Sellers Area

Know Why You are Selling

If you know exactly why you are selling then it is easier for you to follow the right plan of action for getting what you want.

If you are a seller who needs to close a sale as quickly as possible, then you should know that getting the highest price possible is not one of your priorities. It does not mean that you won’t or cannot get the highest price, but it means that the price is not the deciding factor.

A buyer who can give you a quick closing time will appeal much more to you than a buyer who can offer you more money but the negotiation and closing time drag on.

It’s always good to know how low you will go, in terms of selling price. This will help to eliminate some of the offers that you find simply offensive or ridiculous. Even though you should consider all offers seriously and take into consideration the terms of each offer, sometimes, if you know the bottom line and are strict about it, you can save yourself time.

Once you know what your limits and reasons are, discuss them with your broker so that they can help you set your goals realistically. If you decide to list your home on your own, make sure you do research on the current market, and you get the proper advice you need in terms of legal issues, etc. The key is to be realistic and to know what your goals are so they can be met.

Questions About This Property

Plan of Action

  1. Analyze why you are selling – If you understand your motives, you will be able to better negotiate and to get what it is that you want, whether it be a quick sale, high price, or somewhere in the middle.

  2. Prepare your home for the buyer – Maximize the strengths of your property and fix up its weaknesses. You want the buyer to walk away from your home with a lasting good impression.

  3. Find a good real estate broker that understands your needs – Make sure that your broker is loyal to you, and can negotiate to help you achieve your goals. In addition, they should be assertive and honest with both you and the buyer.

  4. Be prepared for negotiation – Learn and understand your buyer’s situation; what are their motives? Can you demand a big deposit from them? Try to lock in the buyer so that the deal goes through.

  5. Negotiate for the best price and the best terms – Learn how to counteroffer to get maximum value from every offer.

  6. Make sure the contract is accurate and complete – Be honest with your disclosures; you do not want to lose the deal because you were lying or diminishing your home’s defects. Insist the buyers get a professional inspection. This will protect both you and the buyer.

Finding the Right Broker

Not all brokers work the same way. The most important attribute of an broker is that he/she is well connected to the real estate industry. He/she should know the market and provide information on past sales, current listings, his or her marketing plan, and at least 4 solid references. In addition, you also want to look for a broker that is honest, assertive, and one that best understands your needs.

Try to go with a local broker. They can better serve your needs because they should be more familiar with the local market conditions, local prices, and what’s hot or not in your community.

Considering Offers

When reading an offer, keep in mind that you are out to get the best price AND the best terms for you. If you focus solely on the price, you may overlook terms that could be favorable to you as a buyer.

Some terms that may work in your favor:

  1. higher-than-market-interest in a second mortgage for your home

  2. the buyer will pay for most or all of the closing costs

  3. the buyer will take care of any repairs

  4. quick close – the buyer is pre-approved , ready to close in a timeframe that best suits you

  5. all-cash deal

When reading through offers, remember to look at the whole package. Take the time that you need to assess what is being offered and if it meets your needs.

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Buying a home

Buying a Home in 2025? Here’s the Real‑Talk First-Time Buyer Blueprint

December 05, 202510 min read
Buying a Home in 2025?

Buying a Home in 2025? Here’s the Real‑Talk First-Time Buyer Blueprint

By Cari, Real Estate Success Coach & Buyer Advocate in Burbank, Toluca Lake & the San Fernando Valley


Introduction: Why This Week Matters

If you’re reading this, you’re likely asking yourself: “Can I really buy a home right now?” The housing market in 2025 is layered with challenges higher home prices in SoCal, interest rates still above historical lows, and fierce competition for first‑time buyers. But here’s the good news: you can buy, and you should try if you approach it with the right strategy.

This week, I shared five hard-hitting topics to help you reframe your mindset, tighten your budget, and build a foundation for real homeownership. Whether you’re just starting or already in motion, these are the themes that will set you apart.

Here’s a deeper dive into each piece plus how they all link together so you’re not just dreaming about homeownership, but actively making it happen.


🏡 How First-Time Buyers Are Actually Affording Homes Today

How First-Time Buyers Are Actually Affording Homes Today

Why It’s Not the Same Game as 10 Years Ago

Back in “the old days,” you might’ve saved 20% down, found a home in your budget, and locked in a low interest rate. Fast forward to 2025 in the San Fernando Valley (Burbank, Toluca Lake, Valley Glen, etc.) and things look different:

  • Home prices remain elevated.

