A condo near the coffee and the train, a townhome with a door of your own and no lawn to mow, or a smaller place in the neighborhood you never wanted to leave. Buying one is different from buying a house, and we treat it that way. Before you offer, we read the HOA documents and the reserve study with you, show you what the dues actually cover, flag any special assessment on the horizon, explain in plain language whether the building's financing is straightforward or will need a specialty loan, and check the pet and rental rules against the life you actually live. The dues sit right next to the price in everything we send you, because the payment is the payment, and you deserve the whole number on day one.
Every listing we send shows the dues beside the price, because a low sticker with high dues is not a bargain. Here is the range of what these neighborhoods offer, with fresh listings every week.
Nobody should learn these at the closing table. We walk every buyer through all six before an offer goes in, in ordinary words, with your specific building's paperwork in hand.
HOA dues are not a fee for nothing, they are your share of the building's real costs. In one building they cover water, trash, insurance on the structure, the roof, and the elevator. In another they cover far less. We put your building's budget next to the dues so you can see exactly what you are paying for, and whether the number is fair for what you get.
The declaration, the bylaws, the budget, the meeting minutes, and the reserve study tell you how the building is really run. We read them with you and translate as we go: whether the reserves are funded for the roof and the boiler that will eventually come due, what the board has been arguing about, and whether the rules match how you plan to live.
When a building needs a repair the reserves cannot cover, owners split the bill. That is a special assessment, and the time to learn about one is before you buy, not after. We look for the warning signs in the minutes and the reserve study, ask the management company directly, and tell you straight if a big bill looks likely in the next few years.
Lenders sort condo buildings into two piles. If a building meets the standard checklist, most lenders will make a normal loan there, that is all warrantable means. If too many units are rentals, or one owner holds too many, or there is litigation, the building may need a specialty loan with different terms. We find out which pile your building is in before you fall in love.
Some buildings welcome a seventy-pound dog, some cap pets at a cat, and some say no. Some let you rent your unit out later, some have caps and waiting lists, and some forbid it entirely. These rules decide whether a building fits your life and your future plans, so we check them on day one, not as a surprise during your final walkthrough.
A gym, a roof deck, or a pool is lovely, and it also costs every owner money every month, forever. We help you weigh which amenities you will genuinely use against what they add to the dues, and which buildings keep it simple on purpose. Sometimes the best amenity is a well-run board, a funded reserve, and a quiet hallway.
Condo and townhome living is a trade, and for the right person it is a wonderful one. Here is what our buyers tell us a year after they move in.
Coffee is a corner away, the market is on the walk home, and the train means the car can sit for days at a time. Our buyers tell us the best part of the move was getting their commute and their Saturdays back. We will be honest about which blocks are genuinely walkable and which ones just photograph well, and what the street sounds like on a Friday night, because you are choosing a daily routine, not a listing photo.
No gutters, no mower, no driveway to shovel at six in the morning. When the building handles the outside, leaving town is as simple as locking the door. For downsizers and frequent travelers this is the whole point, and we help you find buildings where the maintenance is genuinely handled well, with a management company that answers and a board that fixes things before they grow.
For families who want bedrooms on their own floor, a door to their own patio, and neighbors close enough to borrow an egg from, a townhome splits the difference between a condo and a house. Kids on the shared green, school a few blocks over, and far less yard work than a detached house. We will walk you through what you own, what the HOA owns, and exactly where that line runs at your front step.
Condos and townhomes reward preparation on both sides of the deal. Here is what working with us looks like, whichever side of the door you are on.
The unit is the part you see. The building is the part you live with. Before you offer, we do the homework most buyers never hear about until it is too late:
Most condo sales that collapse fall apart over paperwork, not price. We prepare the file before your unit ever hits the market:
Plenty of websites hide the HOA dues to make owning look cheaper. We put them in the middle of the table, because that is where they belong. These are example numbers, clearly labeled, to show how we lay out the comparison for your real situation.
These numbers are made-up examples for illustration only. They are not a quote, not an offer of credit, and not financial or lending advice. Rates, taxes, dues, and insurance vary by building and by person. Before you decide anything, talk to a licensed lender about your real numbers, and we will happily sit in on that conversation with you.
Tell us where you are, curious about what your rent could buy, ready to downsize into something simpler, hunting for a townhome near the schools, or wondering what your unit is worth. We will lay out the honest numbers and the buildings worth your Saturday, with one fair fee and no pressure to hurry.
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