by Broderick Perkins
DeadlineNews.Com
It may be better to buy the square footage you need in a neighborhood
of larger homes rather than buying into a neighborhood of smaller
homes with plans to build up or out.
At the very least, if you decide to shop for a home you want to
expand, also shop for zoning laws that will allow it.
The purchase money you save up front on a smaller home may not
be worth the headache that could come later from building restrictions
and market conditions that leave you with a home that doesn't fit.
Shifting cash into major home improvements can have a triple pay
off -- the work will likely increase the value of your home, boost
your net worth and improve your quality of life, especially if you
need room for an expanding family.
But if you've got a case of palace envy and plan to tear down
walls or pop off the roof to create an expansive estate, make sure
you don't move into a community where zoning laws won't let your
home become your castle.
Numerous jurisdictions passed restrictions preventing so called
"monster homes" in response to the late 1990s "wealth effect" of
stock market endowed riches. Many home owners used their stock market
winnings to rebuild homes, twice or three times their original size
-- much to the chagrin of neighbors.
Today, the cost of housing is forcing many owners to consider
staying put and expanding their home, but that door may be closed.
Bowing to community pressures, jurisdictions enacted home improvement
restrictions that prevent home owners from spreading out or up too
much. Often based on the lot size, square-footage and footprint
of the existing home, the new zoning laws are designed to allow
neighborhoods to retain their character as well as prevent starter
mansions from physically over shadowing their neighbors.
Even where such laws don't exist, you must consider a major home
improvement's impact on your resale. Rebuilding or expanding a home
beyond the scope of existing homes could be financially hazardous
if you plan to sell the home later.
Major home improvements don't always return to the value of the
home the full cost of the work and even if you plan on remaining
in your home indefinitely, your heirs could be stuck with a very
large, immobile white elephant.
In the best of markets, where there's room for appreciation, improvements
are generally wise if they don't push your home's value beyond 20
to 25 percent above the current value of like homes in the community,
appraisers say.
In a tired market where there's less wiggle room, your improvements
should keep your home's value in line with the value of existing
homes.
In any market, if your neighborhood's homes have mixed values,
keep your improved home's value just below the top values. The high
end homes will help buoy your home's value, while offsetting pressure
from low end homes to sink it.
Copyright © 2005 DeadlineNews.Com -- Broderick Perkins, is
executive editor of San Jose, CA-based DeadlineNews.Com, an editorial
content and consulting firm. Perkins has been a consumer and real
estate journalist for more than 25 years. |