I will only buy a house East of my office. That way I’m driving away from sunrise and sunset.
Where I live, I would look what Internet connection speed is available at this address. A very slow connection with no possibility to upgrade can be a pain in the ass imo
Piggy-backing on that, check who your ISPs are at that address. I didn’t and then discovered Comcast had a monopoly on my area :(
Town ordinances. Some places are so strict that it’s dumb. It took me quite a while to find a town that allows people to own ducks. There are ordinances in my town against specific types of flowers(that aren’t even invasive) and you’ll get fined if you put out more than 6 bags of trash on trash day. And God forbid you regravel your driveway without a permit.
If you live in a northern clime, having your house and your driveway facing south is nice in the winter.
My house faces north and my neighbors across the street always have a nice clean and dry driveway, where mine is packed with snow and ice.
As someone who’s had both, it’s not as bad as I thought it would be. You have to keep on top of it. Don’t let snow sit for a few days. And get a good floor scraper to break up ice.
A positive to having a north facing house: my garage stays cooler in the summer.
Dogs. I’m not an anti dog person, our most recent family dog passed away 5yrs ago and when i left for work, she would howl indoors loud enough for the neighbors to hear. 5 yrs later, i’m getting my due payback. The new neighbors on both sides of me have 3 dogs each that will run to the fence and bark when I go out back and also howl when their owners are away. Several houses down there is a family with a female pitbull that shrieks when she is left in their back yard. a really sweet dog, but has anxiety issues. Normally not an issue, unless it’s the summer and all your windows are open.
Dogs and neighbors come and go, though
Drive the neighborhoods you like after it rains and see if the streets flood. Especially if there’s retention ponds nearby. I found out the hard way 20 years ago. Luckily it was an apartment and we could leave when the lease was up. AFTER the car was caught in 3 feet of water. 🤬
Attic/crawlspace access for wiring, we live in a time where Ethernet all over is super important in the long term and taking devices off the wifi speeds up the wifi-only clients. Also, check available breaker space as a lot of electric retrofitting is on the horizon and easy rewiring access may be a boon, especially when you might swap gas appliances to electric in the coming decade.
Especially if it is an older home, is there space in the breaker box for additional circuits.
Single-story. I’ve witnessed/lived through too many expensive and stressful upstairs bathroom and washing machine leaks. No stairs is a plus, too.
My dumb pro tip for buying a house: go and scope out the area at different times of the day before you put in an offer. Example, go to the neighborhood when you would leave for work and get home from work and see how the traffic is. Also go in the evening. Just visiting the house once in the middle of the day will not really tell you if the neighborhood is a good fit for you.
Also friday/Saturday night if you have the time. I swung by on July 4th so see what the neighborhood was like. A couple of small get togethers happening but nothing too crazy. Figured if it wasn’t too bad on a national holiday it wouldn’t get too crazy normally.
As someone who’s slightly on the taller side (5’ 11" 1.8M), I stepped into the shower to make sure the shower head was at least at the top of my head. There were a few that were at about chest level so even with an extended shower head it wouldn’t go over my head and showering would have been always annoying.
If you’re in the south or a warm climate - a whole house fan. You don’t typically find these in newer construction anymore but they can really save you a bundle on cooling costs.
Is this different than the fan built into the air handling unit or furnace?
Yes. The whole house fan blows air outdoors. Where I live in the spring and fall it’s hot during the day but cool at night. When I get home from work the inside is usually hotter than the outside. Open some windows and turn on the whole house fan and blast the hot air out. If I want it cooler than that I can then close the windows and turn on the air conditioning, but it saves a fortune knocking it down from like 80° to 75° for a penny.
Ah, got it. That probably wouldn’t be ideal in humid areas right? Our AC basically functions partially/mostly like a dehumidifier durring the summer months. Without it, the humidity in the house is unbearable.
Walking distance to things like a grocery store or heck, just a short five minute drive to something would be good. Too many housing subdivisions are a thirty minute drive to even a gas station. It makes me wonder what people are thinking in building a housing community in the middle of nowhere. In the USA walkability is under rated.
Walkability is amazing
Having wired Ethernet.
Ceiling vents! If you have pets, it keeps the tumbleweeds to a minimum. In the bathroom, it also keeps you from having that one vent that’s always by the toilet. You know, the one that’s always freezing you to death while doing your business.