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Home For Sale By Owner: \'We Buy Houses\' Scams - How to Spot Them and How to Avoid Them



Home For Sale By Owner


\'We Buy Houses\' Scams - How to Spot Them and How to Avoid Them

There are many reasons why a home owner would want to sell a house fast. Job change, relocation, debt problems, divorce and inheritance are just a few. Unfortunately, people in need also tend to attract predators who have no problem profiting from someone else\'s misfortune.

If you\'re looking to sell a house fast, here are a few scams to be on the lookout for and how to avoid becoming a victim yourself.

Equity Skimming

One of the most common types of "we buy houses" scams allows the "buyer" of the home to make off with most or all of your equity. It begins with you transferring your home\'s deed to the "buyer." The buyer may then have you make payments to him instead of the mortgage company, or he may have you move out so he can begin renting out the house.

There are several ways the buyer can then profit from this transaction. First, he receives some sort of payment every month � whether from you or from the renter. Second, he can use the equity in your home to secure home equity loans or other lines of financing. Third, he can simply resell the house without satisfying the outstanding mortgage.

Ultimately, once most of his profit is exhausted, he simply stops making payments on the mortgage and allows the home to go into foreclosure, because while he holds the deed to the home, he never assumed liability for the mortgage. As a result, you are left with a foreclosed home, no remaining equity and a significant black spot on your credit history.

Contract Bait and Switch

The contract "bait and switch" is a clever scheme that takes advantage of the trust between buyer and seller.

In one version of this scam, the home buyer inspects your house and makes a verbal offer that you accept. A few days later, he presents you with a written contract that he presents as "just a formal, legal version" of your verbal agreement. Because you believe it to be the same offer you had already agreed to, you simply skim it and sign on the dotted line.

In the time between signing and closing, he may also deliver one or more "minor changes" to the contract. He presents these as simply "a few tweaks" and nothing that really affects the original agreement.

At some point, though, possibly at the closing or even later, you discover that the last contract you signed actually bears little resemblance to the initial offer, and you are either stuck with a losing home sale or tangled in legal battles for months or even years to get out of the contract.

Liberian FSBO

This scam is an interesting twist on the Nigerian Scam or 419 Scam. In it, a person outside the U.S. contacts you after seeing your house on a For Sale By Owner site, telling you that he is looking to move to the U.S. soon and can pay cash for your home. His story is compelling to the point that you actually feel good about helping him out � not to mention being able to sell your home.

Ultimately, though, his only goal is to get you to transfer him money and/or to get access to your bank account so that he can transfer the funds himself before you realize what has happened. And because he is outside the U.S., recovering your money can be next to impossible.

How to Protect Yourself from Scams

If you need to sell a house fast, here are a few rules for protecting yourself from falling prey to a scam like these.

Only Work with Professionals

The best way to protect yourself from scams is to work only with professionals who have an established history of home buying. These days, anyone can order a book from an infomercial and become a "professional home buyer," but real professionals have been in business for many years and have closed millions of dollars in real estate transactions. Their primary concern is the health of their business, and they will not risk that by cheating you or otherwise treating you unfairly.

Check Out the Buyer

If you have any concerns about the buyer, don\'t hesitate to check them out. Contact your state Attorney General\'s office, your state\'s Real Estate Commission, or your District Attorney\'s Consumer Fraud Unit. If they are an established business, also check out the Better Business Bureau. Always Understand What You\'re Signing

Not asking questions because you are afraid of looking stupid could end up costing you tens of thousands of dollars or more if you end up in a deal that wasn\'t what you thought it was. A lawyer or even your mortgage company can help you if you want professional advice from a third party. Never, ever sign a contract that you don\'t understand.

Get All Agreements in Writing

If a disagreement arises about a verbal agreement, the issue becomes your word against theirs and often must go to a court of law to be settled. Don\'t risk that. Insist that all terms be in writing, and don\'t agree to anything that isn\'t. Be Willing to Walk Away

If you have any doubts about the buyer or the contract � or if it just doesn\'t feel right � just walk away. It\'s never worth the months (and maybe years) of future headaches to sell your house a few days sooner.

Conclusion

If something sounds too good to be true, it usually is. So don\'t get so emotionally tied up in the sale of your home that you abandon caution and logic. Your home is both a major financial obligation and a major asset. Falling prey to a scam like these will have major repercussions many, many years down the road � and maybe for the rest of your life.

Duane LeGate is president of House Buyer Network, America\'s fastest-growing home buying service. Since 2002, the company\'s nationwide network of professional home buyers has helped more than 45,000 families and individuals who needed to sell a property fast � processing more than $7.5 billion in property during that time.



Away We Go: Let yourself fall for Alexandria

September is the perfect month to fall for the art, culture and history found in Alexandria, Va. A cornucopia of special pleasures has been planned, filling the upcoming weekends with plenty to enjoy in Old Town. Kicking off the abundant lineup will be: The 11th annual Alexandria Arts Safari, presented from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday at the Torpedo Factory Art Center, 105 N. Union St. This day of hands-on happenings and demonstrations will be an art-filled adventure for kids of all ages. Highlights of the day will be encounters with the "clay experience," the fold-and-dye project, treasure-box making and papier-mache animal sculpture workshops from 1 to 4 p.m. The Alexandria Archeology Museum - located on the factory's third floor - will present "Potter's Art," an activity that teaches children about archeological digs. read more.

Amazon Appears Close To Video-Download Service Launch

The Seattle-based e-commerce giant is testing a service, dubbed "Amazon Unbox Video," that will allow U.S. customers to rent or buy digital videos, including movies, television shows, news shows and sporting events, according to a draft of Unbox's terms of service captured by a Business 2.0 contributor and published on the publication's B2Day blog Saturday. Meanwhile, a screenshot of the service's main page that was posted on the Web suggests Amazon will charge $1.99 for most TV episodes. Another page showing science fiction and fantasy films lists "The Matrix" at $9.98 and "Alien Vs. Predator" at $10.97, and lets shoppers narrow their film search by category, director and studio. Web developer Alan Taylor, a former Amazon employee who posted the screenshots on his Kokogiak blog Thursday, said he found the Web pages after discovering a side door into the service that Amazon left open inadvertently. read more.

Author Proulx selling her home but will stay in Wyoming

CHEYENNE - Annie Proulx, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author whose stories about Wyoming include the controversial story "Brokeback Mountain," has placed her home in the town of Centennial up for sale. Her real estate agent says she's bought a ranch elsewhere in the Cowboy State.Proulx's home in Centennial, about 20 miles west of Laramie, was recently advertised for sale in "High Country News," a newspaper about Western environmental issues.James Rinehart of Western United Realty in Laramie has the listing. He said his firm specializes in ranch properties."Annie's home is kind of a specialty niche market. We don't normally sell homes, but this one is a unique enough one that we're happy to work on it," Rinehart said. . read more.


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