Overland Park KS real estate market update ~ July 2019: View Overland Park home trends

The Jason Brown Group

Overland Park Kansas Real Estate Update

There were 169 homes sold (closed) in Overland Park Kansas the past 15 days. Comparing that sales volume to the 604 homes currently for sale in Overland Park, the city has 1.8 months of inventory on the market. This volume of real estate inventory indicates a strong seller’s market in Overland Park and a continued shortage of inventory to meet buyer demand in the area. The average new listing the past 15 days in Overland Park Kansas came on the market around a $415,000 list price and the average sales price of homes closed during the same time period was nearly $371,000.

Type # Average $ Avg DOM
Listings Past 15 Days 224 $414,533
Total Active Listings 604
Newest Contracts Written 187 $339,636 29
Sold (closed) Past 15 Days 169 $371,015 39

* The Average $ of Newest Contracts Written considers the list price when the homes went under contract. Data pulled from Heartland MLS and deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Low samplings in a category can skew results. Stats cover approximately 15 days from post date. DOM = Days On Market.

The last 169 homes sold in Overland Park Kansas were on the market an average of 39 days, while the most recent 187 homes to go under contract did so in 29 days on average. We look forward to helping you assess the effect these market stats have on your your real estate investment and the decisions you make when buying or selling a Overland Park Kansas home.

The Jason Brown Group provides expert home seller representation, helping home sellers maximize their real estate investments by selling quickly and for top dollar. We provide expert home buyer representation, helping home buyers locate the best available homes on the market, while providing guidance all the way through the real estate process. Learn more about how we can help you with selling an Overland Park home or buying an Overland Park home.

We look forward to helping you achieve your real estate goals… Contact Jason Brown today!

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Johnson County KS Short Sale Sellers Can Start Repairing Their Credit Score As Soon As The Short Sale Is Completed

The Jason Brown Group

We’ve helped a lot of Johnson County Kansas homeowners with selling their homes in a Short Sale. A question we often get asked at the end of the process is, how long will it take before they can buy a home again? It had been two years in many cases, including FHA and VA loans, but recently FHA pushed the wait to 3 years. Guidelines are constantly changing and with so many mortgage options today, potential home buyers can call us and we’ll let you know what we’re seeing today’s market. We’re connected to many of the best mortgage lenders in the business and can quickly assess your financial situation and ability to buy a home. 

TmpThe biggest factor in being able to buy a home ASAP is to start improving your credit score as soon as the Short Sale has been completed. The #1 way to do this is to start paying all of your bills on time going forward. Your payment history makes up 35% of your Credit Score and you’ll need to show creditors that you are willing and able to pay all of your monthly bills on time. Until you can pay all of your credit card bills, department store credit bills and any/all other installment loans on time, you will continue to fight a battle with your credit score.

Credit scores range from 300 to 850 range and you’ll want to work to get your credit score up into the 700’s for creditors to start viewing you as a low credit risk. The lower your credit risk, the more willing a lender will be to give you a loan and the better the terms will be (i.e. lower interest rates). As for the rest of puzzle that makes up your credit score, 30% is how much debt you currently owe compared against the maximum amount of debt you could possibly have based on your current credit limits. This considers factors such as how much you owe on a credit card compared to the credit cards max limit, how much you currently owe on your mortgage compared to your beginning balance, etc.

The length of your credit history accounts for 15% of your credit score and considers how long you’ve had a credit card, how long you’ve had a mortgage, etc. If you heard of a great new credit card that you can’t pass up, you still will want to think twice about closing out your old credit card, because old credit is generally the best credit as far as credit scores go.  Accounting for 10% of your credit score is your credit mix, which looks at the different types of credit you use. Also, rather than getting two new credit cards at the same time, avoid a big shakeup of your credit by getting one new card, show a history of making payments on that card on time, and then add the second credit card. The last portion is how much new credit you have and this accounts for 10% of your credit score. Too much new combined credit, such as new mortgage loans, new credit cards, new car loans, new installment loans, etc. over a short a period of time will harm your credit score, temporarily at least.

 

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Posted by Jason Brown

 

Johnson County Kansas Homeowners Facing Foreclosure Should Consider A Short Sale

The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

Do you know someone facing foreclosure on the their home in Kansas City, Johnson County KS, Overland Park, Olathe, Leawood, Shawnee, Lenexa or in the surrounding area?  Have them contact us to discuss getting their home sold in a Short Sale! A Short Sale means working to get the homeowner’s lender to accept selling the home at a price SHORT of the amount needed to pay off the mortgage loan balance.

