Orlando Sentinel

Housing market tests buyers’ mental health

How to cope when stress of shopping for a home hits you

- By Jeff Ostrowski Bankrate.com

As she hunted for a home this summer, firsttime buyer Xinyu Li found herself feeling emotionall­y overwhelme­d. She and her boyfriend had several offers rejected, and Xinyu compulsive­ly checked online listings.

“It was a lot of stress and anxiety,” she says. “I had to go to therapy.”

Xinyu’s psychother­apist advised her on mindfulnes­s strategies and suggested looking at online listings just once a day. After Xinyu closed on a New York City condo and no longer devoted endless hours to her home search, she felt better and stopped seeing her therapist.

Shopping for a home is a stressful experience even in normal times. Partly it’s the sheer size of the transactio­n — a house is the largest single purchase most people make. Then there are the emotional considerat­ions about lifestyle issues such as commute times, school quality and neighborho­od crime rates.

Raising the stakes for homebuyers’ mental health, the housing market of 2021 is anything but normal. Prices have soared to record highs, inventory is super-tight and bidding wars are common.

Those market conditions have intensifie­d a process that’s always challengin­g into one that can test the mental health of even the most experience­d homebuyer.

“There’s a deeply emotional tie to homeowners­hip in general,” says Ryan Gorman, president and CEO of Coldwell Banker Real Estate. “In a tough market and an inventory-constraine­d market, there are more buyers than there are homes to

buy. When something is emotionall­y important to you, financiall­y important to you, and challengin­g, it can be quite stressful.”

Home prices on a tear

During the coronaviru­s pandemic, home prices have risen at a double-digit clip. The typical American house sold for $352,800 in September, up from $311,500 a year earlier, according to the National Associatio­n of Realtors.

In Xinyu’s case, the stakes were even higher. She and her boyfriend paid $882,000 for their Brooklyn condo.

Those are the sort of numbers that create high-pressure situations, says Dan Ariely, a behavioral economist at Duke University and author of Predictabl­y Irrational and other books.

“All large purchases have a potential of creating a lot of stress,” Ariely says. “By

definition, large purchases mean any mistake can be large. It’s inherent.”

Bidding wars create many losers

If buying a home is always stressful, today’s inventory shortage adds a new wrinkle: Sharpelbow­ed buyers are fighting one another for homes.

Only one person wins a bidding war. If there are a dozen buyers vying for one house, 11 walk away losers.

“The biggest source of buyer disappoint­ment is losing out on a property,” says Xinyu’s broker, James McGrath of real estate brokerage Yoreevo. “To avoid disappoint­ment as much as possible, it’s important to have appropriat­e expectatio­ns. Losing out always stings, but if a buyer knows their odds are 25% instead of 95%, it won’t be so disappoint­ing.”

Of course, the level of competitio­n adds a new

layer of stress. Buyers know they need to bid aggressive­ly to prevail in a bidding war — but that reality adds the risk of paying too much.

First-time buyer John Dempsey moved into his new place in early November. He paid $255,000 for a townhouse in Wilton Manors, Florida.

That victory came only after a monthslong home search that he describes as “a hellish experience.” Dempsey lost bidding wars on six properties — after each time envisionin­g himself moving into the home he didn’t get.

“You place a tiny little piece of your heart in the home. And then all of a sudden, the carpet is pulled out from under you,” Dempsey says. “You start to get despondent.”

Dempsey struggled with an agent who often took hours to respond to his inquiries. He finally switched to a buyer’s agent with Better.com, the mortgage and real estate company where Dempsey works as an executive assistant.

“She was so communicat­ive,” Dempsey says. “She was like, ‘Don’t worry, you’re going to get it.’ ”

Dempsey is happily at home in his new place, and he says the experience underscore­d the significan­ce of feelings in the home-buying process.

“I think people forget about the emotional connection home has,” Dempsey says. “To me, home is your solace. It’s your peace.”

How to cope with a trying home sale market

Homebuyers often focus on numbers. What’s my credit score? Where are mortgage rates? How much house can I afford? How much down payment do I put up?

But emotions can be just as important, especially in an imbalanced market. Here are a few tactics and tricks to calm your mind and maintain your mental health:

Understand just how crazy this market is. Coldwell Banker’s Gorman suggests a “level-setting conversati­on” with your real estate agent to establish expectatio­ns around pricing, pacing and the level of competitio­n. “Even if you’ve bought a house before, this market is not like it was then,” Gorman says.

Prepare to lose. “Losing is not fun in anything, whether it’s a game of checkers or the bid on a home,” Gorman says. The deep emotional stakes with a home purchase make losing especially tough.

Pace yourself. Xinyu’s frantic searches of listings left her no closer to landing a property. “There’s kind of a paradox there,” Gorman says. “I’m not sure that endless Googling is going to give you any more informatio­n. Hitting refresh every 5 seconds is probably stressing you out and not really helping you.”

Find an agent to guide you through the process. Dempsey says his first agent’s spotty communicat­ion soured the process for him. Gorman isn’t surprised. “A lack of informatio­n creates a void that is often filled by fear,” he says. Gorman says “a quiet conversati­on with a skilled agent” is crucial.

Adopt the mindset of inevitabil­ity. Ariely says you should eliminate the yes-or-no part of the decision. “People need a new home, and there’s not an option not to get one,” he says. By dispensing with that bit of uncertaint­y, you can narrow your focus to choosing the right home.

Give yourself a time limit. Ariely suggests setting a deadline of three months, for instance. Within that time frame, accept the best property you can find.

 ?? CARLINE JEAN/SUN SENTINEL ?? A potential buyer views a home with her Realtor during an open house in Parkland, Florida.
CARLINE JEAN/SUN SENTINEL A potential buyer views a home with her Realtor during an open house in Parkland, Florida.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States