minutes.

  • @louisebaker3793
    @louisebaker3793 Před 27 dny +2264

    I live in a century old home. I agree about the potential problems. However, my roof is slate, my floors are quarter sawn oak and my trees are 90 plus feet tall. Like everything else in life, it's a trade off.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 27 dny +89

      Yup.

    • @sandblast5636
      @sandblast5636 Před 26 dny +23

      Have you seen the cockroaches and termites?

    • @robertscheinost179
      @robertscheinost179 Před 26 dny +95

      If the slate on your house is as old as the house the slate is at the end of its useful life. Wait and see how much a new slate roof costs! Yep, I used to do slate roofs in Vermont, where that is a common roofing material After 100 years half of the slate is cracked or broken.

    • @louisebaker3793
      @louisebaker3793 Před 26 dny +1

      @@robertscheinost179 It was 75k when we replaced it. Worth it, IMHO.

    • @louisebaker3793
      @louisebaker3793 Před 26 dny

      @@sandblast5636 Termite inspection every spring.

  • @marrlena947
    @marrlena947 Před 23 dny +507

    My home is about 500 years old! I bought in a medieval town in Spain. It needed almost no work. Everything works fine even though it's very old. I've been here 4 years now.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 23 dny +56

      Wow! I love Spain! I vacationed there 30 years ago!

    • @birdlover7776
      @birdlover7776 Před 20 dny +10

      This is where I’d like to be !

    • @marrlena947
      @marrlena947 Před 20 dny +12

      ​@@birdlover7776 It's the only place I want to live and I have lived in many countries.

    • @birdlover7776
      @birdlover7776 Před 20 dny +7

      @@marrlena947 my mom visited Spain and loved it. I would like to travel there and explore rentals and or purchasing property. I absolutely love the architecture and food etc. i’ve been to Indonesia, Mexico and France but so far not Spain 🌸

    • @prettykitty5416
      @prettykitty5416 Před 20 dny +7

      How cool! Was it expensive?

  • @trishan9537
    @trishan9537 Před 19 dny +37

    I agree with everything that was suggested. But... If you buy an old house, don't depend on the inspector sent out for home purchases because they just do not tell you everything. It happened to me. The old house I bought was passed but we were not told of issues that we wish we had known. If you can, hire your own inspector. Believe me, it will be worth it.

    • @angelad.redcay738
      @angelad.redcay738 Před 4 dny +3

      Our house is 70 years old. Inspector missed tons of stuff, including asbestos and thousands and thousands of dollars of plumbing issues. My advice is to get a plumbing and electrical inspection.

    • @mlevi9206
      @mlevi9206 Před 23 hodinami +1

      Find a civil engineer.

    • @lindarich7346
      @lindarich7346 Před 20 hodinami

      A relative of mine purchased a condo - first home and yes, it came with an hoa. Two things. The person who inspected the property was so clueless that he didn't find that most of the windows collapsed and were in dyer need of replacement, the dishwasher didn't work nor did the washing machine that was included in the sale. He did threaten a lawsuit against the inspector and was reimbursed for the inspection but had to eat the rest. Furthermore, the building was sold after about a year of him being there and the new owners and staff were miserable. Needless to say, NO to condos and HOAs.

    • @fuzzypumpkin7743
      @fuzzypumpkin7743 Před 11 hodinami +1

      Yeah, my realtor told me the inspectors in our area are not worth anything and you are much better off finding a friend or relative who knows construction to come with you when looking for homes. They at least have your safety in mind.

  • @ae744
    @ae744 Před 15 dny +21

    Usa victorian home owner here: bought a fixer upper 130 year old home, updated many parts of the home. It cost some money but we were able to do most of the work ourselves over several years. 100% worth it.

  • @livingreflection5
    @livingreflection5 Před 21 dnem +357

    Never buy a home without paying for a good home inspection. That's all you need to know.

    • @uscitizen898
      @uscitizen898 Před 19 dny +23

      Not always. We sold a home and our prospective buyers hired an inspector that knew so little I had to show him the issues he found were totally unfounded. Example: What he thought was an exhaust pipe from the bathroom going directly into the attic was nothing but an old metal rod that originally went out the roof to attach a TV antenna to. I knew what it was but because the inspector was so young, he didn't know what it was....at least up to that point. 😉

    • @henryb.7723
      @henryb.7723 Před 19 dny +31

      In our experience (learned the hard way, twice) home inspectors aren't NEARLY as thorough as they need to be. They're inspectors for a reason - you want a legit contractor to look at everything.
      Inspectors know code, contractors know construction.

    • @abelis644
      @abelis644 Před 18 dny

      ​@@uscitizen898
      One inspector completely missed a room in the basement of the older house my ex and I bought. He missed the room because their was a wall-hanging hanging over its door from the old owners.
      We didn't know about that room either.
      It cost his company dearly unfortunately because he missed a giant nest of carpenter ants!
      So thankfully to have gotten an inspection.
      I would NEVER buy a house without one.

    • @queenofmyownuniverse2339
      @queenofmyownuniverse2339 Před 17 dny +6

      My house is 1908 Edwardian era, and looks like a Victorian villa. Absolutely love the proportions and room sizes. Yes there is maintenance but in all honesty I prefer a house with space to some of the tiny rabbit hutch size homes we get in the UK. 😊

    • @kimd8873
      @kimd8873 Před 14 dny +22

      NEVER USE THE BANK'S INSPECTOR -THOSE BASTARDS WILL SAY EVERYTHING IS FINE!!!!!

  • @phyllisgodwin8799
    @phyllisgodwin8799 Před 22 dny +627

    I had to sell my mother’s house. It was in bad shape, and it had a reverse mortgage. I just had to get out from under it, so I sold it to a house flipper. First, they changed the den to a 4th bedroom. They painted over all the wood paneling, the cabinets and doors. They also painted over all the mold. They tore up some of the driveway and sidewalk that had bad cracks, but the back porch had a huge crack that they didn’t fix, and the porch fills with water. The plumbing is also totally messed up since my parents bought it in the 70’s. They purchased for 140,000 and sold it for 215,000. All they did was “put lipstick on a pig”. Paint and some new fixtures covered up soooo much! Be careful of house flippers!

    • @raimeyewens7518
      @raimeyewens7518 Před 21 dnem +48

      The house next to my parents house looked like it needed to be torn down and started over. It hadn’t been lived in for 20+ years and the inside and outside had extensive water damage. When you walked up to it you could smell mold. A flipper bought it and put on some siding and cheap materials inside and sold it in less than a couple of months. I was shocked because it needed to be gutted.

    • @rochester3
      @rochester3 Před 21 dnem +2

      and they still didnt make a profit with the cost it took to fix it

    • @Jennifer_Lewis_Beach_Living
      @Jennifer_Lewis_Beach_Living Před 21 dnem +17

      Exactly. A layer of paint can hide a multitude of sins, like mold and mildew.

    • @rinnylakin81
      @rinnylakin81 Před 21 dnem +31

      I am glad to hear someone say that we shouldn’t be developing these flood zones!
      Ever since the studies showed human health implications if you live within 200 feet of a highway, I have noticed a lot of low income housing projects ADDED along highways. Maybe listen to scientists and consider the true cost of ignoring or abusing the warnings.

    • @lilygarden89
      @lilygarden89 Před 21 dnem +8

      @rinnylakin81 what are the health implications living next to a highway?

  • @jordanxfile
    @jordanxfile Před 9 dny +37

    Yes to everything else, but I would never get tired of a secret room 👀🧐

    • @Heather-Luper
      @Heather-Luper Před 2 dny +2

      Hubby insisted on installing a secret door to his office. I'm worried about re-sale, but he loves it SO much and it brings him joy. 😊

    • @c0rnichon
      @c0rnichon Před 2 dny +5

      @@Heather-Luper I get the importance of re-sale value but what would be the point of owning a home if you're basically just "borrowing" it from a future buyer, right?

    • @nohomo4774
      @nohomo4774 Před dnem

      @@c0rnichon that's a really good point

    • @scvcebc
      @scvcebc Před 14 hodinami

      My family had a secret room with the entrance inside one of the closets. Years later, one of my sisters and I visited the house as adults and told the new owner we were just driving by. When we asked if the secret room was still there, the new owner knew we were legit and invited us in for a tour! Seeing what had changed and what was still the same was a wonderful experience and we were lucky that the current owner shared our joy and appreciated hearing the house history from its first children.

    • @winstonchurchill3597
      @winstonchurchill3597 Před 12 hodinami

      Agreed - I've always wanted a secret room!

  • @AtoZb137
    @AtoZb137 Před 19 dny +103

    If your home was built after 1980, you’re living on a foundation of chopsticks

    • @maryhaynes9493
      @maryhaynes9493 Před 9 dny +1

      Meaning what? I have pictures as they built our house. My dad who dug footings and such for a living, said ours (1981) was really good.. I guess my dad wouldn't lie to me. Anyway no problems here. I'm sure many around that time were done poorly. 😢

    • @stinkycheese804
      @stinkycheese804 Před 6 dny +8

      Kind of worthless thought, considering millions of people have no problem with post-'80 homes. Some do, but the same can be said of at least as many pre-'80 homes. Would I buy a flimsy home where there are hurricanes? No, let's use some common sense.

    • @vaderladyl
      @vaderladyl Před 4 dny +1

      I don't know, it depends.

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 Před 2 dny +3

      Depends where and when, and built by who. Are you talking about Calgary Alberta or Kanagawa Japan? Your pithy advice may as well be "never order the chicken salad".

  • @pennsylvaniapatti1835
    @pennsylvaniapatti1835 Před 21 dnem +537

    I live in my 124 year old home i bought years ago. Id rather buy an old home than a new home that you have to replace everything within 10 years of owning it.

    • @rjl9707
      @rjl9707 Před 18 dny +36

      Corrrect. My house was built in 1886. Full renovation, and all the wood is high density. 2x4 are not 1.75 x 3.75 and are much heavier, same with 2x6, etc.

    • @lenoraclemm1892
      @lenoraclemm1892 Před 17 dny +42

      Yes I'm in real estate you are totally correct.. there is a well pump company that went out of business some years ago bc all of their well pumps NEVER GIVE OUT.. the quality just doesn't match. I see people with 50 year old fridges all the time but ones that are from the last twenty years last 5-10 years unless maybe on the very very high end range but even then...

