Buy The Most Expensive House In The Neighborhood?
When looking at homes, one is tempted to buy the best home in a
neighborhood. Should you buy the most expensive home on the
block? No.
Think Long-Term
Assume you fall in love with the masterpiece home in a
particular neighborhood. It has everything you could dream of:
black bottom pool, marble, an incredible kitchen, top of the
line windows, stunning brick work and so on. The sellers
obviously put a lot of time, effort and money into the home.
Accordingly, it stands out as the pearl on the block. Why
wouldn't you want to snap it up immediately?
Before you start signing documents, take a look at the sales
prices of comparable homes, "comps", in the neighborhood. If you
compare the comp prices to the dream home, you should notice a
pretty significant price difference. This difference should act
as a metaphorical slap in the face or pouring of cold water over
your head. The dream home is undoubtedly selling for a price
range far beyond the comps. Warning lights should be going off
at this point.
You are going to have a problem if you give into temptation and
purchase the most expensive home on the block. In fact, you are
going to have two problems.
The first problem is the appreciation of the value of the home.
The appreciation on the best home in a neighborhood is always
going to be dragged down by the structures around it. If you
take a $900,000 home from a private community and put it on a
block of $250,000 track homes, the $900,000 value is going to
come down a lot because the neighborhood will not support it.
When you eventually sell, buyers are going to look at the comps
in the neighborhood and laugh at a $900,000 asking price.
The second problem is "hemming." Since you own the most
expensive house in the neighborhood, your appreciation potential
is already limited. This becomes a bigger problem if you want to
remodel or add on to the home. Taking such action would
typically add to the value of a home. With the most expensive
home, not only will it not add value, it may cut into your
equity. Why? If you do a $50,000 remodel, you may see a $10,000
gain for your $50,000 cost. You just lost $40,000. Dream or
Nightmare
Unless you can accurately predict an increase in valuations for
an entire neighborhood, you shouldn't buy the most expensive
home on the block. If you do, the dream home could quickly turn
into a nightmare.