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Economic News

Builders reveal hidden costs of buying foreclosed homes

The builders’ challenge

Despite builder sentiment rising for the last five months, new home construction remains one of the hardest hit sectors in the housing industry as lending remains tight and a glut of foreclosure is dragging down prices nationally and reducing the chance of healthy margins. The large inventory of distressed sales has been problematic for builders since the crash, and the battle has been waged by builders to educate consumers on the differences between buying a new home versus a distressed home.

Arizona builder, Fulton Homes is marketing their new Foreclosure Calculator that offers detailed cost comparisons between a new home purchase and the purchase of a foreclosed home, taking into account condition, size, repair estimates, size and other factors.

A 50% cost increase?

As an example, a 1,755 foreclosure home in Arizona listed for $81,500 in “Poor” condition that has outstanding liens but no current occupants will cost an average of $42,908 cash investment in the form of repairs, appliances, painting and the like, making the total investment $124,408.

Some consumers believe that the $81,500 price tag is their cost, but when buying a distressed home, it is often much more. With the attention turning to the deals to be found with foreclosed homes, builders like Fulton are launching a full out attack to promote the idea that new homes can be less expensive in the long run and you know what you are getting.

After each cost comparison, Fulton offers homes in the same price range that require no work or additional investment, showing slick photos of community amenities and clean floorplans.

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The inventory of foreclosure homes will increase in 2012 as the backlog begins clearing after the robosigning scandal and lawsuits are settled, and new home builders have to be more out front like Fulton Homes if they want consumers to choose their product over what appears to be a less expensive option.

Tara Steele is the News Director at The American Genius, covering entrepreneur, real estate, technology news and everything in between. If you'd like to reach Tara with a question, comment, press release or hot news tip, simply click the link below.

27 Comments

27 Comments

  1. Rian Dean

    February 20, 2012 at 12:10 pm

    I love the idea, but as a sales person my clients would shred me trying to use that calculator on them. There is no way to control the actual amount of repairs needed. The calculator assumes one is able to come up with a square foot cost based solely on the total square footage og the home, rather than the actual repairs needed. Example: 5 windows replaced or 10? 100 sq.ft. of dry wall or 1000? Two rooms of carpet or 5? Very misleading and inaccurate. I would rather use facts than flash when making this argument.

  2. Brandon Fosters

    February 22, 2012 at 9:24 am

    This is good to know about the calculator which helps to know about the comparison between purchasing of new home and foreclosure home. It will help who are willing to buy home.

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