    • @lisaazzano1811
      @lisaazzano1811 Před 17 dny +58

      100% agree! Newer homes are horrible craftsmanship. They use the cheapest materials

    • @jrtr2642
      @jrtr2642 Před 16 dny +28

      I bought a 1922 house with knob & tube wiring. 12k to replace it 7 years ago. Over the last 7 years I have replaced the water pipes, water heater, painted the outside and a lot of other renovations. Now I am having a new heating and AC system put in next week. Last thing I am waiting on is the roof to be replaced. But hey roof have to don't last 100 years anyway. I sometime wonder if I should sell and get something newer but I would give up my windows, hardwood floors and 10 foot ceiling and my 2 1/2 percent mortgage. But I do know more things will go wrong as time goes on.

    • @rjl9707
      @rjl9707 Před 16 dny +1

      @@jrtr2642 Keep and renovate it. With my 1886, it was 60amp fuse box; then new 200amp panel with complete wiring. New 4-ton HVAC. Re-roof and new decking. Its well worth the investment and satisfaction of a job well done. BTW- I am a licensed appraiser and seen all these new housing projets scattered in various counties; this alone, motivated me to stay. Good luck !

  • @the_kombinator
    @the_kombinator Před 21 dnem +327

    LMAO my aunt in France lives in a 350+ house. It's bloody awesome.

    • @uscitizen898
      @uscitizen898 Před 19 dny +27

      And in many places in Europe a house that age is often considered "new" 🥰🥰

    • @thomasallen6980
      @thomasallen6980 Před 18 dny +8

      She must live next to my grandmother. She lives in a shoe and has alot of kids.

    • @abelis644
      @abelis644 Před 18 dny +8

      ​@@uscitizen898
      Let's not exaggerated...
      I'm French btw.
      And also Canadian, but not French Canadian...😅

    • @abelis644
      @abelis644 Před 18 dny +9

      Yes but probably made of stone with clay tiles on the roof.

    • @mr.monocle4812
      @mr.monocle4812 Před 18 dny +1

      @@abelis644lol that’s funny, canadian french?

  • @jodykrieger6327
    @jodykrieger6327 Před 8 dny +37

    Nobody can afford to buy any type of houses right now ☹. But thanks for the heads up for future🙂

    • @GailG74
      @GailG74 Před 2 dny +5

      Facts! It’s soooo bad out here, especially if you’re an American. If you sneak into this country without paperwork, you can have anything given to you and live like a king 👑

    • @bryanpatrick3509
      @bryanpatrick3509 Před 22 hodinami +1

      Lol, speak for yourself, I am
      Closing on one right now in America lol. 🙄

    • @sarajanewebster5321
      @sarajanewebster5321 Před 21 hodinou +4

      @@GailG74 lmao idk why you brought up illegal immigrants. This conversation is about housing, and it’s not like anyone is handling that out for free!

    • @GailG74
      @GailG74 Před 18 hodinami +1

      @@sarajanewebster5321 I’m glad you’re laughing, but it seems you missed the context of my reply. Did you really think I just randomly brought up illegal immigration? It’s all connected-housing, resources, and policy issues. Maybe take a moment to understand the original comment before jumping to conclusions. I was replying to someone else’s comment. Also, I know nobody’s handing out houses, but interconnected issues affect the housing crisis. Next time, please try thinking it through before adding your two cents.
      Have a blessed day

    • @GailG74
      @GailG74 Před 18 hodinami

      @@bryanpatrick3509 congratulations

  • @brandywineblue
    @brandywineblue Před 14 dny +11

    Not just lead pipes, but also galvanized pipe. They get corroded from the inside out, so over time they get clogged, break, and leak. Thanks for making people aware of the problems of old homes. Have lived in several of them, so I can say you're spot on!

    • @raydemos1181
      @raydemos1181 Před 5 dny

      your pipes will not clog if you fill them with distilled water, do not use tap water in your heating system pipes

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 Před 2 dny +1

      @@raydemos1181 I believe we're talking about water supplied by the city i.e. tapwater. For closed heating systems there are additives that do the trick.
      What bugs me about old pipes that _should_ be replaced, is no homeowner will do it until they have a leak, and a crisis, then they make bad costly decisions because it always happens at the worst of times.

    • @gondolacrescent5
      @gondolacrescent5 Před 17 hodinami +1

      I have news for you- I’ve been seeing copper pipe made in the 1970’s leaking (not at a solder join but at a 90 degree elbow) at first the leak is so slight it’s a fine mist- so it can take weeks or months to make itself known in the form of ruined, collapsed ceilings or a slightly damp floor that has you looking all over the place for a problem that’s almost impossible to easily find.

    • @gondolacrescent5
      @gondolacrescent5 Před 17 hodinami +2

      These are the types of houses to never buy if………..you have absolute zero ability to do anything more complicated than change a light bulb in a table lamp…..otherwise, use the features attendant to an old house to leverage your position as the buyer to your advantage.
      I live in Toronto and there are no homes anywhere in the region that are built on flood plains…because they were all destroyed in 1954 by Hurricane Hazel…and after that happened, the municipalities involved refused to issue residence building permits for flood plains. Pretty well all flood plains in Toronto are now parks or golf courses….as they should be.

    • @pong9000
      @pong9000 Před 16 hodinami +1

      @@gondolacrescent5 Yes, Canadian Wolverine pipe&fitting copper refined in the 1970s is notorious for developing pinholes. That was about 1/3 of the North American market. At first you think it's cobwebs but when you try to brush them aside your hand gets wet.
      Another issue I'm anticipating is joints failing due to sticker residue as suppliers affix barcodes directly on the product, a convenience to retailers. Everybody along the chain from manufacturer to installer can point the blame somewhere else.

  • @paulshlasko3608
    @paulshlasko3608 Před 21 dnem +293

    My 120 year old home stacks up very well against newer ones, thank you......

    • @constancedenchy9801
      @constancedenchy9801 Před 8 dny +14

      All solid wood in my home...no ply wood or fiber board. Cherry wood stairwell, parkay floors...all my pipes were replaced in the 1970's!

    • @lauraIngleswilder74
      @lauraIngleswilder74 Před 7 dny +11

      I agree! Newer homes are junk

    • @Steph-yz4tn
      @Steph-yz4tn Před 6 dny +5

      That's great for you, but her advice is good about old homes. If you're lucky, the previous homeowners fixed all the problems she mentioned.
      I was set to buy a 90 year old house and it still had knob and tube throughout the house. Some old homes are money pits.

    • @letsbereal-hd8qt
      @letsbereal-hd8qt Před 6 dny +1

      @@Steph-yz4tn you are so right about knob and tube wiring!

    • @marianmorgan2156
      @marianmorgan2156 Před 6 dny +1

      Mine too

  • @annmariez9596
    @annmariez9596 Před 26 dny +860

    For those who want an old house, be aware of the work that needs to be done. I simply adore my 100 year old house. We purchased our it knowing it needed certain updates. It's not a for everyone. My sister built a new house with a reputable builder and her brand new house has more issues than my oldie.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 26 dny +92

      I'm not surprised. New builds are not like old houses at all!

    • @maryd253
      @maryd253 Před 25 dny +44

      I totally agree. Just know that it will need work. Eyes wide open. I prefer older homes to the homes that are being built now.

    • @marylclc1269
      @marylclc1269 Před 24 dny

      I have heard horror stories from owners who had DR Horton and other companies build their houses. AFAIK, this company usually buys huge tracts of land and builds neighborhoods where corn fields or old houses once were.
      Mold, cardboard lining siding, plumbing not hooked up or finished at closing, buyers being threatened, shoddy workmanship, young teenagers being hired to "build" the homes instead of union workers, etc.
      There are videos on CZcams about these builders.
      My husband and I have owned 2 100 year old and older homes in our almost 40 years of home ownership. We are sadly leaving our 100 year old bungalow only because our neighborhood is turning into light industrial one lot at a time and we want a quiet place to live in retirement. We have had our water tested, etc, and never had issues with lead pipes, old wiring, etc. (My husband is also handy, so when small problems pop up we can deal with them immediately. We know when to call a professional when necessary.) We are buying a custom build house that has been inspected by a good inspector service and we are really confident that this 25 yr old house we will be moving into soon is in good shape.
      I agree with Jackie that quick flips are a horrible idea. I'd *never* buy a quick flip house.
      And, always get a quality inspection done! I wouldn't buy property without one. We paid over $1,000 for the inspection for the house we just bought. It was worth every penny.

    • @warrenpuckett4203
      @warrenpuckett4203 Před 23 dny +6

      As long as it is not on a slab or built over a crawl space. Top feeders are pain in the tukas to repair. Basements well not good in areas with high water tables.
      Swimming pools. Have you even ever seen one float out of the ground when someone thought is a great idea to drain it for the winter?
      Pipes in the basement easy. In the walls not so much. 2nd floor not good. 3rd flour even more worse. Same with electrical.
      Hmm well asbsetos? Well maybe the octopus in the basement is still there? Those are what are known as gravity heating. And open window cooling
      Oh and my local Electric and Gas companies told me I use too much heat and electricity. 96% efficient furnace.
      Solar heating only works in the daytime. In winter only 7 1/2 hours of day light.
      No incandescent lighting. Oh and when I switched. The out door lamps corroded. To stop it I just leave them on. I can run a 7 watt bulb for how long vs paying for a new out door lamp?
      Ran the in window A/C once off the grid last year. When the grid drops below 109 it shuts off.
      If it is in the upper 90ds with upper 90% humidity. I run it off the gasoline powered 12K watt generator. Because the grid is is in brown out..
      Sorry Forney I don't live there any more. Your state sucks on my finances too much.
      Asbestos? Probably in a old UMC house from the early 20th to late 19th century. They also made asbestos shingles and siding.
      As for underground heating oil? Why do it? Gravity always works.
      But if it is yugly. Well then just burn wood or coal in the fireplace. The chopping , cutting and toting will keep you healthy and warm twice.
      She just made proof that people have been using their head mainly for a hat rest for lots of generations. Still in the gene pool.

    • @SuperDrLisa
      @SuperDrLisa Před 23 dny +25

      I live in a 106 year old home which has been in my family for 100 years. It has been updated twice. Knob and tube wires are still there but not used. I do have some asbestos covered pipes. Please, we had a laundry shoot, we were not stupid enough try to go down in it. My father removed the oil tanks in our yard. I had the oil burner my father had converted from a coal burning boiler removed and installed a gas boiler and on demand hot water heater. My sister's "newer" 20 year old home has had problems with every appliance even though high end ones were installed, the central air condition has been replaced, she has bad water pressure. Her cellar stairs were so steep she had to install a riding chair to get to the cellar. Her gutters were not properly installed so the fascia is rotting...

