Killeen Fort Hood Real Estate

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Fort Hood Sees Upswing in Home Sales with Return of First Cavalry Division

Wow!  What a day it's been in real estate here at Fort Hood!  I'm taking a little break to give you a quick market Ringing Phonereport.  

Phones are RINGING, RINGING, RINGING and emails are flying between here and Iraq  as the 1st Cavalry Division rotates back to Fort Hood a plane load at a time.  We are GLAD to see you guys and girls back safely!

The most popular price range right now seems to be under $140,000, with a concentration in homes under $110,000.   Out of 371 homes listed as "under contract" waiting to close, almost half of those (156) are under $110,000.  Search for YOUR Fort Hood Home right here. 

Prices are steady, and sellers are paying buyer's closing costs, as well as for other settlement expenses such as prepaid reserves, the property survey, and the title insurance with a full price offer.   With conditions like this, buyer's RULE!

ChartInventory is excellent right now, and interest rates are still very good!  (VA is 6.0% today  for a VA loan with -0- points and -0-origination fee!).    If you would like to buy a home and need to be prequalified, shoot me an email and we'll get it done.   There's no fee for that or any of my team's services when we help you purchase a home!

 

Contact Mary Ann Daniell, Fort Hood Realtor                  

Insider’s Look at Fort Hood Area School Districts

High School StudentsIf you have school age children, or you are concerned about resale value when you leave the Fort Hood area, your home buying decision is often based on the quality of the schools.  Here's some  information that may assist you with your house hunt based on area schools.

Bookmark this page to serve as an information resource for Fort Hood Area schools:

1.  Texas Education Agency

2.  Killeen Independent School District

3.  Copperas Cove Independent School District

                                                                                4.  TEEM Program for Early Childhood Learning

The Texas Education Agency provides all the testing information for every school district in Texas, broken down by campus and grade.  This is your best resource for finding which schools are high performing and which campuses may need a push to improve.

The Killeen Independent School District has approximately 30 elementary schools, 11 middle schools and 4 high schools.   More new schools are in the planning stages due to tremendous growth in the area.

Harker Heights schools are part of the Killeen ISD, as are the elementary and middle schools on Fort Hood and in Nolanville.

Copperas Cove Independent School District has 6 elementary schools, 2 intermediate schools, 2 junior high schools and one high school.

Teacher and ChildrenThe TEEM program is a new teacher/mentor program for early childhood classrooms and provides exceptional training and teaching strategies for teachers of 3 and 4 year olds.   The program is in place in all PreK classrooms in Copperas Cove and in a few classrooms in the Killeen ISD.

Hope this was helpful, and if you have questions, give me a call.  I'll be glad to help!

Mary Ann Daniell is a realtor, licensed to practice real estate in Texas.

From Iraq to Fort Hood - Buying a Home with Less than Perfect Credit

Working togetherWith all the talk about the condition of the housing industry, the mortgage industry, and about the impossibility of buying a home with less than perfect credit, I'm going to blow you away with this great story about what a determined couple and their realtor and mortgage lender accomplished via fax, phone and email from Iraq!

Here are the characters in this story:

First Time Home Buyers:  Jill and Joe (names have been changed)

Realtor:  Mary Ann Daniell

Lender #1: (shall remain nameless, but is a HUGH well recognized national name in the mortgage business)

Lender #2:  Local Fort Hood area lender who knows HOW to work with active duty and retired home buyers, meeting their unique needs.

I got a call from Joe who is deployed to Iraq.  Joe will be back to Fort Hood by early 2008, and he and his wife want to buy a home now.    Joe asked me if he really needed a realtor to help him buy a home.  He specifically asked WHY he needed a realtor.

After explaining everything that I do for my clients, I told him that there is NO CHARGE for my services.  He was surprised, to say the least!  I explained to him that the seller of the home he buys pays my fee for bringing a buyer for their property.  He had no idea that agents who help buyers do not usually charge a fee.

Once he realized having a licensed realtor represent him was a good thing (as Martha would say), he asked me to call his wife and talk with her.

Jill was home and waiting for my phone call.   We had a great visit on the phone and set an appointment to start looking at homes in a few days.   Meanwhile, I asked Joe to contact his lender and have them send me his prequalification letter and his Good Faith Estimate.

After reviewing the documents, I had some reservations about just what the lender was up to.  I asked Joe to call the loan officer to give her permission to talk with me about his loan terms.

lender disguiseOnce I got her on the phone, we talked a bit about the charges on the Good Faith Estimate.  She told me they always charge a 1% origination fee AND an additional 1% fee for a VA loan .

I nearly fell out of my chair!  I have NEVER, EVER, heard of a 1% fee for a VA loan in the Fort Hood market. 

