Transaction Process
New York real estate transaction guide from offer to closing
A practical guide to the New York real estate transaction process, including offer, attorney review, inspection, mortgage, appraisal, title, and closing.
Start with the decision you need to make
New York real estate decisions should not start with listing photos alone. A useful review begins with your budget, timeline, preferred location, monthly carrying cost, property type, and the tradeoffs you are willing to accept.
A practical guide to the New York real estate transaction process, including offer, attorney review, inspection, mortgage, appraisal, title, and closing.
Look at the real cost, not only the asking price
Taxes, insurance, common charges, maintenance, commute, repairs, financing terms, and closing costs can change the real affordability of a property. These details should be compared before you decide whether a listing or pricing strategy truly fits.
Use property condition as part of the strategy
Roof age, basement moisture, electrical panels, heating and cooling systems, drainage, windows, permits, and visible maintenance can affect negotiation and future cost. Buyers should understand those risks before an offer. Sellers should decide which concerns to address before listing.
Key points to review
- Clarify budget, timing, location, property type, and decision priorities before moving forward.
- Review property condition, repair risk, inspection timing, and negotiation exposure early.
- Keep the next step practical: what to verify now, what can wait, and what should be documented.
Practical next steps
- The goal is not to rush a decision. The goal is to make the next move with enough context to avoid preventable surprises.
- A short consultation can turn a broad search into a clear sequence of practical next steps.
Common questions
When should I ask for guidance?
Early. A short conversation before touring, listing, or making an offer can clarify the right order of decisions.
What should I prepare first?
Prepare your budget, preferred locations, timing, property type, and any concerns about condition, repairs, or monthly cost.
