Wed, 24 March 2021 | housing real estate
With a red-hot real estate market coming out of the pandemic, many homebuyers are finding that they must tour more homes, cut bigger checks and waive more contingencies in order to win, according to a new report from Redfin. Remote work and low mortgage rates have prompted scores of Americans to buy homes during the pandemic, and this has resulted in a severe housing shortage that's fueling record-high prices, cutthroat competition, and putting sellers in the driver's seat.
Redfin's analysis reveals just how much homebuying has changed during the coronavirus pandemic.
Buyers Are Shelling Out Bigger Down Payments and Offering Above Asking In Order to Win
The median down payment on a home during the last six months was $40,987, up from $32,261 during the same period a year earlier. That's an increase of 27%, or nearly $9,000. The typical homebuyer made a down payment equal to 15.9% of the sale price, compared with 15.3% a year earlier. Down payments have mostly increased because housing prices have jumped.
"The surge in home prices actually hasn't resulted in higher monthly mortgage payments for most buyers because it has been offset by low mortgage rates, but it has driven up down-payment costs," said Redfin Chief Economist Daryl Fairweather. "This is likely putting homeownership out of reach for many cash-strapped first-time buyers who can't afford to put an additional $9,000 down."
In addition to spending more on down payments, homebuyers have been boosting their bids. During the last six months, 1 in 3 buyers (34.4%) paid more than the seller's original asking price, up from 1 in 5 buyers (21.2%) a year earlier.
"It's extremely competitive out there. One of my buyers recently beat out 25 other bids by offering $120,000 over the $425,000 asking price on a three-bedroom single-family home," said Portland Redfin real estate agent Mark Peterson. "There was a competing offer for the same amount, but my client won by opting for a shortened inspection period, accepting the home `as-is' and agreeing to pay up to $20,000 extra in the event that the appraisal came in low."
Buyers Are Waiving Contingencies At a Much Higher Rate Than Before the Pandemic
Over the last six months, 17.6% of successful offers submitted by Redfin agents waived the appraisal contingency, up from just 6.1% during the same period a year earlier. The share of successful offers waiving the inspection contingency jumped to 13.2% from 7.3%, and the portion waiving the financing contingency increased to 13.2% from 10.1%.
With more than half of home offers encountering bidding wars these days, buyers are finding that they need to sweeten their offers and get creative in order to win. Waiving these contingencies is a strategy buyers use to make their offers more competitive by assuring the seller that the deal will close without unforeseen headaches.
More Home Sales Are Being Financed With Conventional Loans
More than half (53%) of home sales in the last six months were paid for using conventional loans, or loans that are provided by private lenders and not backed by the federal government. That's up from 49.7% a year earlier. The portion of sales financed with jumbo loans, which are regularly used for purchases of higher-end homes, increased to 6% from 5.5%. Slightly more than a quarter (25.9%) of home purchases were paid for exclusively in cash, little changed from before the pandemic.
Meanwhile, the share of sales financed with Federal Housing Administration (FHA) loans fell to 9.9% from 12%, and the share of sales financed with Veterans Affairs (VA) loans dropped to 4.4% from 5.3%. FHA loans are backed by the U.S. government and are frequently used by first-time homebuyers and Americans who don't qualify for conventional loans due to lower credit scores. VA loans are used by military service members and veterans, and allow recipients to finance 100% of a home's cost without a big down payment.
"Lenders have been tightening up requirements for borrowers during the pandemic because so many families are at risk of defaulting on their mortgage payments," Fairweather said. "This means that many lower-income Americans have been unable to qualify for the loans they need to become homeowners and start building home equity. But as lenders become more confident in the economic recovery, they will be more willing to offer loans to borrowers with less-than-immaculate credit."
The Homebuying Process Is Taking Longer
Homebuyers toured 14 homes on average during the last six months, up from 13 homes a year earlier. From start to finish, the homebuying process took a median of 96 days, compared with 91 days during the same period the prior year. It's taking longer to find homes in part because there's an intensifying housing shortage that's causing many house hunters to get outbid repeatedly.
"Within hours of a home hitting the market, the showing schedule is often completely booked up," said Laurene Broccard, a Redfin real estate agent in Raleigh, NC. "We've seen properties get over 70 showings in three days and up to 30 offers. There are frequently buyers who want to see a home, but it goes under contract before they even have a chance to tour it."
To view the full report, including charts and methodology, please visit: https://www.redfin.com/news/profile-of-a-pandemic-homebuyer/
Source: Redfin