The Chronicle

Buying a house?

- – realestate.com

5. No compromise

"Whether it be the style, the size of the yard, the inclusion of a shed/garage, interior design or layout, sometimes couples have a mismatch on the criteria which is most important to them and occasional­ly one’s preference­s will rule out the other," Bakos says.

Bakos says couples don’t always fight about obvious or critical issues.

"Sometimes the elements which can cause friction are the ones which are hardest to explain to each other. For example, ‘gut feel’, ‘vibe’ of a house, etc," she says.

"Being able to articulate specifical­ly what appeals and doesn’t appeal can de-mystify the jargon that is often used when one person likes a property and the other can’t explain why they don’t. Continual inspection­s and shortliste­d attempts can be followed with scepticism or negativity when the other partner keeps saying no."

Psychologi­st and director of Moving Mindsets Sarah Godfrey says couples can avoid an all-out house hunting war by getting practical.

"Divide a page in two. One column is a wish list and the second is a compromise list," Godfrey says. "Start with the top three suburbs you both agree on in your wish list and then decide on which ones you will compromise on, for example, living in the same suburb as my parents may be the wish but a better house in the suburb of his parents may be the compromise.

"List the things you want – number of rooms, large garden, double garage – and then discuss the compromise.

"Decide together if this is our dream family home or a five-year investment home so we can buy the dream home."

Even the budget can be discussed in this way, Godfrey says.

"For example, I am happy to spend $10,000 more to get the right house knowing we have no expensive holidays for two or more years. If you have already talked and committed to compromise then becoming rigid and inflexible is less likely, although not always, to occur."

Setting ground rules before you start means you have boundaries to keep each other in check, she says.

"Buying a house is investing in childhood dreams of happiness, safety, and adulthood. It is a highly emotional and complex decision. We tend to get into difficulty when we let emotions determine rational thinking over what we can and cannot have in our first home."

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Australia