My dumb pro tip for buying a house: go and scope out the area at different times of the day before you put in an offer. Example, go to the neighborhood when you would leave for work and get home from work and see how the traffic is. Also go in the evening. Just visiting the house once in the middle of the day will not really tell you if the neighborhood is a good fit for you.
Also friday/Saturday night if you have the time. I swung by on July 4th so see what the neighborhood was like. A couple of small get togethers happening but nothing too crazy. Figured if it wasn’t too bad on a national holiday it wouldn’t get too crazy normally.
Where I live, I would look what Internet connection speed is available at this address. A very slow connection with no possibility to upgrade can be a pain in the ass imo
Piggy-backing on that, check who your ISPs are at that address. I didn’t and then discovered Comcast had a monopoly on my area :(
We refused to look at any lot (we built) that didn’t have access to fiber. Best decision ever.
Walking distance to things like a grocery store or heck, just a short five minute drive to something would be good. Too many housing subdivisions are a thirty minute drive to even a gas station. It makes me wonder what people are thinking in building a housing community in the middle of nowhere. In the USA walkability is under rated.
Walkability is amazing
Being priced out of suburbia hell ended up being a good thing for me. I would’ve loved to have a garage and more privacy, but found those were decent trade-offs for the convenience of living in the city. There are 2 major shopping centers that I can drive to in 30 seconds or walk to in about 10 minutes.
Town ordinances. Some places are so strict that it’s dumb. It took me quite a while to find a town that allows people to own ducks. There are ordinances in my town against specific types of flowers(that aren’t even invasive) and you’ll get fined if you put out more than 6 bags of trash on trash day. And God forbid you regravel your driveway without a permit.
Especially if it is an older home, is there space in the breaker box for additional circuits.
Our feed is under ground so you should also check the size of the conduit running to the breaker box as that dictates the maximum size wire (and thus capacity) you can run into it. The box at our house had a few extra circuits but is limited to 100A service by the conduit/wire size from the main feed.
If you live in a northern clime, having your house and your driveway facing south is nice in the winter.
My house faces north and my neighbors across the street always have a nice clean and dry driveway, where mine is packed with snow and ice.
As someone who’s had both, it’s not as bad as I thought it would be. You have to keep on top of it. Don’t let snow sit for a few days. And get a good floor scraper to break up ice.
A positive to having a north facing house: my garage stays cooler in the summer.
Dogs. I’m not an anti dog person, our most recent family dog passed away 5yrs ago and when i left for work, she would howl indoors loud enough for the neighbors to hear. 5 yrs later, i’m getting my due payback. The new neighbors on both sides of me have 3 dogs each that will run to the fence and bark when I go out back and also howl when their owners are away. Several houses down there is a family with a female pitbull that shrieks when she is left in their back yard. a really sweet dog, but has anxiety issues. Normally not an issue, unless it’s the summer and all your windows are open.
Dogs and neighbors come and go, though
I will only buy a house East of my office. That way I’m driving away from sunrise and sunset.
Neighbors that mind their own business. If a neighbor tries to chat me up while I’m looking at a home I’m out, I had one terrible fucking experience with a guy trying to insert himself into mine and my wife’s lives.
Yeah bad neighbors can be hell. I think the best way to handle that if possible is to have a good buffer zone around your house. Otherwise a house can have great neighbors but they might move or die.
Radiant floor heating, especially in the bathroom.
Also a heated towel rack is really nice in the winter. I happen to have a baseboard heater right below a regular towel rack, that works the same and heats the room as well.
My notes:
-Face west for sunset view. Or east for sunrise view. -If house has a mailbox and road is busy, make sure mailbox is on house side of the road. -Enough land to keep me away from neighbors.
Next time I buy a house I’ll definitely pay more attention to the direction the “main” side faces. Our current place faces north (gets the least sun here in the northern hemisphere). The deck and concrete gets covered in moss/mold and in the winter it’s hard to find a spot to sit outside and soak up the sun.
Similarly in CO you learn north facing houses get the least exposure to the sun in the winter so when it snows your driveway never melts.
Having wired Ethernet.
Exactly. Makes placement of access points so much easier later on. Also not relying on bad wifi for your computer.
Ceiling vents! If you have pets, it keeps the tumbleweeds to a minimum. In the bathroom, it also keeps you from having that one vent that’s always by the toilet. You know, the one that’s always freezing you to death while doing your business.
Single-story. I’ve witnessed/lived through too many expensive and stressful upstairs bathroom and washing machine leaks. No stairs is a plus, too.
Not really a “feature” per se, but you should ALWAYS check out the attic, just to get a general idea of what is up there. Make sure there are no animal nests, insulation is good, no holes or leaks, etc etc.