  • Interest rates are higher than the sub‑4% era.

  • New buyers face intense competition and tougher qualification hurdles.

That means you need new tactics not just waiting and hoping. Some of the most effective strategies I’ve seen this week:

  • Down payment assistance programs: Ask about local and state programs tailored for first‑time buyers; many offer thousands toward your down payment or closing costs.

  • House hacking & ADUs: Buying a home with an accessory dwelling unit (ADU) or renting out rooms can reduce your monthly cost and speed up qualification.

  • Seller credits & negotiating closing costs: Consider asking the seller to pay part or all of your closing costs; every dollar you save helps.

  • Using retirement/401(k) funds (carefully): Some buyers borrow from or tap into their retirement plan with caution a creative option if done wisely.

  • Veteran/VA loans & special grant programs: If you or your partner are veterans, you might qualify for zero‑down financing. Plus, there are special grants for eligible buyers.

  • Shared ownership or buying with family/partners: Two incomes, one home it’s an unconventional route, but real and effective.

  • Down‑sizing your expectations (start small): Begin with a condo, townhome, or fixer‑upper; you’ll build equity and move up later.

Your Takeaway

If you’re feeling stuck because you don’t think you have “enough” turn that around. What you do have is value, income, and options. It’s not about perfect credentials; it’s about a perfect plan.

Action Step: Find one down payment assistance program or rent‑offset strategy you qualify for and schedule a call to explore it this week.


💰 Buy the House You Need Now — Not Your Dream Home Yet

Buy the House You Need Now — Not Your Dream Home Yet

The Traps of Qualifying for the “Max” vs. Buying for Life

Here’s a scenario I see all the time: You get pre‑approved for a loan amount that makes your heart race. You’re excited. Then you go house‑hunting full speed ahead for the biggest, nicest home you can afford — only to end up house poor. Big payments, little lifestyle.

In our high‑cost markets like Burbank or the SF Valley, just because you qualify doesn’t mean the house is right for you. Buying the house you need is a whole different ball game.

Key Considerations

  • Budget + lifestyle matter more than qualification number. You might qualify for a home at the top end of your budget but does it leave you with money to enjoy your life, save for retirement, or handle repairs?

  • Wants vs. Needs list. Homeowners who win create a “must‑haves” list (location, commute, safety) and a “nice‑to‑haves” list (pool, media room, huge yard). They compromise on wants so the needs fit.

  • Buy beneath your means. What if you bought a home at 80% of your approval? The monthly payment goes down, you breathe easier, and you gain flexibility.

  • Older homes or smaller homes = smarter entry. In some neighborhoods, an older home with lower taxes might give you more upside than a brand‑new, high‑tax property.

  • Multi‑family/mixed‑use options. Buy a duplex, live in one unit, rent the other that rental income offsets your payment and builds equity.

Your Takeaway

Right‑sizing your first home isn’t settling, it’s smart. It gives you freedom today and options tomorrow.

Action Step: Create your “wants vs. needs” list. Set your house budget at no more than 90% of your pre‑approval. Choose two neighborhood options where you start your search.


🏘️ Make Sure Your House Payment Fits Into Your Life

Make Sure Your House Payment Fits Into Your Life

It’s More Than Just the Mortgage Payment

When buyers focus solely on the mortgage principal & interest, they often miss the parts of homeownership that quietly eat your budget: taxes, insurance, HOA, maintenance, unexpected repairs. That’s why I talk about payment fit not just payment score.

The Ugly Truth of Hidden Costs

  • Property taxes in California can be higher than new buyers expect.

  • Homeowners insurance, especially in wildfire‑ or earthquake‑prone areas, adds up.

  • HOA or condo association fees sneak in monthly sometimes hefty.

  • Maintenance & repair: the roof, HVAC system, plumbing none of these mail you a “final bill.” They surprise you.

Metrics to Run

  • Use the 28/36 rule: No more than ~28% of your gross income toward housing, ~36% including debt.

  • More personalized: Review your full budget. If you buy this house, will you still have room to save, travel, invest?

  • Build a “reserve fund” for repairs, replacements, emergencies (roof, AC, etc.).

  • Know your loan: Can you drop PMI? How soon can you refinance if rates go down?

Your Takeaway

Homeownership should enhance your life not dominate it. When your payment “fits,” you’ll sleep better, plan better, and enjoy it more.