  • @Susanhartman.
    @Susanhartman. Před 17 dny +17

    Keep in mind that during the 80’s people were encouraged to save due to the interest rates. Right now there’s very little incentive to save because those who are saving are watching those who are reckless taking it in. I’ve been trying to save for a home and it’s been discouraging to watch prices continue to not budge because there’s people willing to get into a mortgage where they’re paying 40% of their income. It’s insane.

    • @Grace.milburn
      @Grace.milburn Před 17 dny +4

      The housing market in 2024 poses difficulties due to uncertainties about the Federal Reserve's ability to curb inflation and reduce borrowing costs without adversely affecting demand for assets like homes and automobiles.

    • @mikegarvey17
      @mikegarvey17 Před 17 dny +4

      Consider shifting from real estate to stocks during severe recessions. While market volatility presents short-term trading opportunities, it's crucial to approach with caution. This isn't financial advice, but investing during such times may be a strategic move, consider adopting the services of a financial expert.

    • @mariaguerrero08
      @mariaguerrero08 Před 17 dny +3

      I fully agree and place great value on my advisor's role in guiding my daily investments. They excel in both long and short strategies, managing risk for potential gains and protection against market downturns. Their access to exclusive insights and in-depth analysis makes exceeding expectations a regular outcome. In the two-plus years I've worked with my advisor, I've gained over 1.2million dollars.

    • @ThomasChai05
      @ThomasChai05 Před 17 dny +3

      @@mariaguerrero08who is your advisor please, if you don't mind me asking?

    • @mariaguerrero08
      @mariaguerrero08 Před 17 dny +2

      "Gertrude Margaret Quinto" is the licensed advisor I use. Just research the name. You’d find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment

  • @pong9000
    @pong9000 Před 2 dny +5

    In my experience as a renovator and handyman over thirty years, everything depends on knowing good competent workers who hope to be written into your will as thanks for service above and beyond.
    For example I removed an empty oil drum once that the owner had planted a walnut tree directly atop thirty years before. She preferred the towering walnut not cut down. So a friend and I dug with shovels, wrapping the exposed roots with wet cloth. If you put your hand over a computer mouse, imagine the mouse is the tank and your fingers are the roots that will not be severed. Cut a hole with grinder and climbed inside (I could almost stand). Scoured the interior with clean sand, quarantined into buckets. Cut the tank from inside into small pieces that we teased out between the roots. Scraped the apparently clean soil the tank had rested on for good measure and quarantined that too. Every step we thoroughly documented with photographs like it was a crime scene. Cost $1200 labour in the summer of 2010; and the neighbours were bringing cold ciders to celebrate our environmental stewardship for saving that tree... priceless.
    SO I'm saying to cultivate good relationships with workers who care, not live in a bureaucracy on the kindness of strangers who hope to forget you and your house at the end of the day.

    • @brendabadih8855
      @brendabadih8855 Před 20 hodinami

      Definitely. I work for myself. I don't want to be told how to do my job.
      I do the same work for you I do for myself. Can't stand cheap and sloppy work. People usually hire me again. If a worker needs to advertise after 3 yrs, the work is not good enough to rely on referrals.

  • @marilynhoward4561
    @marilynhoward4561 Před 22 dny +148

    Our home was built in the 1870s. We have replaced everything. It's a fantastic home. Built better than anything new today.

    • @fleatactical7390
      @fleatactical7390 Před 20 dny

      That's really the way to go if you can manage it. The only main drawback is regarding the typical lack of insulation (or insufficient insulation). If you're gutting outside walls, that's great, but otherwise you'll be stuck with a higher fuel bill than newer construction.

    • @uscitizen898
      @uscitizen898 Před 19 dny +2

      @@fleatactical7390 But you can do blown-in insulation from the interior quite easily in older homes with not very much "repair" to the interior walls. Costly? Yes, but in the long run less than many years of higher heating/cooling bills.

    • @fleatactical7390
      @fleatactical7390 Před 19 dny +2

      @@uscitizen898 Good point, that is true. It can have mixed results depending on the existing materials in the walls, but yes, it will usually help and no doubt pay for itself over time.

    • @1972Ray
      @1972Ray Před 19 dny

      @@fleatactical7390 My parents had an old house. Bedrooms without closets, no kitchen space.

  • @t0dd000
    @t0dd000 Před 22 dny +566

    I'm an agent.
    I live in a 160 year farmhouse. This is my suggestion to everyone. Do what we did: send two inspectors through before you close. We knew exactly what we would be spending over the next ten years.
    ---
    Flood zones. 100% agree. Personally, I really wish flood zones were off-limit to development. Even the 500 year zones.
    ---
    Advice I always give. Always ALWAYS get into that crawlspace, attic, and basement with a really good flashlight. Always.

    • @elim7228
      @elim7228 Před 21 dnem +28

      The basements are now "finished". So, a lot of the issues are concealed by drywall and plywood. In fact, I am more inclined to purchase a house with an unfinished basement, which would allow me to see all the issues firsthand.

    • @KrystalLioness
      @KrystalLioness Před 21 dnem +29

      I had to crawl through the crawlspace under my house. One of the creepiest things I've ever done, and found out what zombie-spider fungus was.

    • @t0dd000
      @t0dd000 Před 21 dnem +5

      @@elim7228 I'm down south. We don't have many basements. Sometimes they are finished, sometimes not. Lots of things can be hidden, but often there are signs.

    • @t0dd000
      @t0dd000 Před 21 dnem +9

      @@KrystalLioness I've owned two houses and have had to redo both crawlspaces. I'm talking $60k and $80k, roughly (we were prepared for the second one, but the first was a total surprise). Crawlspaces are easily shrugged off by a client because they are simply too put off at diving in there. The inspector will often save the day, but in a world of due diligence money going directly to the pocket of the seller like we have in North Carolina, a bit of scrutiny by a prospective buyer can save them zillions.

    • @nunyabidness3075
      @nunyabidness3075 Před 21 dnem +21

      I’m hoping everyone takes all this advice, plus, never buy from a flipper! There used to be a lot of honest and professional flippers, but now they are too hard to discern from the others they compete with. I’ve talked to them, and mostly they do things they would never do to a home that wasn’t going to a stranger.

  • @bryanwilson928
    @bryanwilson928 Před 13 dny +276

    I realized that the secret to making a million is saving for a better investment. I always tell myself you don't need that new Maserati or that vacation just yet. That mindset helped me make more money investing. For example last year I invested 80k in stocks and made about $246k,but guess what? I put it all back and traded again and now I am rounding up close to a million

    • @traumfee25
      @traumfee25 Před 13 dny +9

      You work for 40yrs to have $1m in your retirement, Meanwhile some people are putting just $10k in a meme coin for just few months and now they are multi millionaires. I pray that anyone who reads this will be successful in life

    • @toni_leyn
      @toni_leyn Před 13 dny +1

      Thanks for continuing updates I'd rather trade the stock market as it's more profitable. I make an average of $34,500 per week even though I barely trade myself.

    • @jesus_inco
      @jesus_inco Před 13 dny +3

      I'm favoured financially, Thank you Jesus $32,000 weekly profit regardless of how bad it gets on the economy.

    • @lumivalkosnow
      @lumivalkosnow Před 13 dny +1

      How
      ..? Am a newbie in crypto investment, please can you guide me through on how you made profit?

    • @steliosmormoris1
      @steliosmormoris1 Před 13 dny

      Thanks to Mrs Maria Davis.

  • @rosskhan4815
    @rosskhan4815 Před 2 dny +4

    Hahahaha the talking German shepherd 😂😂 Nice touch. Love it 👍🏼 Enjoyed the video too👍🏼

  • @scullyfox4271
    @scullyfox4271 Před 20 dny +223

    We bought a short sale and were tied up with paper work for 8 months! On the day of signing they informed us the house was in a flood zone! We were so exhausted and had already invested so much time and energy into getting this house that we caved and signed. Not only do we have ridiculous insurance, but every remodel, construction project, even fences are subject to flood regulations. It makes everything so much harder and more expensive. This lady is right! Don't buy it!

    • @robinmeyer5016
      @robinmeyer5016 Před 16 dny +9

      So sorry that happened to you! I am renting an older home (100 years) in New York state and learned about those “500-year” floods- last summer our unfinished basement that “had NEVER in its history had water in it” was flooded (13-17 inches) by heavy rains-and it could have been worse since house next door had 3 FEET of water.
      I would never have expected this and lucky we didn’t buy this, just rented. We lost some possessions that were kept in basement , but lesson learned so that now we won’t buy anything in a flood-able area, second we will never store anything in a basement within approx 15 inches of the floor.
      Not just rain, but in case of burst pipes new rules: Nothing in cardboard, nothing wood kept down there, Nothing kept on bottom shelf of wire rack shelving units-not even in plastic bins since we discovered they get lifted, then float no matter how heavy! And then tip over allowing just a little water inside to ruin your stuff!!
      Lucky our washer & dryer were fixable (thanks to CZcams appliance guy DIY advice to run dehumidifier after taking apart & drying out the machines, wait a week to turn ANYTHING on to keep circuits from shorting out…
      Hey, just saying be proactive before the 500 year flood bites you like it did us.

    • @zoer7338
      @zoer7338 Před 16 dny +2

      ​@@robinmeyer5016we have a sump pump in our basement, otherwise it would flood during our rainy season. I would ask your landlord about a sump pump.

    • @scullyfox4271
      @scullyfox4271 Před 16 dny +4

      @@robinmeyer5016 lessons are always learned best the hard way! I wouldn't have understood unless I lived through it. But I will definitely learn from yours!

    • @rcwessel
      @rcwessel Před 16 dny +5

      You might want to investigate a letter of map amendment or letter of map revision to see if your location in a flood zone has changed or can be changed. Check with FEMA.

    • @brandywineblue
      @brandywineblue Před 13 dny

      ​@@rcwesselFEMA are the nincompoops who put a whole block in the flood zone that didn't even get a single wet basement during Sandy!

  • @patrickwade3150
    @patrickwade3150 Před 21 dnem +194

    As a contractor for 30 years, I would definitely agree with staying clear of a flipper. I’ve been called to do work they flippers don’t know how to fix and they want the “cheapest “ job. I will refuse unless I can do the work correctly. Most do nothing but cosmetic improvements and hide the problems.