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Why should a Short Sale be considered?  It can help the owner avoid a dreaded foreclosure… It can reduce the damage to the owner’s credit history… It may allow for buying another home within 1 to 2 years… It can offer the peace of mind of settling the mortgage debt… The homeowner doesn’t pay the real estate commission… The homeowner doesn’t pay for any home inspection repairs… The owner lives in the home during the process…  Kansas “redemption” laws allow 90 days AFTER a foreclosure sale takes place to continue working to complete a Short Sale.

At no cost to the homeowner, The Jason Brown Group can assess the viability of moving forward with a Short Sale. Most lenders want to AVOID taking on another foreclosure, so there’s EVERY reason to attempt to sell a home in a Short Sale when foreclosure is the alternative!  Click here to learn more about the Short Sale process and how we go to work to help homeowners avoid foreclosure.


Posted by Jason Brown

Overland Park Kansas Real Estate Market Update – March 2014 Update

The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

Overland Park Kansas Real Estate Update
Recent Real Estate Market Activity In Overland Park KS

Using the 54 homes sold in Overland Park Kansas the past 15 days to calculate the absorption rate in the city, we find there’s currently 4.9 months of inventory on the market. This amount of inventory indicates a very slight seller’s real estate market in the city of Overland Park. The average new listing the past 15 days came on the market around $309,000, while the average sales price during the same time period was around $221,000.

Type # Average $ Avg DOM
Listings Past 15 Days 175 $309,402
Total Active Listings 525
Newest Contracts Written 140 $285,259 77
Sold (closed) Past 15 Days 54 $221,411 62

* The Average $ of Newest Contracts Written considers the list price when the homes went under contract. Data pulled from Heartland MLS and deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Low samplings in a category can skew results. Stats cover approximately 15 days from post date. DOM = Days On Market.

The last 54 homes sold in Overland Park Kansas were on the market an average of 62 days, while the last 140 homes to go under contract were on the market an average 77 days. We can assist you with buying or selling a home in Overland Park, so please contact us so we can help evaluate your real estate options. You can also start the process by finding detailed real estate information on our site regarding selling an Overland Park Kansas home and with buying an Overland Park Kansas home.

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Do You Know Someone In Johnson County Who’s Faced With Losing Their Home To Foreclosure?

Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

If you know anyone who’s struggling to make their mortgage payments, they’re surely pondering the options for selling their home. If they don’t have the money to pay the real estate commission or are upside down even more than that amount on their home, then this often leaves homeowners in a paralyzed state. What a LOT of homeowners don’t realize is that they can try selling their home in a Short Sale and the seller would NOT be responsible for paying the resulting real estate commissions.

If you’re unfamiliar with the process, a Short Sale means a seller sells their home to a buyer at an amount that nets “short” of how much is needed to pay of the outstanding mortgage balance(s). While selling in a Short Sale will likely put a hit on the seller’s credit, it’s nothing like the hit a foreclosure will do. In fact, many people who sell their homes in a short sale are able to regroup their finances and purchase another home within a couple of years. That’s not going to happen for someone who loses their home in foreclosure.

You may be wondering how a seller gets out of paying the real estate commissions… It’s because the seller’s lender pays it. Why and how? Any lender who will consider a Short Sale understands the seller doesn’t have the ability to pay it themselves (remember, the seller can’t even afford to continue making their mortgage payments). Once a buyer makes an offer and the seller accepts (with the understanding the deal won’t happen if the seller’s lender doesn’t accept a short sale), then the offer is submitted to the seller’s lender… and the lender will factor the real estate commissions into the equation for whether they’ll accept the Short Sale offer.

As far as the process, it’s complicated for real estate agents, no doubt about it. It can easily take 10 times the work – and sometimes triple or longer the time – to get a Short Sale completed. Sometimes a lender will doom the process… they’re often disorganized, sometimes difficult and occasionally non-responsive. But this is what we agree to take on when we take a Short Sale listing. I don’t think 90% of agents understand what they’re getting into when they list a Short Sale. We do… And it’s certainly a process that requires organization and persistence.

Our Short Sale listings get the same attention to detail and care that all our listings get. So if you know someone who… owns a home that’s lost value… doesn’t have the money to pay a real estate commission… has lost their job… can’t afford their home due to a divorce… Or something similar, then there’s a good chance we can help them. Have them email me and we’re happy to go over their situation in detail to see how we can help.


