Archive for the ‘Steamboat Condominiums’ Category
Wednesday, August 11th, 2010
By Susana Field
A prospective client of mine was doing his homework and closely studying the detailed property sheets of some ski in/ski out condos for sale in Steamboat Springs, CO, which I had sent him off of the Steamboat Springs Multiple Listing Service (MLS). One detail caught his eye and he shot me off this question:
MLS 126967 mentions a special assessment. Can you provide any details?
And just as quickly, I sent him my answer. Here’s the skinny:
How Special Assessments Work
A Special Assessment is a Home Owner’s Association (HOA)-approved one-time fee charged each property owner, to go towards paying for a special improvement project. Sometimes the fee is spread out over several payments, but nevertheless it is not an ongoing fee. In the case of MLS 126967,  it was to cover the cost of the exterior remodel of this particular Storm Meadows building. The MLS sheet stated that the condo owner already paid the assessment, so it won’t be a debt transfered to the future owner. This specific Special Assessment amount was $28,000.
As part of each annual HOA fee a certain amount is put into Capital Reserves for future improvements. But sometimes an HOA will vote to do an improvement even if they don’t have enough in the capital reserves fund. They will also vote to divide the shortfall due on the project amongst the owners as a one-time special assessment. Some HOAs have very healthy Capital Reserves and seldom have to do a Special Assessment. Other HOAs have voted to keep their annual HOA dues (of which the Capital Reserves portion are a part) as low as possible, and thus end up seeing more Special Assessments come their way as major improvements are needed. Some HOAs keep thier developments up nicely, while others vote both for low Capital Reserves and against Special Assessments, and their complex falls into disrepair.
How We Protect Buyers
One of the contingencies we always write into an offer is your right to cancel the contract (without loss of Earnest Money) if upon review of the Homeowner’s Association documents (bylaws, declarations, budgets and financials) and past two-year’s Annual Meeting Minutes, you find something that will not work for you. You should get a good feel for how well the condition of a property matches your personal expectations of how you’d like to see the property maintained just be strolling around the premises.
Many of the Homeowner’s Associations in Steamboat are run by professional management companies. Two big ones in Steamboat are Steamboat Resorts and Mountain Resorts. They have the staff to keep track of all financials, do repairs, maintenance, snow remeoval and landscaping. Anything they can’t do, the can interview and get bids from contractors and oversee the work. There is a particular management person assigned to each development they run. This person often goes by the title of Owner’s Representative. They typically run the Board of Directors Meetings and the Annual Homeowner’s meetings, if requested by the Board of Directors. And are the go-to person for all the home owners of that condominium development.
We encourage all of our prospective buyers to speak with the Owner’s Rep, and maybe also the President of the Board of Directors (another homeowner elected by the HOA), to get a feel for how compatible your wishes will be with the board, and to answer all your questions. All of this can be done either before or after you get under contract to buy.
But back to your main question about a Special Assessment on a specific unit. Typically the MLS sheet states whether there is a current Special Assessment and whose responsibility it will be to pay it. Then even if it states the new owner will need to pay it, it is something that can be negotiated with the offer.
Tags: consumer protection, homeowner associations, Special assessments, steamboat condominiums, steamboat real estate Posted in Buying Tips, Exclusive Buyer Agency & Consumer Protection, Steamboat Condominiums, Steamboat Town Homes | No Comments »
Monday, May 3rd, 2010
Last week I received a call from Tom Ross, the real estate editor for the Steamboat Pilot asking for some insight to the condo market. He read a report by the National Association of REALTORS stating that in the resort real estate market, condos represented about 11% of overall market share, whereas single family homes captured 71%.
Steamboat is not close to those numbers. In our local market, I have found single family residences (sfr) and condominiums represent 25% of the market, each. The reason Steamboat condos are so much higher in demand than single family homes is most likely due to the desirability of being close to the slopes (where condominiums are clustered) and the price difference between sfr’s and condos.