    • @Christy.1
      @Christy.1 Před 17 dny +7

      That's exactly what I suspected with flippers, basically do the cosmetic work, get some idiot couple to think it looks "cute". Got one down the road that just did that. Bought it for 215K less than year ago. Granted, looks like they did bunch of work, roof, new a/c/heat unit, flooring. Asking 270K for it. Only a 1200 sq ft house, hardly any land on it, and the backyard is a hill sloped towards the house. And, it's been vacant since I moved in back in 2013, and actually had vines and trees overgrown all over the house, no one ever cut the grass either. The market is hot in our area, but that house is still vacant 2 weeks later. Probably no help the neighbor has gazillions of cars parked in their yard and occasionally has a huge RV parked on the road. Maybe 150K max for it, simply because the market is insane, but anything more is just ridiculous.

    • @michaelsix9684
      @michaelsix9684 Před 16 dny +3

      so true, saw owners do this to make quick sale, got burned on my first house in TX this way

    • @karinstricker3147
      @karinstricker3147 Před 15 dny +7

      I can only agree with you. As a contractor, I tried to flip houses but lost a lot of money, because I eliminated ALL of the existing problems. I couldn't find a buyer who is willing to pay the price required to cover the cost. Now, I concentrate on high end remodeling, where the home owners are willing to go the whole nine yards.

    • @andreah6379
      @andreah6379 Před 9 dny

      🎯

    • @TheDiamondtwins
      @TheDiamondtwins Před 8 dny +2

      I love my house, but it was a flip. And I did notice the paint was sloppy in some areas which made me wonder. I had a complete inspection and there is a lot still wrong with it, but i've corrected much of it. Probably should have waited to invest in a new home. One of the problems was with the sewage system out to the street. It cost me over sixteen thousand the first two weeks I was in. It also has very old electrical that has never been updated. And i'm working on that right now. If I went back and look at the list of everything that should be done I will probably get sick so I am just doing the big danger things. Cosmetically, besides the paint facet is off in the bathroom in the bathtub. Not sure if it was always like that, but it doesn't align proper, really. Other than that, the house looks so beautiful. I get a lot of compliments, but I do worry!

  • @chipfornaris
    @chipfornaris Před dnem +3

    I’m a home inspector and you are spot on with everything. The only thing that is also worth mentioning is never ever, ever buy a house without a home inspection. What I have seen, especially on new construction is simply mind blowing. What people try and hide is unbelievable.

    • @nickhuynh6321
      @nickhuynh6321 Před hodinou

      I've had a couple of great home inspectors. At first it seems expensive for what they do, but now that I've worked with a few I think they provide lots of value. Make sure they don't rush anything and can do all the home testing with good equipment such as gas leak sniffers etc. There should be lots of picutres documenting everything (digital pics are basically free these days).

  • @marthawelch4289
    @marthawelch4289 Před 5 dny +4

    I bought my first home back in 1977 for $35K and sold it in 1980 for $70K. Throughout the years, I have determined that perhaps the most important thing to have in real estate transactions is a knowledgeable, attentive, assertive real estate agent who truly works on your behalf. Agents who are professionals of this caliber aren't growing on trees so you have to interview candidates and get references.
    If I were moving to New Jersey I would be setting up an interview with the author of this informative video.
    [DISCLOSURE: I do NOT know this agent in any way, shape, or form. I am just impressed by the information she presented in this video.]

  • @drakonismo
    @drakonismo Před 22 dny +84

    Replumbing and rewiring an old home is nothing compared to the headaches from buying a poorly built new home, workmanship has gone down the drain

    • @constancedenchy9801
      @constancedenchy9801 Před 8 dny

      Exactly

    • @DarlingNikki2
      @DarlingNikki2 Před 8 dny +1

      I live in a suburban/rural town with a sudden housing subdivision boom and I see the junky houses being thrown together Extreme Home Makeover style and shake my head. The architecture is trash in my opinion (some weird futuristic farmhouse is all I can call it lol) and the 'custom' features are dating the home before the 2020's are done. I mean, what is with all this gray on top of gray on top of gray? That screams 2023/2024 with no timelessness in sight.

  • @tomaseire
    @tomaseire Před 21 dnem +184

    I grew up in an Edwardian Queen Anne house with 26 rooms. It was full of drafts, but it was a child’s dream and my parents upgraded the house over many years without destroying the original features. An old house with parquet floors, 14 foot ceilings, brass door knobs etc., makes a great home!

  • @SkillBuilder
    @SkillBuilder Před 7 dny +6

    I live in England and would never buy a new home. My house is 120 years old and, yes the plumbing and electrics are not the original and neither is the kitchen or bathrooms but that is not big deal. The basic structure, the design and the location are what made me fall in love with it.

    • @TRPGpilot
      @TRPGpilot Před 5 hodinami

      I live in Europe. I never considered getting an old house any more than I would purchasing an old car or somone elses old shoes or clothes! My home only needs to last me as long as I live in it i.e. no more that 70 years. After that it can fall down for all I care as I would be dead ROFL 🙂

  • @renettadegrate5601
    @renettadegrate5601 Před 19 dny +8

    I’m a broker, house flipper , and builder. I own an LLC. My favorite style homes are early 1900 built homes. Yes they usually need expensive repairs. But the charm of those homes are priceless. New construction can be just as bad,some builders are only about profit and quality is not in their vocabulary. The key to buying real estate is use a good agent, great inspectors and or contractors prior to the purchase. Old or new make it your business to KNOW WHAT YOU ARE BUYING, COUNT THE COST!!!! If you have any individuality stay away from HOA’s.

  • @loriwoloshyn7266
    @loriwoloshyn7266 Před 22 dny +208

    Renovating an old home far outweighs building a brand new one. To each thier own.

    • @fleatactical7390
      @fleatactical7390 Před 20 dny +15

      It can, especially when you have astronomical materials costs today. But even that aside, a gut or remodel will always be cheaper. And usually easier to manage and control in terms of the trades doing the work.

    • @alexcanning5383
      @alexcanning5383 Před 20 dny +25

      Especially since many newer homes in subdivisions are built so poorly

    • @cfoster6804
      @cfoster6804 Před 20 dny

      ​@@alexcanning5383Exactly

    • @joevarga5982
      @joevarga5982 Před 19 dny +7

      Not necessarily. Often, old homes have severe problems, like with rot and termites.

    • @oldarkie3880
      @oldarkie3880 Před 19 dny +6

      @@joevarga5982 Failing foundations, mostly caused by years & years of improper drainage. I've seen many..

  • @annassiter4087
    @annassiter4087 Před 26 dny +382

    My house was built in 1919…. I rather deal with older home problems, than new house problems.. I have seen the catastrophes of a new house…. My brother made a wonderful career fixing new house problems.. I have new electrical, new plumbing …. All houses need constant maintenance…. As my late husband said…. Maintenance, maintenance, maintenance….

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 26 dny +26

      Yes maintenance is key when owning an old home! Thanks for watching!

    • @marylclc1269
      @marylclc1269 Před 24 dny +16

      @@JackieBaker Yes it is. It's also important in newer houses. Even a custom built, brand new home will require maintenance. It's like..... death and taxes. You can't get away from any. 😉

    • @auggiedoggiesmommy1734
      @auggiedoggiesmommy1734 Před 23 dny +4

      That’s what sold our house for us. We lived in it for 24 years and it was minimally updated but we had maintenance records for everything. Sold the house in 3 days.

    • @auntbarbara5576
      @auntbarbara5576 Před 22 dny +3

      @annassiter4087
      Yep, mine's 1918 👍🏼

    • @samidelfosse587
      @samidelfosse587 Před 22 dny +8

      Mines 1921, owned it since 2009. New roof, windows, siding, water heater, central air, furnace, HVAC, and plumbing have been installed. Electrical is next 😉 wouldn’t trade the craftsmanship of the structure for anything!

  • @sabrinacomotto3565
    @sabrinacomotto3565 Před 5 dny +2

    You're 100% right about very old houses. I was young and unexperienced, and I felt in love with a 100+ years old apartment. After a couple of years living there, things started to become very complicated because the building began to show concerning sings like structural breaks. Long story short, I had to finally move away because there were serious riks of collapse. Some years later I sold it for an absurd price.

  • @joycewright5386
    @joycewright5386 Před 19 dny +2

    Our first home was in a flood zone, although in 1986 it was only $400 a year. We flooded every spring, the basement filled with water. But it was all we could afford and we were very very happy for 12 years. We simply didn’t put anything in the basement.

  • @zombiemom6701
    @zombiemom6701 Před 22 dny +49

    Grew up in a 1792 home. Much better built than the crappy 1998 I currently own. My friend built her home. Within two years she had black mold from a leaking pipe and shoddy workmanship.
    I’d buy an old house in a heartbeat.

    • @vanessarongstad8576
      @vanessarongstad8576 Před 19 dny +6

      I built my own house, myself that is and it’s in perfect condition at 12 y/o.

  • @Dbb27
    @Dbb27 Před 25 dny +278

    My friend does repairs on the new tract houses just before closing. Basically he fixes whatever is on the punchlist. He shakes his head at what is going on with these new builds. They are a mess; he says he wouldn’t buy anything built in this decade.

    • @Mithras444
      @Mithras444 Před 23 dny +16

      Yep older homes are built better. The new construction is crap! IMO

    • @donnatritz7865
      @donnatritz7865 Před 22 dny +7

      @@Mithras444
      Yep, I wouldn’t buy anything built after about 1960 - prewar houses are even better.

    • @kimberlychodur3508
      @kimberlychodur3508 Před 22 dny +7

      Is it getting too expensive to build basements? I live in Iowa, not a flood zone, or ground that would prevent a basement being built but all the new construction for new homes around me have no basement. There is a safe room built into the home in case of a tornado instead. Can someone answer that question for me? It’s even the nicer, more expensive homes being built with no basement.

    • @innocentnemesis3519
      @innocentnemesis3519 Před 22 dny +3

      @@kimberlychodur3508 Iowa is known to flood on occasion just fyi. The entire state used to be swamp and marshes and it’s now the most terraformed state in the country due to monocropping agriculture.

    • @donnarichardson7214
      @donnarichardson7214 Před 22 dny +1

      Anything after around 1970.