Posted by Jason Brown

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10% Of Kansas City Metro Area Homes For Sale Are Short Sale Listings

Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

If you are upside down on your home or needing to sell and teetering on a break-even, it can be a very stressful time. If this is you, you’re not alone because around 10% of the homes for sale in Kansas City, Johnson County Kansas and the surrounding areas are Short Sales. We get calls all the time from people needing help in determining if they’ll be able to sell in a traditional sale or if they’re going to need to get short sale approval from their lender.

Seller’s who are upside and in a situation they need to sell, can bring the cash to closing to make the sale happen. This happens more than you may realize and is a way to save your credit and make the problem go away. But for the majority of seller’s who are upside down on their home, they don’t have the cash needed and they’ll need to get their lender on board with selling the home in a Short Sale. If you know someone who is facing losing their home in foreclosure, you can recommend they contact us to discuss the process and their situation. If we can achieve a successful short sale, the lender pays all the real estate commissions and many sellers are unaware of that important detail.

Anyone who needs to sell their home in a short sale will want to act quickly because the law that has allowed short sale sellers to avoid tax consequences is set to expire December of this year. If that happens, sellers could have tax consequences on the amount of the loan written off as a loss by the lender. I’m just a real estate agent so be sure to contact a tax adviser with all tax related questions. The average short sale is taking more than four months to complete, so if that tax law isn’t renewed, selling a home in a short sale next year will be less appealing than it is today.


Posted by Jason Brown

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Interested In Buying A Kansas City Or Johnson County Kansas Short Sale Listing?

Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

In today’s market, many home buyers in Kansas City and Johnson County Kansas are looking for deals on Short Sales and foreclosures. For many, the term Short Sale is synonymous with bank foreclosure listings, yet that couldn’t be further from the truth. Bank foreclosures are listings that have already gone through the foreclosure process, the bank now has a clear title to sell the property and the bank is looking to get the properties off their books. But Short Sales are much different. In a Short Sale, the homeowner is upside down on their home but it has not (yet) been foreclosed on. In other words, the home seller is HOPING their lender will accept a Short Sale, so the home can be sold before it goes into the foreclosure process.


Short Sale means a short payoff of what is still owed on the home. In many cases, the seller’s lenders doesn’t even know what’s about to hit them. Though it can’t be a surprise generally speaking when a lender is notified a seller is requesting a Short Sale, the reality is that many sellers are not yet behind on their payments. So this could mean the first notification a seller’s lender gets that a loan is about to go bad is when a
listing agent sends the lender a Short Sale package. A Short Sale package includes the real estate contract (with whatever buyer is trying to purchase the home) and a laundry list of other items (i.e. proof of job loss, etc) that the seller’s lender will demand if there’s any chance of the Short Sale getting through.

If you are planning to buy a home in Kansas City, Johnson County Kansas, Overland Park or the surrounding area, there’s certainly many complications that come with Short Sales that aren’t encountered when dealing with a typical re-sale transaction. There’s many additional hurdles to consider, including whether the listing agent assisting the seller knows how to properly handle a Short Sale. From my experience, most agents are not experienced in dealing with Short Sales. If they’re not, the chances of a successful Short Sale just shot down well below a coin flip. So it’s important that your Buyer’s Agent politely quiz the listing agent on their expertise with the Short Sale process.

Short Sales can take 60, 90, 120, 150 days or more to get the closing table (many never do close), so you MUST have patience AND time on your side or Short Sales are not for you. You’ll be asking a lender to accept less than what the seller owes on the home and they’ll need to study the offer, do a detailed market analysis and come to a conclusion on either accepting your Short Sale offer or choosing to take the home back by way of foreclosure.

Click here if you are a homeowner considering selling your Kansas City area home in a Short Sale.

Posted by Jason Brown

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Overland Park KS Real Estate Market Update – November 2011

Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

Real Estate Statistics On Overland Park Kansas
15 Day Glance At The Overland Park KS Real Estate Market

After calculating the absorption rate over the past 15 days in Overland Park Kansas and comparing it the current volume of homes for sale, we find the city has 8.0 months of inventory on the market. This amount of inventory is considered a buyer’s market. When we checked the Overland Park real estate stats almost a month a go, there was 6 months of inventory on the market. Since there’s actually fewer homes on the market now, the higher months of inventory on the market is due to a slowing sales rate — 82 homes were sold during the 15 day period earlier this month, compared to 58 sales during this most recent 15 day period.

Type # Average $ Avg DOM
Listings Past 15 Days 80 $283,187
Total Active Listings 928
Newest Contracts Written 85 $238,154 133
Newest Sold (Closed) 58 $231,889 132

* The Average $ of Newest Contracts Written considers the list price when the homes went under contract. Data pulled from Heartland MLS and deemed reliable but not guaranteed. Low samplings in a category can skew results. Stats cover approximately 15 days from post date. DOM = Days On Market.

