Where HOME PRICES Are Headed in 2022
Kiplinger's Personal Finance|April 2022
It’s still a seller’s market, but higher mortgage rates will slow the torrid price increases.
DANIEL BORTZ
Where HOME PRICES Are Headed in 2022
After watching four homes go to competing bidders over the course of seven frustrating months, Shubham Nath and Ankur Srivastava finally nabbed a four-bedroom house in Warren, N.J., last June. The couple pounced on the property when it hit the market. “We saw the home on a Saturday, looked at it a second time that Sunday and made an offer Sunday night,” says Nath. And this time they were prepared to best the seven other bidders: They offered about $60,000 above the home’s $849,000 list price, plus a 2.5-month closing period so that the seller would have plenty of time to pack up and move. And when the property appraised for $7,000 below the price they had agreed upon in the purchase contract, the couple paid for the appraisal gap. “We jumped through a lot of hoops,” Nath says.

On the bright side, the house, about 35 miles west of New York City, has ample space for home offices for both Nath, 39, a data analyst, and Srivastava, 42, a software engineer. The basement has plenty of room for their 9-year-old daughter’s doll house and Lego projects. To sweeten the deal, they snagged a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage with a 2.95% interest rate. And they had no trouble selling the 1,500-squarefoot townhome they were living in.

A RED-HOT MARKET

This story is from the April 2022 edition of Kiplinger's Personal Finance.

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This story is from the April 2022 edition of Kiplinger's Personal Finance.

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