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Bucks County SHORT SALE! Affordable Remodeled Twin

Bucks County SHORT SALE! Affordable Remodeled Twin
3 bed, 1.5 bath, 1300 sf
$115,900

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Strongest Housing Increase in the Past 2 Years

8/23/2012  OK All you Savvy Potential Buyers that are sitting on the Fence Guess What……..According to last Month’s Zillow Statistics...There are 2 separate housing Markets and they are BOTH CURRENTLY...
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Happy Clients

8-2012 Jay Savitz Real Estate Pro Investment PropertiesWe have chosen John and Sheri Curci to represent us with our listings For Sale, as well as Rentals. We do this, because...
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6 Reasons to Google Your Address

     

8-2-2011-In Compliance Trulia and John + Sheri Curci

With virtually any type of information imaginable online, it makes

sense to do regular internet searches for your home’s address.

There are at least six compelling reasons it makes sense to

do so, especially if it’s an address you’re thinking of renting,

buying or selling. Smart homeowners would do well to search

for their addresses, too, and here’s why:

1. To See If Megan’s Law Registrants Live Nearby

There is plenty of information available to the public regarding

registered sex offenders in their neighborhoods. Nearly every state

that has a Megan’s law-­type sex offender registry has an online

version that serves up the names, addresses, sex-­offense history,

and even photos in many cases, of convicted sex offenders.

Googling your address and “Megan’s law”-­-­ or even your city or ZIP

code and “Megan’s law” -­-­ will turn up a quick list of nearby registrants.

2. To Find Crime Reports and Data For Your Home and Environs

City, county and state law enforcement agencies all post crime data online, but a Google search for your address

or city and “crime reports” is most likely to turn up your local police office’s crime map. Or, you can check

out Trulia Crime Maps for a crime map of recent incident reports for the whole city, ZIP code or neighborhood. The

map is color-­coded to represent the intensity of crimes in each area.

3. To Detect Scammers Trying to Rent or Sell Your House

Internet scammers have taken to ripping off home information

and putting together fake listings offering other people’s

homes for rent or lease-­to-­own. They often list the

home on extremely cheap and easy terms, then ask the

would-­be-­buyer or tenant to please wire or send the deposit

money overseas. These scams often come to light only after

the homeowner or current resident notices bargain-­hunters

checking out the place. If you start getting an inordinate

amount of foot traffic to your home, or someone knocking on

your door asking if they can see the place, you may want to

Google your address. If you find a fraudulent listing, identify

yourself as the home’s rightful owner and ask the offending

site to take the scam posting down -­ stat!

4. To See What Your Neighbor’s Place Sold For and

Possibly Lower Your Property Taxes

In real estate, the value of your home is largely driven by

what is similar or how much nearby homes have sold for. If

you search your address, Trulia will first surface some sort

of image of your home, a map, the basic property details

from the public records (see No. 5, below), and recent sales

data for your own home before listing out the comps -­

homes with similar numbers of beds, baths and square feet

near yours, and what they recently sold for. If you see a pattern

of homes selling for lower than your home’s assessed value,

you can use those comps to petition your county to

lower your own property taxes!

5. To See Your Home’s Property Records

Your home’s records online are populated from the public records about your home, which are either so old they

don’t include upgrades and additions, or they’re just flat out wrong. If you Google your address, or search for it on

Trulia, and find that your home’s description is riddled with errors, contact your county public record agency to

correct them and edit your home facts on Trulia. This is particularly important if you’re planning to sell your home

anytime soon.

6. To See Your Home’s Google Street View

When you’re selling your home, it’s especially critical to see

everything that prospective home buyers will see. That

means checking out how your home’s listing looks on all the

online real estate sites (yes, even on Trulia), checking out the

flyer -­ even stopping by to check out any staging your broker or

agent did if you’ve already moved out. One thing even the most

savvy sellers don’t check out is the way Google Street View

depicts your home. If you’re about to sell your home, and you

notice that the street view is outdated, mention it to your agent,

and ask them to make a note of that fact in the listing information.