The average new listing the past 15 days in Overland Park came on the market at more than $283,000. The average sales price over the same period was just under $232,000. If you are making plans to buy or sell a home in Overland Park KS, my group can provide you the market information you need to make an informed decision and we’ll guide you through the real estate process. Here’s info on how we can assist you with selling your Overland Park home or with buying an Overland Park home. Please contact us with any questions you may have!

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Posted by Jason Brown

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Deciding Whether Selling Your Overland Park Home In A Short Sale Makes Sense?

Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

If you’re behind on your mortgage or thinking you’re about to get behind on your mortgage payments, now is the time to sit down with an Overland Park Realtor and discuss your options. But don’t sit down with just any agent, make sure you sit down with an agent who understands the Short Sale process. Most agents don’t have a complete grasp on the complicated process and getting hooked up with the right agent can easily double or triple your chances of success.

We go through a checklist of questions to help determine whether we think a homeowner has a good chance at achieving a successful Short Sale. A Short Sale can be more or less complicated depending on whether there’s just one lender involved or whether a second loan has been taken out on the home. Finding out who all has an ownership interest in the property is critical in devising an out plan for each party involved. We need to know if a seller has received a Notice of Default from their lender because time is of the essence more than ever when dealing with a Short Sale.

We always want to be sure a homeowner has exhausted any possibilities to stay in the home, such as refinancing or asking their lender whether a loan modification is possible. Every homeowner’s situation and goals will lead to different questions being asked. We are constantly working to get a complete picture of what we’re up against. So that we can see all lien’s that have been placed against a property, we get our home sellers a free preliminary title report so we can see exactly what it’s going to take to achieve a successful Short Sale.

There’s a lot of work to be done to get a lender to even CONSIDER a Short Sale, much less accept one. From pin-pointing the hardships that have occurred to cause the situation to helping clients explain these hardships to their lender, we’re there every step of the way. If you’re in a distressed situation with your home and think a Short Sale may be a possibility for you, we’re happy to discuss your situation.

Posted by Jason Brown

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How We Turned A Likely Overland Park Short Sale Into A Break Even, Credit Saving Deal

Checking The Pulse Of The Kansas City Real Estate Market

There’s many homeowner’s out there who are behind – or about to get behind – on their mortgage payments. Many of these stories don’t have a happy ending and that’s one of the unfortunate realities of today’s real estate market. But with an understanding of how real estate is done today, the focus can be shifted to minimizing the financial and credit damage that is done to a homeowner. Sometimes the moon’s align and a situation even turns out much better than anyone expected. Recently, I had an Overland Park family that had all but accepted foreclosure as their fate. After having their income level drastically slashed, they’d been keeping up with their mortgage payment by using up their savings. With those funds almost dried up, they asked to meet with me in what amounted to a last-ditch effort to avoid foreclosure.

The home was less than 10 years old but needed significant updating and repairs due to deferred maintenance. Adding those estimated costs to the typical costs of selling, we then factored in the sales prices of comparable homes. We were very likely looking at the makings of an upside down home seller. I explained we had a good shot at getting a short sale through but I also went over how a short sale would still affect their credit scores. It would almost certainly keep them from buying another home for one to two years… and possibly more. They said they understood and were ready to get things moving because they were running out of money.  As we got things moving, I explained there was a small hope that we could sell their home at a break even but it would take the moon’s aligning. We concluded we had less than a month to try to achieve a scenario that would make it a break even and do no harm done to their credit.

They prepared the home as best they could and we priced the home appropriately, factoring in all our goals. What occurred was a quick, near full price offer. Along with the contract negotiations was a verbal understanding that the home seller had no money for repairs and that by not asking for any, the buyer could likely get a quick 30 day closing while avoiding having to deal with the purchase as a short sale. There was another fortunate piece to the puzzle in that there wasn’t another real estate agent involved. This meant the entire real estate commission stayed with the listing broker and typically when this happens, a listing agent who works both sides of the transaction gets compensated with the full commission.

But after running the final estimated proceeds/deficit sheet for the seller, it was apparent the seller was upside down by an amount that was less than the full real estate commission. Understanding the good it would do this family if I helped out on the real estate commission charged, I made some changes to the listing agreement that allowed them to sell the home at a break even. It saved the seller’s credit and in the end they were able to then go and purchase a smaller home, that fit well within their new financial means.  I got to be their buyer’s agent in that home purchase and it was a win-win situation all the way around.

Posted by Jason A. Brown

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