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312 Virginia Avenue
Vestal, NY 13850
Lisa Barrows with WARREN REAL ESTATE (Vestal), original listing - (607) 217-5673
$175,000
Conventional
Property
Bedroom
4
Bathroom
Full: 2
Property Type
Conventional
Square ft
1466 Square Feet
Property Description
Here's a charmer! Sitting pretty on a delightful 1/4 acre lot in Vestal, this quaint home is sure to please! Greeted by a nice blacktop drive and a cute brick paver sidewalk, this well maintained Cape Cod can be yours by the new year! A large kitchen and living room, two bedrooms on the first floor, two spacious dormer bedrooms on the 2nd floor, AND a lower level family room. There is plenty of extra unfinished space for storage in the basement. Some replacement windows, wall sconces, knotty pine, hardwood and vinyl plank floors, and charming built-ins throughout. The unique backyard, whimsical landscaping, and covered decking have so much character! Single car attached garage and shed. Located in a desirable neighborhood. This home has all of the big ticket items taken care of for you. Nothing left to do but move in, and make it your own! Clayton Avenue Elementary school. Easy to tour, call for your private showing soon.
Property Information
Lot Size
0 acre(s) square ft
Property Type
Residential-Single Family Residence
Year Built
1953
MLS Number
--
Location
Address
312 Virginia Avenue
City
VESTAL
State
NY
Zip Code
13850
County
BROOME
Listing
Name
Phone
(607) 217-5673
Office Name
Office Phone
(607) 217-5673
Agent Name
Lisa Barrows
Agency Phone
(607) 217-5673

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HUD Foreclosures

HUD foreclosures and VA Foreclosures are some of the best homes to buy when price is part of the equation. As with most Americans, price is always a concern. If not buying the same house for less, why not buy more house for the same dollar invested? When looking for a good deal it is hard to do better than the VA or HUD foreclosures market. The simple truth is that there are just more VA and HUD homes on the market, as they represent such a large number of mortgages that are generated each year. This translates into more foreclosures just by the magnitude of difference between all others comparing to the two largest. The two largest also being government owned and operated means that they have less time to wait to make money back on the home. The FHA is especially known for selling HUD homes for less than the average sales price in a given area. FHA foreclosures represent a fraction of HUD but they are still a significant number of homes and both should be considered. VA (Veterans Administration) and HUD (Housing and Urban Development) have different and unique opportunities for the buyer. Both are often forgiven for the local taxes normally associated with the purchase of a home (this is on a county by county basis). Be sure to ask the local title company or escrow company to look into it for you before closing as this is often missed due to their are not used to dealing with the 2 to 3 percent of the market that VA and HUD foreclosures represent.

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Foreclosure Listings Increasing

As the market settled after the mortgage meltdown foreclosure listings also settled and fewer homes were on the market with a placard reading “Bank Foreclosure” in big red lettering. This was a good thing for the entire real estate market. Having an abundance of foreclosures brings the entire market down and it makes it harder for home owners, who would like to move, to get the appropriate price for their home as a similar home down the same street was sold for substantially less and the appraiser is using the foreclosure as a comparable sale. This is just one of the problems when there are too many foreclosure listings in any area. Another issue is the television set that sits in everyone’s living room harping about the price of homes based on the number of foreclosures and this constant barrage of negative information makes most people sit on the sidelines waiting for the market to either implode completely or to correct itself. Meanwhile while they wait, others are buying foreclosure listings and making great investments. Whatever the reason, a market can only handle so many foreclosure listings at any given time. The more foreclosures, the lower the market gets and this is a lesson the banks that were foreclosing and selling off realized too late. The market and their investments would have been better off if there had not been a rush to divest themselves of the toxic assets made more toxic by their own actions.