Yes, the data's correct. Only one home sold for close to $100M: aaronkirman.com/listings/10721-stradella-ct-los-angeles-ca-90077/ The list price was $150M, but the final sale price was just $92.8M. The second most-expensive sale of this period was $44M: www.redfin.com/CA/Beverly-Hills/51-Beverly-Park-Way-90210/home/6834083 And everything else was $35M and under.
Yes, I can help with a purchase in Lake Arrowhead. I hate to fess up to having fine print, but mine is: minimum commission is $6000. So, on a $490K home, it's actually 1.2%.
Let's say you buy a house and find out that a patio roof attached to the house wasn't permitted by the city. What would you do as the buyer in that situation? Take it down? The home owners insurance never asked about it.
You've posted about this before, right? I'd leave it. At worst, the city might make you take it down -- but first a neighbor has to complain, then the city has to come out and inspect, etc etc etc. Highly unlikely that any of that happens. For safety's safe, you might want to have a contractor come and take a look at it, make sure it's structurally sound. Just because it lacks a permit doesn't mean it wasn't built well! And, if you're really uncomfortable, just take it down. Not a big deal. It's not structural to the house.
@@thejonschwartz Oh, my apologies. I guess my memory is not what it used to be. Thanks for the response either way. Always look forward to your videos.
$2,000,000 to $100,000,00 or more lot of prices , so is the data correct ?
Yes, the data's correct. Only one home sold for close to $100M:
aaronkirman.com/listings/10721-stradella-ct-los-angeles-ca-90077/
The list price was $150M, but the final sale price was just $92.8M.
The second most-expensive sale of this period was $44M:
www.redfin.com/CA/Beverly-Hills/51-Beverly-Park-Way-90210/home/6834083
And everything else was $35M and under.
With buy with blueprint, would you be able to help with a purchase of a home in Lake Arrowhead?
And is it 1% for a sale price of say, 490K?
Yes, I can help with a purchase in Lake Arrowhead. I hate to fess up to having fine print, but mine is: minimum commission is $6000. So, on a $490K home, it's actually 1.2%.
Let's say you buy a house and find out that a patio roof attached to the house wasn't permitted by the city. What would you do as the buyer in that situation? Take it down? The home owners insurance never asked about it.
You've posted about this before, right? I'd leave it. At worst, the city might make you take it down -- but first a neighbor has to complain, then the city has to come out and inspect, etc etc etc. Highly unlikely that any of that happens. For safety's safe, you might want to have a contractor come and take a look at it, make sure it's structurally sound. Just because it lacks a permit doesn't mean it wasn't built well! And, if you're really uncomfortable, just take it down. Not a big deal. It's not structural to the house.
@@thejonschwartz Oh, my apologies. I guess my memory is not what it used to be. Thanks for the response either way. Always look forward to your videos.
@luperamos7307 No worries and thank YOU!