Selling a house....

cptlo

Pursuit Driver
Anyone ever sold a house to Opendoor or know someone that did?

For those unfamiliar with Opendoor, they are like Carvana for houses. If you're unfamiliar with Carvana, well...come out from under that rock! :D

Opendoor almost seems too good to be true, but I've ready numerous reviews online that are way more positive than negative. It seems like they are paying more for houses in order to gain market share.
 
We have not used them but we have gotten an offer from them before. They have been coming in way above market value which is what makes me a bit leery. They have been around a while now so I assume they are legit.
 
We have not used them but we have gotten an offer from them before. They have been coming in way above market value which is what makes me a bit leery. They have been around a while now so I assume they are legit.

I did their online offer thing a week or so ago and got what I think is a high offer compared to other homes in the neighborhood....at least $20K more than what I think I could sell it for right now. The offer expired yesterday so I renewed it this morning...it went up another $7000.

My initial thought was that they lure you in with a high initial offer and then lower it substantially after doing the video walkthrough and exterior inspection. However, most of the information I read about them on Reddit indicates that isn't usually the case. In fact, lots of people said their offers went up.

I asked a coworker this morning if he has heard of them and he reminded me that he used to work for a company they bought out a couple years ago. He said he has only heard good things about them. I know someone else that still works for the company they acquired so I'm reaching out to him for more info.

I suspect they will eventually get around to making offers more in line with market values, but they are simply trying to buy up market share right now. Think about how Uber went years losing billions just to get market share.

Heck, even if they lower their offer to what is more in line with market value, being able to avoid showings and dealing with all that hassle is worth it. They don't even do an inspection....they simply have you walkthrough the house while on a video call and then send someone out to do a visual inspection of the exterior of the home.
 
Our daughter and SIL used them and Zillow last July. Both made above market offers, they went with Zillow for the highest offer and closed within 30 days. No issues, no delays, the only surprise was how smoothly it went. I think Zillow has since put a hold on their offers, or at least slowed considerably.

The sad thing is that our daughter is a realtor and couldn't beat either of them.
 
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Figured I'd provide an update in case the info helps anyone else.

I've been going through the process with Opendoor over the last week or so. Instead of the live video walkthrough, I recorded and uploaded videos of the interior of the house (no, @Guard Dad, I didn't fart while recording the videos :) ). A guy came out yesterday and did an exterior inspection (he was only here 5 minutes). I got their final offer this morning and it went up another $5100. However, they subtract $2119 for repairs (no specifics on what the repairs are) so the net increase is just under $3000. Also, they charge a 5% fee, but that is lower than the typical 6% agent commission.

Combine the offer with a savings of around $5000 that I had planned to spend on repairs and I think it's a pretty good deal especially considering no real inspection, no showings, no back and forth negotiations, etc. The final offer is not way higher than market value but it looks to be around the average of what other similar homes in the area are selling for.

From what I've read, the rest of the process should be pretty painless. I'll update this thread if that turns out to not be the case.
 
Interesting.

I bought a car from Carvana a few months ago. Loved how easy it was to do. I basically car shopped and did everything in the middle of the night once I got off work.

Perhaps the pain of people traipsing through your home, at the least ideal time on a Saturday or Thursday evening, to sell your house is a thing of the past.
 
That's great news since I'm right behind you. Did they mention how many days until final closing?
 
That's great news since I'm right behind you. Did they mention how many days until final closing?

From what I've read, you can pick a closing date of between 14 and 60 days out. I haven't clicked to accept the offer yet because I need closing to be after May 11 to avoid paying capital gains tax on the profit (gotta own it 2 years). I'm waiting a couple days to make sure I can pick May 12 or May 13 for closing.
 
Update on the transaction with Opendoor. It couldn't have been easier. Closing was today and it took about 10 minutes to sign everything. Cash was in my bank account about 15 minutes later. By far the easiest real estate transaction I've ever done.
 
Yep, worked the same way when my daughter sold their house. Did they give you full asking price?
 
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Opendoor doesn't waste any time. They already have my former house listed for sale. I doubt they will get their asking price, but they will still likely make money on it.
I imagine they are concerned that rising interest rates will reduce the buyer demand and want to go ahead and get it sold.
 
Looks like the rising rates are having the effect they were looking for. Hopefully this cools it off before they have to raise them up to Jimmy Carter Rates.

The real estate frenzy is over​

Emily Peck

Looks like America's home buying binge is winding down. There's a vibe shift visible in both the official data and in the anecdata from sellers, buyers and brokers.
Why it matters: This is just what Jerome Powell ordered. The slowdown means the Fed's rate hikes are working — cooling demand in an overheated market.
"The buyers just stopped buying," said Shauna Pendleton, an agent with Redfin in Boise, Idaho, until recently one of the hottest markets in the country. "Californication," as she called it, drove an influx of buyers from the West coast, flush with cash courtesy of the also formerly booming stock market.
  • Some listings now sit for weeks without even a showing, she said; like this 4-bedroom priced at $899,000; 42 days without a look-see.
  • In the Dallas/Ft. Worth area, Redfin agent Robin Glaysher said five people showed up to an open house last weekend; previously there would've been a line out the door.
  • "It's a completely different market now," said Glaysher, who works with homes priced around $400,000.
  • The change is a boon for some buyers — like those relying on FHA loans that require only 3.5% down, she said. In the old times they were often outbid by cash buyers, who have now vanished.
Driving the news: New home sales plunged in April, falling 16.6% from March to 591,000, well below economists' forecast of 750,000, according to data out Tuesday. It's the slowest pace since April 2020 — when the economy froze for a minute before the boom began.
  • Existing home sales — perhaps a better measure of the U.S. market since it's a much larger segment — are also trending down, falling for three straight months, according to the National Association of Realtors.
  • Mortgage rates have soared since March and with the 30-year now hovering at around 5.25%, the highest it's been in years.
  • Meanwhile, new housing supply is building. Available inventory of unsold new single family homes jumped by 8% in April to 444,000, a 13-year high.
Catch up quick: The real estate market has been, technically speaking, bananas since COVID, as the rise of remote work — and super-low mortgage rates — sent more people looking to upgrade their living space.
  • The surge in demand fueled bidding wars and all kinds of wild activity — buyers waiving inspections or begging sellers to pick them, for example.
  • Now, "buyers are less conciliatory, as far as giving whatever we want on the sell side," said Glaysher, the Texas agent.
What they're saying: "The party is over," Ian Shepherdson, chief economist at Pantheon Macroeconomics, wrote in a research note Tuesday.
  • "We were going 90 miles an hour down the highway, and we took our foot off the gas," Michael Simonsen, CEO of Altos, a real estate analytics firm, tells Axios.
  • "The market's shifted from "irrational to more rational," Jonathan Miller, a New York based real estate appraiser, tells Axios in an email. What used to sell in 24 hours, now could take about a month.
Yes, but: This isn't 2008. Home prices haven't started falling. The U.S. median new home price ticked up in April to $450,600 — that's up 45% from two years ago.
  • And though the supply of newly built homes has increased, that's actually a small part of the overall market. Inventories of existing homes are still some of the lowest on record, as of April.
The bottom line: Though the frenzy is over, "there's still a lot of pent up demand from people who've been shopping for a year," Simonsen said.
 
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