When I asked her if she was willing to waive this fee for my buyer, she said NO, that they always charge that fee on VA loans.    Her attitude gave me a brief visual image of someone in a cubicle hiding behind the telephone, twirling around in her chair, getting a good laugh at my expense (so she thought).

Well, folks, I have been working with VA loans here at Fort Hood for over 8 years, and I know from experience that I have never seen a lender charge a 1% VA fee when it comes to these loans.   In fact, I've done VA loans with this national mortgage company for many years, and have never had them try to pull this on a borrower. I think she dreamed this up to pad her own pocket. (Although I know local lender may charge a fractionally higher interest rate and not charge any origination fee)  I could say a lot more about this, but will save it for another post,

Once the steam stopped spewing from my ears, I emailed Joe and let him know that I didn't think that his loan officer had his best interest at heart, and asked him if he would consider talking with a local Fort Hood area  lender.   Joe called me right back back to get the lender's phone number, and within an hour, had been prequalified for his loan at a great rate, and NO ORIGINATION FEE and NO bogus "VA Loan Fee".   He was one happy camper!  The move to the other lender saved him about $4600 in loan fees, and the local lender's regular closing fees were much less than what the national lender quoted him on his Good Faith Estimate for even more savings.  He was impressed with the professional service and straight talk he received from this local lender, and thanked me more than once for helping him get a better mortgage deal.

WHEW!  One crisis solved! 

Jill and I had gone out to see some homes, and we did find the PERFECT home!  It was one she and Joe had not even considered because of the smaller size, but it WAS in their preferred subdivision.  I knew it was a FANTASTIC home that was well maintained and had some great upgrades.  The minute Jill walked in, all she could say was WOW, I LOVE IT!

We wrote up the offer and it was accepted.   Jill hired an independent home inspector to give a report on the home,  We negotiated the minor repair items found in the inspection, and the seller agreed to fix everything.  All is well and everyone is happy to have this phase behind us.  

 But...  Crisis #2 is on the horizon...

The lender had noted that there were some credit issues on Joe and Jill's credit report that would have to be cured before they were fully approved for their loan.  This means that items that Joe said had been paid off were still showing as negative comments on his credit report.    NOW WHAT DO WE DO??    He's in Iraq.   She's here.   They go into panic mode! 

What we do is identify the problem and plan a solution!   The lender worked with Joe on the phone and on email to tell him exactly what she needed from him and from his creditors. 

Joe and Jill both worked together to get the lender what she needed, but it seemed that one particular issue just could not be fixed.   Jill was heartbroken that she wasn't going to be able to get her beautiful new home, and Joe was irritated that the bill he KNEW he had paid off was still showing on his credit report.

The lender and I told both of them if the bill was paid, there was a paper trail somewhere (or an electronic trail these days).  If the creditor was unwilling to help him, he could contact his bank to find proof of the payment.  Joe worked on this all the way from Iraq, while I kept encouraging Jill to not despair.  

These issues take time and perseverance to fix, and I had a good feeling that Joe would get this cleared up, and HE DID!  All the way from Iraq, amazingly, he managed to solve the last issue, and they were approved for their loan.

Fort HoodSo, even though this was a rough experience at the beginning, Joe and Jill ARE going to close on their first home in about a month.  By not throwing up their hands, this couple, their realtor and their lender made their dream come true.  Special thanks should go to the lender who worked so hard to make all this happen.

 

If you want to buy a home, don't give up at the first evidence of a possible problem.  Don't say "well the mortgage market is a mess" or "a realtor says I can't buy a house".    Keep hammering away at it until you have exhausted every possibility.  Question everything and everyone who can possibly help you find the answers to solving what stands between you and owning a home!

 

 

 

 

 

Duty, Honor, Country at Fort Hood and Around the World

Fort hood FreedomIn some areas of the country, seeing men and women in uniform may be a unique experience.  Having lived here in the Fort Hood area all my life, these men and women in their ACU's ebb and flow through every part of my daily life.  I see them in the grocery stores, school rooms, at the mall, in the restaurants.  I see them in their cars, making their early morning drive to PT on post, and I see them wending their way home in the evening, after putting in a long day of service to the USA.

It goes without saying that most of my customers and clients are active duty soldiers.  I hear bits and pieces about their travels, about where they've been and how long they were gone.  But I never hear complaints in any way, shape or form about the conditions they faced, the fear they must have experienced, or the long separation from family and friends back home.  They are strong.  They are heroes who deserve respect, no matter what your particular politcal views.

Fort HoodNext time you see a soldier, honor him or her with a thank you.   They have earned it more than you can imagine.

 

Photo courtesy of US Army, Fort Hood, Texas.