Action Step: Download the Home Payment Planner. Fill in all monthly costs (mortgage, taxes, insurance, HOA, utilities). If the total feels tight, revisit your target home size.


🚗 That Car Payment Might Be Costing You a House

That Car Payment Might Be Costing You a House

This One Hits Where It Counts

You want a home but you’ve got a car payment that rivals a house payment. Sound familiar? In a high‑cost market like the Valley, this is one of the biggest “hidden blockers” to homeownership.

Let’s unpack why.

Debt‑to‑Income Ratio (DTI): The Real Game‑Changer

  • Lenders evaluate your DTI, the portion of your gross monthly income that's tied up in debt to decide if you can take on a mortgage.

  • That $900, $1,200, $1,400 monthly car payment? It’s not just a car. It’s fewer dollars available for your home loan.

  • The bank doesn’t see how nice your car is just how much of your income it takes.

  • Co‑signing for someone else’s loan? That adds invisible debt for you.

Realistic Moves to Free Up Power

  • Drive something paid‑off (or nearly paid‑off) while you buy your first home.

  • Share a car if one partner works remotely or has flexible hours.

  • Avoid adding new debt (another car lease, loans) during your homebuying process.

  • Focus on debt reduction: lower/fewer car payments + more mortgage eligibility.

Your Takeaway

If you’re serious about buying a home in the next 12–24 months, treat your car like a tool not a status symbol.

Action Step: Download the DTI + Home Budget Planner. Tally your monthly debts and see how your car payment impacts your approval. If it’s too high, start planning the transition now.


🧾 Your Down Payment Is Hiding in Your Subscriptions

Your Down Payment Is Hiding in Your Subscriptions

It’s Time for a Spending Reality Check

One of the most undervalued truths I share: you already have money for your down payment, it’s just hiding in your habits. Streaming services, gym memberships you don’t use, coffee routines, ride‑shares. They all add up.

Tracking the Hides

  • Grab your last 2 bank statements. Highlight non‑essentials: subscriptions, apps, multiple streaming services, small convenience purchases.

  • Add them up. Multiply by 12 = your potential extra savings annually.

  • Example: $150/month x 12 = $1,800/year. Over 3 years = ~$5,400! That’s a meaningful down payment boost.

Smart Adjustments

  • Rotate your streaming services: Use one or two at a time rather than all at once.

  • Pause the gym or membership you don’t frequent.

  • Cook more at home, fewer take‑outs.

  • Automate savings: Every dollar you redirect becomes equity.

Your Takeaway

When you treat spending like investing, your down payment fund grows quietly but significantly.

Action Step: Download the Budget Tracker. Identify one subscription or habit you’ll cut this month and redirect that money into your home savings account.


🔗 How All Five Themes Connect

Let’s step back and see how these five topics create a cohesive path for first‑time buyers in 2025:

  1. Affordability options (Topic 1) show you that buying is still possible — even in a tough market.

  2. Buying what you need now (Topic 2) prevents you from stretching too thin and setting yourself back.

  3. Payment fit (Topic 3) ensures sustainability and gives you peace of mind.

  4. Debt management (Topic 4) removes hidden blocks like car payments that kill your buying power.

  5. Spending awareness (Topic 5) unlocks the cash you already have — you just need to redirect it.

When you follow this path, you’re not just crossing your fingers and hoping the market works in your favor. You’re executing a plan.


👣 Are You Ready to Follow This Path?

If you’re nodding along and thinking, Yes — I’m ready for those tools, then let’s make sure you have everything:

Download the First‑Time Buyer Hacks Guide (from Topic 1) to explore assistance, creative financing, and smart entry strategies.

Use the Smart Buyer Checklist (from Topic 2) to keep your home search focused.

Fill in the Home Payment Planner (from Topic 3) so your future home payment works for you.

Plug your debts into the DTI + Home Budget Planner (from Topic 4) and take control of your qualification.

Track your habits with the Budget Tracker (from Topic 5) — what you save today becomes your ownership tomorrow.

And here’s a bonus: If you’d like all five tools bundled into one download and a strategy call to walk through your numbers with me. Just DM me the word “WEEK1PACK”. I’ll send you everything and schedule a time to chat.


📲 Let’s Stay Connected

This isn’t a one‑week sprint, it’s a lifestyle shift. I’m here to guide you every step of the way with real talk, expert insights, and the resources you need. Follow me on social media so you don’t miss out:

Click the links or search Cari Pelayo Real Estate Coach to connect.
Stay plugged in. Stay informed. And let’s turn your homeownership goal into your reality.