  • @janagunter5916
    @janagunter5916 Před 8 dny +3

    Definitely agree with the LLC flip. I bought one in 2022. I love this awesomeA frame, but I'm still spending SO much money fixing things the very unskilled flipper messed up.

  • @AveryFossen
    @AveryFossen Před 22 hodinami +4

    The issue is that either the renter or the owner must in some way pay insurance and property taxes if they want a "permanent roof" with utilities like electricity, gas and water. Because of this, many people-at least in California, where I currently reside-are living in tents. No taxes, rent, mortgages, or insurance. The number of people who tell me they live in their car that I meet amazes me. Its crazy out here!

    • @fadhshf
      @fadhshf Před 22 hodinami +4

      It’s getting wild by the day. The prices of homes are quite ridiculous and Mortgage prices has been skyrocketing on a roll(currently over 7%). Sometimes i wonder if to just invest my spare cash into the stock market and wait for a housing crash or just go ahead to buy a home anyways.

    • @leojack9090
      @leojack9090 Před 22 hodinami +2

      I get such worries too. I'm 50 and retiring early. Already worried of the future and where its headed, especially in terms of financies and how to get by. I'm also considering making my first investment in the stock market, but how can I do so given that the market has been in a mess for the majority of the year?

    • @KarlyNoorda
      @KarlyNoorda Před 22 hodinami +2

      For you to grow your portfolio in today's market, you really need to be coachable and willing to get off your high horses. I for example, have managed to grow mine from $150k to 300% of my initial deposit within the past 8 months just by copying trades from a broker that has better skillset and technical know-how than me.

    • @parrish8386
      @parrish8386 Před 22 hodinami +2

      @@KarlyNoorda Could you kindly elaborate on the advisor's background and qualifications?

    • @KarlyNoorda
      @KarlyNoorda Před 22 hodinami +1

      Finding financial advisors like Sharon Ann Meny who can help you shape your portfolio would be a very creative option. There will be difficult times ahead, and prudent personal money management will be essential to navigating them.

  • @kittycat6195
    @kittycat6195 Před 26 dny +124

    I have an old home. Built solid.
    You are right about the cost of bringing them up and caring for them, but they kick butt over new boring looking and cheaply made home.

  • @lorchid23
    @lorchid23 Před 22 dny +69

    Regarding flood zones: I recommend not even buying *near* a flood zone, or just outside it. My husband and I purchased a home in ‘96 and in 2008, the flood zone map was changed, enveloping our property.

    • @mickyo7171
      @mickyo7171 Před 20 dny +5

      Never never, never, and again, never buy in a flood plain. Although our home never flooded (even 20 yrs ago it was flooding all around our metro area) we were in the flood plain and you cannot shop around for flood insurance as you can car insurance. The cost of our flood insurance went up every single year by at least $50. we were fortunate in the zoning eventually changed and we sold the house. We paid hundreds of dollars monthly for flood insurance. If we were still in that home, the flood insurance would be almost as much as the mortgage payment.

  • @constance875
    @constance875 Před 2 dny +1

    Don’t buy a home next to a major highway, don’t buy a really terrific house in a bad neighborhood, don’t buy a house because it’s reminds you of old memories (for example say grandmas house); don’t buy emotional.

  • @apricotforest9634
    @apricotforest9634 Před 6 dny +1

    My grandfather-in-law was an engineer and city planner and he always said to go to planning departments or archives to get aerial photos of what the land looked like before development if possible. If you see water, even a small, seasonal drainage stream, run. He insisted you would have nothing but foundation issues forever. My ex-sister-in-law worked for a home builder and she also said you really need to get geology reports and land-use history reports. She knew of entire developments built on little more than sand. Those homes were barely five years old at the time and already a mess. People also need to know that buying rural doesn't mean you own everything and can do whatever you want either. There are often pipelines under the land. In Alberta Canada, if they need to put in a highway, frack, install an oil well, or build a utility corridor, you learn pretty quickly how little control you have over your own land. There are also often strict land-use regulations that have to be followed and sometimes you have to pay for expensive environmental or historical impact assessments before you can make any changes. Bottom line: no matter what type of property you are looking to buy, investigate every possibility for what you are getting into and don't assume anything.

  • @EVEE_Rose-3
    @EVEE_Rose-3 Před 26 dny +446

    I’m sorry, but the new houses are made so cheaply they don’t even withstand bad weather. I find old homes were constructed, much better than the homes you see going up so quickly now. Nowadays builders are cutting the cost of everything when building homes and using the cheapest products, material’s and even labor. I live in NYC and the older homes were built by well known architects. My house was built in 1925 and God willing next year we will celebrate its 100th birthday. We moved in in 1993 and have no complaints. It’s a beautiful colonial house with bedrooms and bathroom upstairs, finished attic, large living room, large dinning room, kitchen, finish basement and nice size yard. We raised our 3 children here and have no intentions on going anywhere. The family who sold us this house. Moved to a brand new house and they regret selling our home. They wish they would have kept it. I think your advice may depend on where people live. If you buy an old home that’s never been upgraded yes than you are going to spend a lot of money. Spending money is also true with new homes when the builder used cheap materials that didn’t hold up. I will take what you said with a grain of salt. I would recommend that buyers hire a good experienced engineer to look over an older home for you before you buy it.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 26 dny +26

      Thanks for sharing your feedback! Yes a good engineer looking over the home is key!

    • @griswald7156
      @griswald7156 Před 23 dny +16

      Agree a price with most builders , then he’ll find ways to source the cheapest materials to increase his profit.. then he will over order those materials and the valuable materials he hasn’t used will be taken away in his van to be used on his next job..that he will charge again for.. and we think oh he’s tidied up the waste.. what a nice man..yes folks you’ve been cowboy buildered again..and you thought you could trust him to be decent , didn’t you..? But he’s been into your nugget gulch.,again..there are two things certain in this world ..taxes and this..

    • @mhughes1160
      @mhughes1160 Před 23 dny +29

      New track houses are literally built with paper , cardboard and plastic
      The only wood is the framing. Doors and moldings and trim are all made from pressed cardboard and sawdust . Slapped together by the lowest bidder

    • @robinq5511
      @robinq5511 Před 23 dny +12

      @@mhughes1160 Even the framing is compromised - when have you seen a 2x4 that actually measured to that size?

    • @CabinGirl57
      @CabinGirl57 Před 23 dny +21

      New construction homes in my area end up having roof problems as early as three years - new construction is what’s keeping roofing companies busy !
      I’d buy an older home with electrical and plumbing updated

  • @Kihsiimawa
    @Kihsiimawa Před 23 dny +182

    For folks who don't know...LLC is Limited Liability Corporation.
    If a LLC business does something to put them at financial risk and is sued for damages, they can opt to declare bankruptcy and the plaintiff gets nothing. Then, the owner(s) can choose to create a new LLC and continue doing what they were doing, free and clear of the settlement debt.

    • @Bada_Boom78
      @Bada_Boom78 Před 22 dny +14

      Wow thanks for that input. So many of these things should be illegal.

    • @millennialodyssey5956
      @millennialodyssey5956 Před 22 dny +8

      Not true. An LLC doesn't fully protect you and it also depends on the state.

    • @Ryan-ff2db
      @Ryan-ff2db Před 22 dny +12

      There's more to it then that. Technically an LLC only risks the amount of money or assets put into the company and can protect your personal assets outside of the business, assuming you follow the rules closely. You are still required to be bonded and insured based the requirements of the industry you are in. If you do not have insurance your personal assets can be seized upon a judgement. Also, if are deemed personally negligent or fraudulent, it will not protect your personal assets.

    • @ByDesign333
      @ByDesign333 Před 22 dny +4

      You really do a great service by warning on these points! By Gods grace I now say, I dodged a lot of RE-buying disaster bullets! That's because as it was, I was ignorant; but every very old, 1960s - 1940s house I bought while with wife & children living in them, I ended up making the money back-plus profits...which amazes me now. But yes, you really have some $aving advise list there; that I can vouch for!!! This one about oil tanks in the ground hit home with reviving my memory of when we moved into an 100 yr-plus crooked 2 story in rural KY, and then noticed a black steel pipe barely sticking out of the dirt, horrified to find the old rusting tank with fluid still in it, where we had only a shallow well for water! So, we really enjoyed a mini farm life at first, but we're benefitted by a Sudden go-ahead to a mega-prison being built 1/8 mile from us! The govt. forced-bought a slice of the 3 acres, including the outhouse we had on it! Then we had to sell and sold the whole place with about a 30% gain on what we paid...Great help at the time.
      THANKS, so far you really gave me reason to subscribe! Subed 👍
      (Bronx-born, Bergen County raised ☺️)

    • @maggie8821
      @maggie8821 Před 22 dny +6

      It’s actually Limited Liability Company. An LLC is not a corporation.

  • @rogerbear5455
    @rogerbear5455 Před 3 dny +1

    I went under contract for a home that was purchased by an investor , they upgraded this house , grab it countertops , LVP flooring , new water heater , and they took the old water heater , car tires and other metal trash and put it on the back of the house and left it. I took that as a sign and I walked away.

  • @LipstickNsofrito
    @LipstickNsofrito Před hodinou

    Everyone..have a wonderful day..blessings and much love to you all ❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤❤

  • @aubreytycer8708
    @aubreytycer8708 Před 20 dny +95

    I'm a retired home inspector. Your video is spot on. Buy a newer home with post 1968 wiring, post galvanized plumbing and modern insulation systems.

    • @angelasmith257
      @angelasmith257 Před 10 dny +2

      WhT year and up do u suggest?

    • @aubreytycer8708
      @aubreytycer8708 Před 9 dny +5

      @@angelasmith257 Homes built after 1968 have a three wire electrical system. About that time PVC/CPVC plumbing was introduced. Both game changers.

    • @angelasmith257
      @angelasmith257 Před 9 dny +1

      @@aubreytycer8708 in ur opinion which year had the best built homes ?

    • @toriless
      @toriless Před 7 dny +3

      My 1968 haza AFCI, copper pipes, etc. It was remodeled by a contractor who was building homes on nearby lots, he put in shitty fans for the bathrooms I replaced.

