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Buyer's Market: Those looking for a home in Kane County can get more for their money

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Craig Schiller, owner of of Real Estaging home staging, hangs a photo in a home on Empire Road in St. Charles. The home once was sold for over $500,000 and soon will be listed for $375,000. (Sandy Bressner – sbressner@shawmedia.com)

In Leslie Ebersole’s experience, most families don’t own more than two cars or have a need for that much garage space dedicated to vehicles.

But the demand for three-car garages remains as high as ever, said Ebersole, real estate broker at Baird & Warner Real Estate’s St. Charles office.

“Some people actually need the space for a third car, but most don’t,” Ebersole said. “What they want is the space for all their stuff – bicycles, sports equipment, tools, you name it.

“And all I can tell you is that, for whatever reason, by a huge factor, it is so much easier to sell a house with a three-car garage than one with just room for two.”

Ebersole and others in her line of work say home buyers may never have a better opportunity to grab that extra garage space as well as the oversized kitchens, enhanced bathrooms and other premium housing perks.

“No one’s saying you’re going to get something for nothing,” Ebersole said. “But if you can get the credit, then this market can certainly help you get the most house for the credit that you can.”

For decades, home buyers in the Tri-Cities and elsewhere in the Chicago area bought homes with the expectation that the value of their real estate and its assorted improvements would go up.

Home prices in the Tri-Cities inflated quickly in the 1990s and early to middle years of the past decade. By 2006, the median home price in each of the Tri-Cities had surged to between $337,000 and $410,000, according to local market data supplied by the MainStreet Organization of Realtors, a trade group representing real estate agents in the Chicago area.

That confidence in a return on investment quickly cratered for many homeowners in the past seven years when years of sustained high unemployment, waves of home mortgage foreclosures and economic stagnation caused home values to plunge.

By 2012, home prices in the Tri-Cities dropped about 16 to 27 percent. The median sale price in Batavia – the price at which half the homes sold in that year sold for more and half for less – had fallen to $245,500, while in Geneva and St. Charles, the median sale price had dropped to $314,000 and $307,000, respectively.

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