💭 Final Thoughts

Yes! The market is tough. Yes! The obstacles are real. But you’ve got something even more important: the will to act, the willingness to learn, and the courage to start today. By committing to smarter habits, tight budgets, and strategic decisions, you’re setting yourself up not for just any home, but a home you can live in, grow in, and thrive in.

Remember: It’s not about owning the biggest house you can get approved for. It’s about owning the right house for your life, your budget, and your future.
Let’s make 2025 the year you become a homeowner.

Thanks for reading and I’ll see you on social.



#buyingahome2025firsttimebuyerrealtalkcari4homes
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Cari Pelayo

Neighborhood Realtor with Cari4Homes Team. Serving my Community. Serving divorcees navigate divorce.

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For Sale By Owner – A Good Idea?

FSBO (pronounced fizz-bo), or For Sale By Owner, is a way of selling your home without the use of a professional real estate broker. The idea behind FSBO is that by selling your home yourself, you save the approximate 6% that would be the agents’ commission.

6% may not sound like a lot, but it can add up, especially on more expensive homes. But before you run off and decide to sell your home FSBO, you must remember that to get savings like that, there must be a cost. So what’s the catch? Selling FSBO is hard. A lot harder.

Only about 10% of sellers that decide to do FSBO are successful at it. And not all of them end up saving themselves money. FSBO sellers often end up accepting a lower price for their home than they would with a broker.

There are of course other issues as well. Can you afford to make selling your home your full time job? Because for a lot of FSBO sellers, that’s exactly what it is. Do you have the time and capital to spend on the marketing, advertising, inspections, paperwork, phone calls, showings, and problems that come up when any home is sold?

Selling with a professional broker also has other advantages. A broker can get your home listed on the MLS (Multiple Listing Service) and other popular websites where not only homebuyers but also other brokers can easily find it. Professional real estate broker also have an extensive network

that allows them to more easily find a buyer.

So before you decide to sell your home yourself, thoughtfully consider just how much time and effort you can spare for selling your home, as well as how important it is that your home sell sooner rather than later.

Setting the Price

The price is the first thing buyers notice about your property. If you set your price too high, then the chance of alienating buyers is higher. You want your house to be taken seriously, and the asking price reflects how serious you are about selling your home.

Several factors will contribute to your final decision. First, you should compare your house to others that are in the market. If you use a broker, he/she will provide you with a CMA (Comparative Market Analysis). The CMA will reflect the following:

  1. houses in your price range and area that were sold within the last half-year

  2. asking and selling prices of houses

  3. current inventory of houses on the market

  4. features of each house on the market

From the CMA, you will learn the difference between the asking price and selling price for all homes sold, the condition of the market, and other houses comparable to yours.

Also, try to find out what types of houses are selling and see if it applies to your area. Buyers follow trends, and these trends can help you set your price.

Always be realistic. Understand and set your price to reflect the current market situation.

Getting the Highest Price in the Shortest Time

In order to get the highest price in the shortest time, you need to know how to market your home. The better you market your home, the more offers you will get. And the more offers you get, the more choices you have to get the price and terms you want.


The most important factor of marketing your home is pricing it right. Your price should be adjusted to reflect the market and your property’s worth. The key is to get as many people as possible checking out your fairly priced property. If your property is not priced fairly, there are

no buyers because your price is set too high.

Another important factor is the condition of your home. Make sure that your home looks ready to be sold. Fix any defects (peeling or faded paint, cracks, stains, etc.) Condition alone can sometimes prompt fast buying decisions. Not only should you fix any defects, but consider

upgrading your home by making major repairs and cosmetic improvements before selling. A nice looking home triggers the emotional response that can lead to a financial response.

Learn how to negotiate the best terms for all parties involved. Terms are another factor that may be adjusted to attract buyers. If you insist on getting your asking price, think of what you can offer to the buyers. For example, improvements you’ve made or even offering seller financing at

a lower than market interest rate on a portion of the sale price. Convince them why they should be paying the price you have set.

Lastly, get the buzz out about your home. List your house with a hot broker that ensures your house is listed on the MLS and on the Internet. On your own, get the word out. It should always be visible to passersby that your house is for sale, whether it is through signs, local advertisements or you telling friends, family, and acquaintances.

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