(TRAINING SITE — this is a sample post for VA pre-screening practice. Not real advice.)
The Five Most Common First-Time Homebuyer Mistakes
Buying your first home is exciting, but it’s also where well-intentioned buyers make the biggest financial missteps. After working with hundreds of first-time clients, I’ve seen the same five mistakes come up again and again — and every one of them is avoidable with a little upfront planning.
1. Skipping mortgage pre-approval
Touring homes before you’ve been pre-approved by a lender is one of the fastest ways to fall in love with something you can’t actually buy. Pre-approval also signals to sellers that your offer is serious, which matters a lot in a competitive market.
2. Underestimating closing costs
The down payment isn’t the only out-of-pocket cost. Plan for an additional 2–5% of the purchase price in closing costs — lender fees, title insurance, escrow, recording fees, and your portion of property taxes.
3. Maxing out your pre-approval amount
Just because the bank says you can borrow $600,000 doesn’t mean you should. Build in a buffer for maintenance, utilities, HOA fees, and the lifestyle you actually want to live.
4. Waiving the inspection in a hot market
It’s tempting to do this to win a bidding war, but a $500 inspection can save you tens of thousands in surprise repairs. If you must waive contingencies, at least walk through with a contractor first.
5. Treating the first home as forever
Most first-time buyers move within 5–7 years. Buy for the next five years of your life, not the next thirty. Prioritize fundamentals that hold value: location, structural soundness, and neighborhood trajectory.
Bottom line
The best protection against these mistakes is working with an agent and a lender early — well before you start touring. Get the financial side ironed out first, then go shopping.
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