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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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In recent months, the market has shown increasing signs of stability, with home prices increasing slightly compared to 2011.

In November, for instance, the median sale price in the Tri-Cities held steady from 2011 to 2012. And in December, the median price increased about 21.7 percent, according to data from the MainStreet organization.

“I think we hit the bottom a while back,” said Michael Parent, broker manager for the Coldwell Banker office in St. Charles. “Now we’re either holding steady or moving back in a positive direction.”

That, said Ebersole, Parent and other local real estate professionals, means many of those looking to buy – and with the ability to finance their purchase – are stepping off the sidelines and seriously looking for their next home.

And many of these buyers are discovering their purchasing power stretches further than it has in years.

Jeff Cadwallader, a real estate broker with the Cadwallader Group of Geneva, said in many instances, a buyer can expect to get anywhere from 3 to 10 percent “more house for the money” than they could have two years earlier.

He noted that a house he recently listed in Mill Creek for $291,000 had sold two years ago for $10,000 more.

“We’re seeing things like that across the board,” Cadwallader said. “Buyers are looking for deals, and they are out there.”

Ebersole noted real estate operates under a general understanding that homes that sold in the mid-2000s should sell about 30 percent less now.

That does not necessarily mean that buyers should expect to get a four-bedroom house today for the price of a three-bedroom home in 2005 or 2006, she and Parent said.

Even if buyers could obtain the same amount of financing today as they could seven years ago, that does not mean they will move up to a different housing category, the real estate agents said.

But buyers should expect to receive more extras with their purchase than they would have netted in years past.

“You’d still be within the same housing category,” Parent said. “But now you’re talking about getting that brickwork on the front, a three-car garage, a full, finished basement, or even a mini-estate lot, depending on where you buy, for the same money you would have paid for a house with none of those things just a few years ago.”


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