  • @BrunetteZel
    @BrunetteZel Před 21 dnem +45

    When we bought our house it had a buried oil tank, still in use. We asked the seller to remove it. What a nightmare! Our own agent acted like we were overreacting. They tried to guilt us into letting them decommission it. They did a wick test and said there was no water in the tank so it didn't have any leaks and it was perfectly okay to leave it there. No! We insisted we wanted it out, they made us feel crappy about the whole thing - but finally the seller agreed to remove it. When they pulled it out of the ground there were so many holes in it and there was oil in the ground soil 14' down. We were right and glad we stuck to our guns, but at the time, I did tell our agent, "If this sale falls through, we are done." Our agent later told me that they had 3 more buried tanks after ours and that they had learned a lot from our experience.

    • @MalachiWhite-tw7hl
      @MalachiWhite-tw7hl Před 20 dny +3

      My property has an unused oil tank, above ground and abandoned. Is there some sort of risk to that?

    • @kumikor3392
      @kumikor3392 Před 10 dny +3

      I DESPISE agents that act like they aren't working with you! Mine tried to have my house re-appraised because the seller was going to cough up a pretty penny. She tried to have it re-appraised to where I'd have to ask my lender for 10k more to pay back. Trust completely broken and I'm happy my Lender immediately emailed and called me before going ahead

    • @iamhischosen3866
      @iamhischosen3866 Před 8 dny +2

      @@kumikor3392 So did you drop the agent?

    • @kumikor3392
      @kumikor3392 Před 8 dny

      @@iamhischosen3866 no, it's super late in the process. Now I have to treat her like a child that a parent can't 100% trust. I'm double checking all her words, micro-managing the progress and expecting updates in a timely manner. I speak with my lender who I can trust more, but I'm definitely never recommending this agent again

  • @mtjc5336
    @mtjc5336 Před hodinou

    9:46 yep. Custom work in a home always raises a red flag to me. I immediately see $$$ and have to pause and evaluate whether or not upkeep, maintenance, repairs, etc are worth it when it comes to the enjoyment I will get.
    Sometimes yes, sometimes no.

  • @SL-eh6hp
    @SL-eh6hp Před 14 hodinami

    Great advice, esp the recently sold/remodeled. We often see the "graywash syndrome," with grey plastic fake wood floors, cheap kitchen and bathroom remodels, white spray-painted everything. We look for 1960's brick ranches that have been owned by original owners and never remodeled. Just bought one this year and we love it.

  • @kathleendepietro3043
    @kathleendepietro3043 Před 21 dnem +45

    I bought a old home. It is beautiful. My husband took our time to update it, but it worth it. Very well built.

    • @barbarabonnette2705
      @barbarabonnette2705 Před 5 dny

      Kathleen, what do you do to heat your home?
      That’s one of my concerns buying an older home. Since they were not as well insulated, most have high ceilings……even when I was a little girl my grandmother paid quite a bit to heat her house. Other than that, I think nothing is built like an older home. My grandmother’s house had pocket doors, and stained glass, and carved railings….. I look at it this way, every house will end up needing some type of work…,it comes with the territory!

  • @7SideWays
    @7SideWays Před 27 dny +309

    Yes! All these great tips plus never buy someone else's flip. Corners are always cut.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 27 dny +26

      Yes! Sad fact but it's true!

    • @shanedavison7473
      @shanedavison7473 Před 27 dny +3

      You can check out the type of plumbing and electric by going into the basement. There are CZcams videos on many repairs.

    • @robertscheinost179
      @robertscheinost179 Před 26 dny +4

      @@shanedavison7473 That's great if you want to throw money and your time into a house you just purchased, otherwise, not great but a potential money pit. The price one pays should reflect that. The question is "what is your time worth?"

    • @Neiri-qg2wk
      @Neiri-qg2wk Před 26 dny +23

      Yep, bought a flip. And you don’t see the issues until after you move in. I already have to get the windows redone and the “bathroom Reno”is already falling apart. They painted or glazed the tub and it’s already peeling. The seller side, your realtor and inspector are all in on the racket so they’ll never point out the problems.

    • @finned958
      @finned958 Před 24 dny +1

      But you’re also asked to not buy an extravagant remodel where corners were not cut. The likelihood of a flip is more than an extravagant remodel. My feeling is buy if the price is right.

  • @judithlabarbera107
    @judithlabarbera107 Před 18 dny +2

    CA homeowner. In CA We can remove asbestos or lead as homeowners without an abatement license. We are both engineers and I’m an MD. We took all appropriate precautions for our non-friable asbestos (floor tile) and tested for lead-based paint. That being said we did incur significant expense in re-piping copper and replacing cast iron sewer pipes with ABS. Also your comment about 1960’s wiring is valid. Thanks for a great video.

  • @stevecooper8121
    @stevecooper8121 Před dnem

    Bought my home 10 years ago, it had been completely rebuilt because of a fire, only thing original is the brick and foundation.
    Had it inspected and he said it was better than any new construction house that he's inspected, only one little problem with the deck which was a easy repair.
    This inspector had inspected 3 other homes which had laundry lists of issues and i withdrew from.
    The inspection is the most important part of buying a home and wouldn't even think about buying in a HOA community.

  • @GMAMEC
    @GMAMEC Před 21 dnem +23

    Word of advice, talk to the neighbors. They know if a homeowner didn’t take care of their property, especially the outside areas. If they don’t take care of the outside property, they probably didn’t maintain the inside of the house.

    • @stinkycheese804
      @stinkycheese804 Před 6 dny +1

      Talk to the neighbors to find out what the neighbors are like, but your suggestion makes little sense, compared to looking at it yourself. "Maintain" is a nonsense word anyway. You're going to get it inspected, right?

    • @zuzanazuscinova5209
      @zuzanazuscinova5209 Před 6 dny +1

      ​@@stinkycheese804inspection isn't the end and be all, they are very high level. I agree about the exterior being a giveaway as to the overall condition. Have never seen a house that looked like trash on the outside but great inside.

  • @ronwinkles2601
    @ronwinkles2601 Před 23 dny +154

    It is not about the age of a home but the quality of construction. I owned a 100 year old
    Arts and Crafts home. The electrical work exceeded today's quality and codes, and the plumbing
    did as well with copper piping. The foundation was perfect and the framing was oak you
    could not drive a nail in. All the finish work was done in heart of pine without a single knot.
    From my 60 years of home ownership and buying, building and selling homes, the worst
    homes in the US are split foyers and tri-level homes. There are too many steps, and they
    are too hard to heat and cool. They are very difficult to sell, and they sell at lower prices
    per square foot.

    • @dinacomelio2807
      @dinacomelio2807 Před 22 dny +4

      Agree , love my craftsman home.

    • @sickofcrap8992
      @sickofcrap8992 Před 22 dny

      ....and they're ugly inside and out.

    • @lavenderoh
      @lavenderoh Před 22 dny +4

      I love split levels, and they're common in my area but this is a very temperate climate so you can get by with open windows to help cool and fireplaces to help heat. I wanted one so bad but couldn't find one that was just right for us. We ended up with a brick ranch with a finished basement. Now I can't imagine living anywhere else!

    • @youdontwanttoknow5203
      @youdontwanttoknow5203 Před 21 dnem +2

      You mean Craftsman?

    • @deborahpetipas9365
      @deborahpetipas9365 Před 21 dnem +5

      When looking for a home, we avoided a split foyer home because of dealing with moving furniture. We did purchase a newer construction home 1991 in 1999, fortunately, the owner and designer was the builder. HE and his wife were very particular with their build. Sold due to children grown and wanted single story. Love the house. The Changes we've nade were according to our needs. Mainly updating style. Go with quality work.

  • @nicolejohnson3481
    @nicolejohnson3481 Před 17 dny +1

    I agree! Most people don’t realize this stuff until it’s too late. After 20+ years of cleaning houses I’ve seen all kinds of issues homeowners have had with houses and it helped me personally to learn from their mistakes and I knew what to look for when buying a house a few years ago. Very informative!

  • @georgem7965
    @georgem7965 Před 18 dny +2

    Actually, the 100 year flood plain does not mean it floods once every 100 years. It actually means that there is a 1% chance that it will flood in any given year. And just because it flooded, say, 5 years ago that does not mean that it will not flood for anothe 95 years. It has the same 1% chance every single year, even 1 year apart. And, this is only an estimation. We don't have a large enough sample to give good statistics of how often a flood happens and with the changing climate things are even more uncertain. Basically, stay well out of the flood plain but if you must get flood insurance.

  • @robertwessels9827
    @robertwessels9827 Před 21 dnem +34

    I have owned two old houses, both over 100 years old. They have been less problematic than the newer homes we have owned! But, they had been restored prior to my purchase. The quality and beauty of the old homes far surpasses anything new.

  • @kibaanazuka332
    @kibaanazuka332 Před 21 dnem +29

    I remember a story about well-known HGTV flippers and how some buyers who bought their flips complained about how shoddy their work was and had to spend money to get it fixed by a professional contractor.

    • @raymondlussier3920
      @raymondlussier3920 Před 21 dnem +6

      was that "Love it or List it"? I heard of a North Carolina couple who took the show to court.

    • @mickyo7171
      @mickyo7171 Před 20 dny +6

      They use contractors in all the HGTV shows, however, does not mean they are good contractors.

    • @raymondlussier3920
      @raymondlussier3920 Před 20 dny

      @@mickyo7171 that's the God's honest truth!

    • @kibaanazuka332
      @kibaanazuka332 Před 20 dny

      @@raymondlussier3920 Flip or Flop Vegas was one of them

  • @Shahrdad
    @Shahrdad Před 2 hodinami

    I agree about not buying an old house, but only to a certain degree. Don't buy an old house UNLESS you have the financial means to do the necessary updates. Once these updates are done, the well-made old home can be far cheaper to keep up than a new home, because the materials and the craftsmanship are so much superior to modern homes which are built with plastic, paper, match-sticks, and spit. Most of these newer homes made with new-growth hollow wood will be rotted away while the old home will still be standing.

  • @daveh893
    @daveh893 Před 23 dny +51

    Very good advice. I'm in my 70s and I would add to all those retirees that they might avoid houses with too many stairs. It's harder to use stairs when you get older.

    • @samantha-eu3cc
      @samantha-eu3cc Před 23 dny +7

      My Dad's 87 and my Mom's 86. The stairs in their house keep them in shape😀. Use it or lose it.

    • @daveh893
      @daveh893 Před 23 dny +8

      @@samantha-eu3cc My sister, who lived alone, fell coming down the stairs. Your parents may be unusually limber, but not everyone has that kind of balance.

    • @annakimborahpa
      @annakimborahpa Před 22 dny +6

      Bannisters, preferably double (on each side of the stairs).

