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Buying a home is one of the biggest financial decisions youāll make in lifeāhome equity accounts for nearly a third of peopleās net worth, making it the largest piece of their financial puzzle by far. People who own homes are also richer than those who continue to rent, so itās not surprising that home ownership remains a key goal for many people.
Of course, houses are also expensive, which leads many people to seek out bargains. While buying a fixer-upper doesnāt guarantee youāll actually save moneyāand houses come with a ton of hidden costs you canāt always predict or account forāif youāre a handy person who can do a lot of work yourself, buying a cheap house that needs work can be a workable financial decision.
Unless you buy a money pit. The difference between a fixer-upper and a money pit is generally of scale: A fixer-upper has some defined issues that you can remedy. A money pit is a black hole that sucks all the money from your wallet and sanity from your soul.
Identifying a money pit is sometimes obviousālisting the house āas-is,ā visible cracks in the foundation, mold everywhereābut sometimes the signs youāre about to ruin your life with a home purchase are far more subtle. Hereās what to look for:
Of course, houses are also expensive, which leads many people to seek out bargains. While buying a fixer-upper doesnāt guarantee youāll actually save moneyāand houses come with a ton of hidden costs you canāt always predict or account forāif youāre a handy person who can do a lot of work yourself, buying a cheap house that needs work can be a workable financial decision.
Unless you buy a money pit. The difference between a fixer-upper and a money pit is generally of scale: A fixer-upper has some defined issues that you can remedy. A money pit is a black hole that sucks all the money from your wallet and sanity from your soul.
The signs you're about to buy a money pit
Identifying a money pit is sometimes obviousālisting the house āas-is,ā visible cracks in the foundation, mold everywhereābut sometimes the signs youāre about to ruin your life with a home purchase are far more subtle. Hereās what to look for:
Bad air. All houses develop a distinct ālike homeā smell that might be alien when you first walk in, but thereās a huge difference between a homey smell and, you know, a stink. Fishy or smoky smells can indicate electrical problems; rotten eggs could mean a gas leak; and a damp, musty smell might mean mold is hiding behind a fresh paint job.
Rust. You can hide a lot of things behind paint and some quick cosmetic work, but rust is harder to hide or eliminate. If you spot rusted appliances and/or pipes in the kitchen and bathrooms or rusty nails or screws, you might be looking at a house with moisture problems that are going to be expensive to deal with.
Stuck windows and doors. If you canāt easily open the windows or the doors are all stuck, at the very least you need to have the foundation carefully inspectedāthis could be a sign that the house needs foundation repair, which can be costly. Another sign that the house might have foundation problems is a simple lack of right angles or even surfacesāif every floor slopes, every wall bulges, and every corner is greater or less than 90 degrees, itās time to hesitate.
Low water pressure. Does the water trickle out of the taps? There are a lot of expensive reasons for low water pressure you should be concerned about. More importantly, low water pressure is a quality of life issue, and if the previous owners didnāt fix it, that by itself implies itās an expensive, difficult problem.
Dropped ceilings. Sure, there are some totally legitimate reasons someone would install a dropped ceiling in their home. But theyāre also often used as affordable ways to hide problemsālike a water-damaged ceiling, crumbling old plaster, or bad wiring and plumbing jobs.
Outdated wiring. If the house has two-prong outlets instead of more modern grounded outlets, you might be staring down the need to rewire the whole houseāwhich can cost as much as $30,000. Itās time to get an electrician to give you an idea of what youāre getting yourself into.
Insect traps everywhere. Everyone has the occasional bug invasion, and itās not uncommon to see ant traps in the spring even in houses that are spotlessly clean and well-maintained. But if you see a lot of traps and new traps dropped on top of older ones, it might indicate an infestationāor current owners who have confused termites for ants.
Lack of maintenance. Itās one thing if a fixer-upper needs work. Itās another if critical aspects of the homeās infrastructure have clearly and obviously been ignored, like an older roof with missing shingles, dirty HVAC vents, or a rusting water heater well past its expiration date. Those are signs that the house is bursting with problems that just havenāt exploded into crises yet. Just because there are no obvious leaks or other problems when you walk through it today doesnāt mean there wonāt be tomorrow, especially if the current owner hasnāt bothered to do basic home maintenance. You donāt want all those deferred problems to be yours.