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    Purchased a new construction "smart" home, no internet Real Estate

    Purchased a new construction "smart" home, no internet Real Estate


    Purchased a new construction "smart" home, no internet

    Posted: 24 Dec 2021 07:52 AM PST

    I purchased a new construction "smart" home and talked with the construction manager, sales rep and Spectrum prior to closing on the house to plan to have modem delivered day one of moving in. I was told everything should be good to go and then closed and moved in. Closed at the beginning of December, turns out I won't have internet until the end of January due to them having to run lines for hundreds of homes. Do I have any recourse on this? Any suggestions on what I should do or am I SOL?

    To clarify further, this is a neighborhood with several hundred homes already, all with internet. Apparently I am part of a new "phase" and they have not run internet connections yet to my home.

    submitted by /u/Dragonfire45
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    What is considered waterfront?

    Posted: 24 Dec 2021 07:39 AM PST

    Is there a distance from water beyond which a parcel of land can no longer be reasonably called "waterfront" by a seller? If the body of water itself is visible by a 6ft tall standing human, but the nearest boundary is 130m across public land from the actual water, would one still call that "waterfront property"?

    submitted by /u/_joebocop
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    How likely is it that the "First-Time Homebuyer Act of 2021" (H.R.2863) will be passed in time for those who became first home buyers in 2021 to get the credit on the taxes they file in 2022?

    Posted: 24 Dec 2021 06:28 AM PST

    The housing market has to crash (or correct itself) eventually right..?

    Posted: 23 Dec 2021 11:29 PM PST

    I'm a 25M just here to rant about how I don't see how I'll ever be able to afford a house with the current market conditions and trends. I make above average income for my area and have been saving up a lot, but I have a wedding coming up, a child on the way and some loans to pay off. I know I'm young, but I have been looking at houses in the DC area that have gone up nearly 50% in the last 3-4 years and am extremely discouraged. If it continues at this rate, I just don't see how it will ever be feasible to own a house for anyone (not just me).

    My logic tells me that eventually all of these income and job losses due to covid will eventually catch up, building materials will go back down, and demand will even out, but I know next to nothing about real estate. What do you guys think is going to happen? How many years will it take to correct itself, and how bad will the correction be? Or is this the new norm and rentals will become the popular thing to do?

    submitted by /u/pen-h3ad
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