    • @chapman1569
      @chapman1569 Před 22 dny +2

      My friend has multiple sclerosis, she showed me her new dream home; a split level. I was quite surprised by her choice, so many stairs. She relapsed and lost her mobility quite often. I havent seen her in many years, dont know if she still lives there.

    • @CC-hx5fz
      @CC-hx5fz Před 21 dnem

      @@samantha-eu3cc yes. I'm partially paralysed. I have various ways of pulling myself upstairs and it's the toughest exercise available to me. We're thinking of moving. My husband suggested a bungalow. Absolutely not!

  • @MilaN-lt2mq
    @MilaN-lt2mq Před 27 dny +249

    Just because the house is less than 100 years old, doesn’t guarantee there are no problems. We bought a 10 year old house and the pvc pipes burst less than a month after moving in because they cut corners during construction. We had to replace pvc pipes with copper to make sure it won’t happen again.

    • @wdcf31674
      @wdcf31674 Před 26 dny +32

      Exactly. years ago we bought a SIX year old house in Maine. I figured 6 years old, what can go wrong it's like buying a 2 year old car. Everything went wrong within 2 months of moving in. new roof, whole new septic system, plumbing, electrical. Oh and btw, the guy that owned the house was a builder! I'll take an older home any day of the week. I can go on about new houses my sister bought WOW!

    • @terrifiorelli9819
      @terrifiorelli9819 Před 26 dny +22

      I watched the build of a subdivision by me as walked through them daily as part of my nightly walk. What I saw that got covered up by Sheetrock and concrete told me never unless custom build that I oversee. Buyer beware!

    • @marylhere
      @marylhere Před 24 dny +6

      I’ve seen ads for two year old homes being “move in ready”….yeah it should be.

    • @user-vh2pk6bd3g
      @user-vh2pk6bd3g Před 23 dny +2

      Stop using cardboardy tubeing for pipes

    • @LouisWilen
      @LouisWilen Před 23 dny +2

      It's incredible that PVC is even allowed for pressurized pipes. For sewer, it's fine, though.
      Copper is still best although PEX has proven to be reliable. There is really no good reason to good PVC or CPVC for pressurized pipes.

  • @GriffinC507
    @GriffinC507 Před 6 dny +1

    Jackie -- I HIGHLY appreciate you and the information included in this video. We are in our 50's and trying to buy our very first home. I knew about some of these things, but you include things that I would have never considered ( ie., old homes (LOVE 'EM but I'm gonna think twice now). Again, just really appreciate the solid, sound advice. Take care.

  • @wendybarclay7908
    @wendybarclay7908 Před dnem

    This one of our first house, “ a side split,” And now that has moved us up to our dream home! This was a new home! This was a starter home!👍

  • @teresa3070
    @teresa3070 Před 23 dny +63

    Also, if the property slopes down toward the house.
    Heavy rainfall brings water toward the home.
    Costly to mitigate.

    • @sandybruce9092
      @sandybruce9092 Před 22 dny +7

      I,totally agree! Our 1999 home sits up from,the road - no chance of flooding at,all - but the driveway is also sloped so……. When we were looking at homes in this area I noticed thst many sat lower than street level! I never understood why! Pretty dumb if you ask me!

    • @syolyte
      @syolyte Před 21 dnem +3

      French drain but yeah, a no off the bat.

    • @johanndork5364
      @johanndork5364 Před 20 dny +3

      So true. Friend twenty years ago had a higher field slip down to and thru his house in torrential rain. Buy on a hill not under it.

    • @oldarkie3880
      @oldarkie3880 Před 19 dny +3

      This causes massive foundation problems

    • @DarlingNikki2
      @DarlingNikki2 Před 8 dny +1

      I sure wish someone had explained that to my mother before she bought out current house. There is a slight hill from our neighbors house and every time it rains heavily (which has been pretty frequent in the 20 plus years we've lived in the house) the water comes in. We've managed to stem the problem to some extent but it stills gets damp in her bedroom along one wall and it got so bad in another room we had to pull the carpet out and get the floor tiled. I know the house is probably full of black mold and/or mildew due to repeated flooding over the years but financially hardships prevent taking real care of the problem. Our neighbors have the same problem as our property slopes down to theirs but they're lucky it's just their garage that gets flooded (well, they have a lot junk in the garage so maybe not so lucky).

  • @susantescione8007
    @susantescione8007 Před 21 dnem +24

    In 1984, we bought a house that was just above the 500 year flood plain. We sold the house in 1992. Water came within 15 feet of the building, but the house itself never flooded when we owned it. The rains were so bad this year (2024) that the house was flooded. It happens. Topography shifts. One of the things you don't mention is homes that are in a slight depression. If the slope runs downward toward the house, it will eventually flood in heavy rain. The water has no where else to go. We were lucky. We owned another property on a hill, where all of the water drained away from the house. Our neighbors were not so lucky and many of them spent a small fortune for construction fixes. Be sure that the property has methods to drain the water away from the house. This is particularly true of garages.

  • @user-kc7mu4jp4p
    @user-kc7mu4jp4p Před 6 dny +1

    Oh wow, this is the first honest real estate agent I have come across, thank you so much!
    It's all true, and when I was through all these filters (including wildfire zone), I ended up buying a flat on the fifth floor right on the highway. Btw, for me mancave (ugh) is as much a no-no as a fish tank or a swimming pool.

  • @marjoriesell8079
    @marjoriesell8079 Před 13 hodinami

    We bought our home brand new, 34 years ago. We were shocked during the final walk through after the papers were signed.....we were told we should paint the whole exterior within a year because they just did a "base coat!". We didn't do that so ended up having to replace several wall panels on the outside when we had it repainted.
    .

  • @kittimcconnell2633
    @kittimcconnell2633 Před 25 dny +121

    Houses with complicated roofs are bad, too. More likely to break down, more likely to leak, SUPER expensive to replace.

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 25 dny +10

      Very true!

    • @krystalbernier234
      @krystalbernier234 Před 22 dny +2

      I got a complicated roof plan. Two A frames smacked together, but opposite ways, with a bedroom addition on main level and a dormer. We call it the funky house.

    • @tealkerberus748
      @tealkerberus748 Před 17 dny +1

      This part. Nice simple rectangular roofs are also vastly superior for mounting solar panels.

    • @buddapudgie8482
      @buddapudgie8482 Před 17 dny +1

      I'd agree. One thing I've learned growing up in my parent's house was never get one with a flat roof! Nothing but trouble. It always needed constant repair and had leaking issues.

  • @MyOhana-zy1pr
    @MyOhana-zy1pr Před 26 dny +500

    I guess she’s saying… don’t buy a house if you’re poor…

    • @lmitchell3604
      @lmitchell3604 Před 22 dny +36

      Since becoming a homeowner, I have a saying: if you can’t afford to buy it twice, then you can’t afford to buy it. There are several things I need to do to my house as it’s 80 years old and thankfully most of it is cosmetic, but I’m just waiting for the hot water heater to go kaput any day now. Also it seems like every 18 months something goes caddywompus with the HVAC system, and I need to get an electrician over here to fix a thing or two that was rigged by the previous homeowners. Plus squirrels love to eat my porch, thankfully they have not touched a piece of wood on the rest of the house (the porch is newer and it’s my understanding they can’t treat the wood the same way they used to with certain chemicals cause of the EPA or something). My one saving grace is that my house was built by the U.S. Navy so it’s otherwise held up extremely well.

    • @reikicowgirl9817
      @reikicowgirl9817 Před 22 dny +58

      Sounds more like she’s saying Don’t buy a house.

    • @samdoorley6101
      @samdoorley6101 Před 22 dny +24

      I mean....Hasn't that ALWAYS been the case?

    • @ellenpetermen3195
      @ellenpetermen3195 Před 22 dny

      @@lmitchell3604 I agree with most of what you said but I want to point out that even the new home are having issues. Not that our house is newer. Our ranch style house was built in 1960 and over the years we have had to replace a lot of the items you have mentioned. My point is that a lot of the things that you have mentioned can happen to almost any home not in the much older home. Unfortunately the homeowners before us thought that they were competent DYI’s and anytime something breaks we now know that we are going to open the Pandora’s box of financial pain just to get it fixed correctly. However we love our house and property and would not want to live in town. So as you said…be prepared to have deep pockets to buy a house in today’s market.

    • @joeyjamison5772
      @joeyjamison5772 Před 22 dny +24

      If you're not smart and you buy the wrong house, you will be poor!

  • @fuzzypumpkin7743
    @fuzzypumpkin7743 Před 11 hodinami

    My house is almost 100 years old and while I agree that the possible issues you state would be big ones, it's pretty easy to tell if your house has lead pipes or knob and tube wiring. Look around! Test the lights! Look in the basement at the fuse box, make sure its capacity is appropriate for the size of the home and look in the rafters of the basement at what type of pipes and wiring there are. If you don't know one thing from the other, that's totally ok (I didn't know too terribly much myself)...bring someone along who does.
    Not saying that there can't be things you won't see on inspection (I had a missing electrical box on my kitchen light, for example) but those sorts of things totally happen in newer construction, too, and an older house is more likely to be built sturdy. Usually. Again, nothing is absolute and you need to actually look at the structure and if you don't want to get a formal inspection (depending on where you live the inspectors can be pretty useless like they are here or it can mean your offer doesn't get accepted because the seller doesn't want to wait), again find a friend/relative who knows some things and bring them with you.
    Also, laundry chutes are awesome. I so regret that when I had the door of my bedroom closet expanded, I didn't have a laundry chute added in there. If you don't take safety precautions, that's on you.

  • @dianaquill9969
    @dianaquill9969 Před 19 hodinami

    My parents bought a home and it had some heating system that had to vent to the outside. Over dozens of years it was never checked and eventually we had to call a plumber to fix it. The plumber found out the problem with the heating system.
    It was clogged up, trapping gasses that should have gone outside. Could have killed the whole family.
    Get an AMAZING inspector if you buy an old home.

  • @markabrice
    @markabrice Před 23 dny +19

    One other type of house I would *never* consider buying is a tri-level. "Tri-level" is code for "always having to go up and down stairs anywhere you go in the bouse."

