Las Vegas Foreclosure

Buying a Foreclosure

Las Vegas is a city with every vice known to mankind, so it’s understandable that 17% of Las Vegas homeowners are in foreclosure and, much of the time, bankruptcy. Banks also provide homeowners with creative mortgage products that leave the homeowner with adjustable interest rates and negative amortization payments that make the situation even more difficult.

The bottom line is, in the Las Vegas real estate market, everyone is looking for a good deal. The challenge is in finding one. This is where a solid knowledge of the Las Vegas real estate market, specifically the foreclosure market, comes in. Here are a few rules for solidifying a Las Vegas foreclosure real estate purchase.

Patience

Depending on a person's use for the property, it can be very difficult to find the perfect deal. It’s also possible to have spent months working on getting the deal closed, only to have everything fall apart. In a normal real estate transaction, there are 100 things that can go wrong. In a foreclosure transaction, there are 1000. (Here is an interesting article about a foreclosure gone wrong.) The added parties involved (banks, lawyers, trustees, courts, judges, etc) make closing the deal very time consuming.

Experience

Most buyers like the idea of buying distressed real estate, as one can usually buy below market value. The problem is that most don’t know what it takes to get a foreclosure transaction completed. There are no guarantees when buying Las Vegas foreclosure real estate. The one thing that is guaranteed is that your Welcome Home Nevada agent knows the ins and outs of foreclosure real estate in Clark County, NV.

Cash is King

While buying in cash is not a prerequisite, it does make a big difference when buying a Las Vegas property in foreclosure. First of all, foreclosure is a time sensitive issue. When buying with cash, the escrow process is expedited significantly. Secondly, cash deals are sure deals. The chances of there being hang ups during escrow process are slim to none. As a rule of thumb, the fewer the contingencies, the easier the transaction.

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