The MLS is flooded with homes for sale that are not truly for sale. The owners do not have the authority to sell the home, because they owe more on the home to the bank than they can sell the home for. This is what we call a short sale.
So when I carefully select the homes that are immediately available, such as traditional sales and foreclosures, I am always dissapointed that my clients do not listen. Instead of selecting from this ample pool of homes, they go to an online search source and select 20 short sales that they want to see. And they don't even know that these homes are short sales.
Almost all search tools you will find on the internet do not offer the ability to filter or even identify short sales from your search results. So get a Realtor you can trust to do this for you. Generally, the fact that a home is a short sale is concealed in the "private remarks" section that is only available to Realtors.
Nobody truly cares about getting this home to change hands but you.
This is where the frustration begins to set in. They find that they would love to own most of these homes that are short sales. And of course, who wouldn't?! When a property is priced far below market value, it seems very enticing. Until you write the offers. And then you wait. And wait. And wait. And call. And call. And call.
Even the "approved" short sales do not respond to your offers when they are written at full price! This is because the "seller" is not the seller at all, just someone who wants to save a small part of thier credit rating in order to save the disinterested and unorganized banks some money. And the listing agent doesn't care either, because they know the game. These short sales only serve to bring them more clients that usually do not end up with the short sale they initially sought to purchase. By the end of any short sale closing, the buyer and buyer's agent have spent waaaaay too much of thier own time securing a home to save the bank a buck.
So the bank, the listing agent, and the owner of the property all do not really care. Why should you? In my opinion, you should not.
Share some success stories with us, readers. I want to hear from those of you "lucky" enough to take advantage of these great "deals". And tell us, was it all worth it?

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