    • @Tes7000
      @Tes7000 Před 23 dny

      Absolutely! My cousin lives in a duplex house with SIX split levels. My paternal grandparents were the original owners about 1970 or so, and I think that sort of architecture was the in thing at the time.
      From bottom to top:
      1. Game room that used to be a garage
      2. Dining room and kitchen
      3. Living room with front door as main entrance to the house
      4. Bedroom
      5. Two more bedrooms and both bathrooms
      6. Bedroom

    • @oldarkie3880
      @oldarkie3880 Před 19 dny

      @@Tes7000 Mostly tri levels are cheaper to build

    • @thomasallen6980
      @thomasallen6980 Před 18 dny

      Maybe you should buy one so your wife gets a firmer ass instead of a fat lumpy one. Just a suggestion. Gotta keep them on the stair climber, ya know.

    • @njprepper8601
      @njprepper8601 Před 14 dny

      Split level or bilevel floor plan is not good

    • @angelasmith257
      @angelasmith257 Před 10 dny

      Can u imagine tryin to do that as u get older…

  • @sheisLD
    @sheisLD Před 26 dny +95

    The house flipped by LLCs - spot on. My cousin bought a house from a wall street investor company - it caught fire (total loss) and it was due to crap insulation material around the fireplace. The reno was trash.
    New sub, I enjoy your content!

    • @JackieBaker
      @JackieBaker  Před 26 dny +7

      Thanks so much for subscribing! So sorry that happened to your cousin. How awful!

    • @sheisLD
      @sheisLD Před 26 dny +12

      @@JackieBaker her whole family was home, they barely made it out - you never think about the danger you put yourself in when corners are cut!!

  • @AdventureIndiana
    @AdventureIndiana Před hodinou

    We looked at a 100 year old house. It was beautiful, but it had a lot of issues. The dining room had 20 foot ceilings and it was amazing. We are push g 50 years old. My days of climbing up tall ladders and scaffolding are numbered. We took a pass because in another 10-15 years, we don’t think we would be up for the maintenance.

  • @jenwatson5539
    @jenwatson5539 Před 16 hodinami

    As a former code enforcement housing inspector in several Midwest cities I have to agree on much of your info - and many of the comments. Get inspections!!!!
    Research about the area and type of house you’re buying. Also as a home owner my motto is if you’re paying more than $50,000 for a house you’re buying too much house. 😆 I’ve lived in a renovated a barn, old ranch homes, and currently enjoying an old trailer in the southwest. Knowing how to properly DiY is a great skill. And if you can’t do it yourself (electric or plumbing) rely only on licensed people with good reputations.

  • @Shannon_Robbie
    @Shannon_Robbie Před 22 dny +70

    It's not just money you may have to spend on repairing the house but also sheer stress of either figuring out how to do it yourself, or the stress of dealing with workers in your home all day long!

    • @betmo
      @betmo Před 21 dnem +10

      or finding someone reputable to do the work

    • @jellyrcw12
      @jellyrcw12 Před 20 dny +4

      The cost of stress is very underrated when purchasing a home

    • @katie7748
      @katie7748 Před 20 dny +1

      ​@@betmo Ugh. Yes. It's why I'm trying to make as many connections as I can while we're looking for land. Ideally, we'd like an old farmhouse and it'll almost certainly need work.

  • @Secretagent71114
    @Secretagent71114 Před 23 dny +54

    I just bought my first house 2 months ago. Immediately when I started looking at homes I ruled out flips for these exact reasons. The cosmetic work was horrible and I didn't trust what was in the walls. My favorite flip red flag I saw, they walled off a portion of the living room to make a 3rd very small bedroom with a closet. The house had a double front door into the living room. They walled off 1 side of that double front door, so it was in the closet of the new bedroom. Left about 3-4 inches of the now useless left side of the door with the doorknob exposed. I was like first of all I don't trust this to be water tight and will probably leak into the wall that was just created. And more importantly, if someone does this and thinks it is ok, I don't trust anything else they did.
    I ended up targetting homes that were being sold by a newer widow where the spouse that died was in their 60s/70s. (I did research through property records and obituaries) Why? Because the homes were well taken care of with plans for the couple to live there long-term then typically one would get sick (cancer everytime actually) and die so the survivor was selling to downsize.
    I bought a great house with all new mechanics, quality everything, for below asking price within 48 hours of it listing.

    • @HumanOptimization
      @HumanOptimization Před 21 dnem +9

      Thats great. I would just be precautious regardinf if the cancer cause had anything to do with the house.

    • @BobbiGail
      @BobbiGail Před 21 dnem +1

      Thank you for giving great ideas of how to do it well. I'm pretty clear on what to avoid. It's so scary when we have to find a place to live in a hurry. Sometimes we dont have loads of time to wait, & with these higher int rates, there isn't nearly as much on the market. Renting doesn't work out if you have petS.

    • @fleatactical7390
      @fleatactical7390 Před 20 dny

      @@HumanOptimization Exactly what I was thinking. I don't think contaminated homes are as common as we may worry, though. The bigger concern is cancer being on the rise period.

  • @steveshaw649
    @steveshaw649 Před dnem

    Excellent advice! I appreciate your effort in making your posts. Thanks!

  • @chrystya
    @chrystya Před 14 hodinami

    Thanks so much. Very informative . I will be reaching out to you

  • @karenveasey9409
    @karenveasey9409 Před 22 dny +18

    We purchased a home 2 years ago. We wanted a large home with a big yard. We opted to buy an older home (20+ years). The newer subdivisions had no yard and many had large HOA fees. They also felt like an apartment with the generic amenities. Just research what you want and keep looking. Houses were selling by the time I requested to walk thru so we had to act fast when we found our perfect home. Hired an inspector who I trust. The house wasn't perfect, but had good bones. No regrets. Just do your homework and hire a trusted inspector.

    • @euenfheiejrj
      @euenfheiejrj Před 18 dny +4

      What’s up with these new houses that have no backyard?

  • @heatherwells6507
    @heatherwells6507 Před 22 dny +18

    Getting a home inspection is the best way to find out exactly what is needed. I would buy an old home any day of the week.

  • @mimaroo1431
    @mimaroo1431 Před 7 dny

    Lived in a house that was built prior to 1850 for 25 years. Every time we started a renovation project, it ended up costing us twice as much money and twice as much time. My husband loved our neighborhood and it took me 5 years to convince him that we needed to get out of there. He did a beautiful job on the renovations, so we had no trouble selling it. We now live in a house built in 2007. I think he's bored, because it's well built and doesn't need much work, lol!!

  • @lynnmoss2127
    @lynnmoss2127 Před 5 dny +1

    Plumbing is not that bad to replace. Electrical is more complicated and expensive. I’d still take an old home anyway over a new construction.

  • @HotTeaAddict
    @HotTeaAddict Před 21 dnem +17

    As someone who owns a 104 year old house yep it is super expensive to do those updates and is not a project to take on unless you are 1) mentally prepared to live in a construction zone forever (I love working on my house in my down time) and 2) financially prepared to handle it.

  • @anthonyaiello4343
    @anthonyaiello4343 Před 20 dny +12

    I own a 170-yr-old brownstone in Brooklyn and a large 100-yr-old house in Nashville. Between the two, they're worth about $5M and I earn 6 figures in rental income from the brownstone. EVERY building comes with challenges, regardless of build date. "No old homes" is not serious advice.

    • @GenoG1202
      @GenoG1202 Před 16 dny

      Yea but I understand what she's saying. I'm originally from Boston. Almost everyone I know who bought homes built in 1890, 1905, etc. had endless issues. Not literally everyone, but I get what she's saying. Looks amazing on the outside and in, but get in those walls and ground and depending where you live, so many issues can arise.

    • @raydemos1181
      @raydemos1181 Před 5 dny

      @@GenoG1202 not true, if the house is standing 100 years most likely it will be there another 100 years

    • @GenoG1202
      @GenoG1202 Před 5 dny

      @@raydemos1181 👍🏾

  • @w.miller7282
    @w.miller7282 Před 19 dny +1

    I disagree on not purchasing a home older than 100 years, I think it is up to the buyer to have the home inspected and know what the home will need. I would also say that older homes are for certain people who are into renovating and restoring an older home.

  • @mattski1979
    @mattski1979 Před 15 dny +1

    My father bought the house I grew up in (1891 Victorian) in Glen Ridge, NJ for $55,000 in 1976 on a 30 year mortgage. Tons of knob and tube, an oil tank in the basement for our ancient furnace and a kitchen that was remodeled in the 50's that we never touched and always kept the same. 13' ceilings on the first floor. 10' on the second and about 9' ceilings on the 3rd floor. All walls were plaster and lathe from before WWII (so no asbestos in that). Only sheetrock in the house was to drop the kitchen ceiling to 10' in a 1950's remodel. What a goofball, right. It was sold in 2017 for $600,000.00 )without doing anything but cleaning it up when they moved and then it was bought by some company that flip remodeled the kitchen, the basement and added a 3rd floor bathroom to sell it for $900,000.00+ in 2018. what a completely terrible decision on my father's part, right? Oh, you meant buying houses currently. That's fair I guess. Sure wouldn't have gotten it for a song like he did back in '76. It's all certainly relative to what you and the economy are currently doing.

  • @kenb3552
    @kenb3552 Před 24 dny +30

    Living in New England, there are so many older homes. Not all of them have the problems you identified and most buyers who are familiar with this area know to look out for those kinds of problems. Personally, I like older homes - those built between 1900 and 1960. They were just built with better and sturdier materials. If they have been updated and well maintained, they are far superior to the cheap, flimsy Micky Mouse stuff they use now in building the average home.

  • @seascape35
    @seascape35 Před 26 dny +37

    I thought you may have also listed as a "NO BUY" is a home on land which you do not own, but pay rent.
    And a home with a significant HOA financial cost.

    • @stephanipeloquin4631
      @stephanipeloquin4631 Před 22 dny

      HOAs are of the devil 👹

    • @Wewereneveryoung
      @Wewereneveryoung Před 22 dny +4

      are property taxes not just rent disguised as taxes?

    • @omomo202
      @omomo202 Před 22 dny +3

      As a Canadian, HOA fees on a fully detached home is CRAZY!!
      We have fees for townhouses and condos , but not single family homes.
      It’s just strange! 😲

  • @dailyqwikbytes
    @dailyqwikbytes Před 19 dny +1

    NO! HOME OWNERS! ASSOCIATIONS! EVER!!!!!!!! Wire hangers are optional.

  • @leeshepherd8486
    @leeshepherd8486 Před 14 dny

    I spent 15 years restoring a huge old house. Trust me it's not worth it. I love old houses and always will. 2 years ago we took advantage of the real estate market and sold. We moved to a brick ranch.