Tom’s call also led me to see what has happened in the condo market over the past several years with values. With the drastic change in the economy over the past several years, one would think that the price range people would be looking to purchase within would shift downward, with the economy. However, it was surprising to see that the price range in which sales are happening today has remained unchanged from the heyday of Steamboat real estate. In the past four years, the most popular price range that Steamboat condo buyers were focussed on was between $200,000 to $300,000. The majority of purchases in the first quarter of 2010 were also in that range. However, those buying in this price range were able to buy 19% more condominium for their money than in times past. On a dollar per square foot basis, buyers in the $200,000 to $300,000 price range were paying $291 per square foot for their abodes between 2006 and 2009. In the first quarter of 2010, they paid $244.
The price range that showed buyers getting the most property for their money was $400,000 to $500,000, where buyers were able to buy 43% more property (from $403 per square foot to $282) with the same amount of money as in the time period between 2006 through 2009.
If you would like to see more information about my analysis, please give me a call, toll free, at 877.970.8885. The newspaper article can be found at http://www.steamboatpilot.com/news/2010/may/02/steamboat-bucks-vacation-home-trends/
Posted in Market Trends, Steamboat Condominiums | No Comments »
Monday, March 29th, 2010
By Susana
A client of mine receives our automatic listing alerts. She’s hoping to buy a two-bedroom condominium in the $200,000 – $300,000 price range close to the Steamboat Springs ski area, and one came up that she expressed interest in. She wanted to know what the HOA fee was, as well as the average rental income for 2009.
Built in 1974, the 834 square foot condominium has HOA fees of $1016 quarterly. These are low, especially considering the HOA pays for the gas heat, cable, high-speed internet, water, sewer, shuttle service, landscaping, insurance, snow plowing and shoveling, trash, building maintenance, capital reserves and the clubhouse with its two hot tubs: one indoors and one out.
Why it’s so low is that a communications company pays the homewoner’s association about $20,000 a year to keep a small tower on the buildings’ roof. That income helps out considerably, especially since it is a small, one-building complex.
Rental Income? Well, in 2009 the Gross Revenue average for their two-bedroom units was approximately $10,576.
This amount is before the management company takes its split – which for this particular complex is 42% to the management company, 58% to the homeowner. So, had my client been the owner she would have made roughly $6134 in 2009, which would’ve paid for her annual HOA fees ($1016 x 4 quarters = $4064), her property taxes ($721.72), and probably her electric bill ($1348.28), which is the only other bill she’d have.
Still, the management company told me this is quite a change from the heyday of 2007, when the same unit would have had a Gross Revenue roughly in the $30,000s. A few things have happened since 2007: the recession has brought businesses down by 40-50%, and there are a number of new luxury condominiums which have come on the market to compete for the fewer visitors.
We advise clients to buy vacation homes for their personal enjoyment. And they can also still be beneficial for tax purposes should their accountant so advise. Cash flow and appreciation, on the owther hand, may or may not happen depending on one’s lenght of time in the market, amount of money down, etc.
Talk to your accountant. Talk to your loved ones – those that will likewise be enjoying the vacation home and their vacation time there with you. And then talk to us, and we’ll go out of our way to help you find the best property for you, at the best price.
Posted in Buying Tips, Market Trends, Steamboat Condominiums | No Comments »
Friday, November 27th, 2009
Ever since this financial crisis has hit the financial institutions practices pendulum has swung completely the opposite direction, and perhaps rightfully so. While it was almost too simple to qualify for loans, pre crisis, with no income statements or tax returns needed, now it has become increasingly difficult to obtain mortgages on certain types of properties. Nowhere is this truer than in the second home or vacation property arena. The hardest hit products are fractional ownerships (simply no one is providing lending for this product type) and resort condos. The lenders theory is that should an owner come into financial difficulty they will quit paying on their secondary or vacation property prior to allowing their primary home to face possible foreclosure. Although the reasoning is sound it is not based in fact. This would be difficult enough but the lenders are now taking it to another level. Theorizing that these resort condos cannot be funded or refinanced and more will come under short sale or foreclosure status, the assumption is that entire projects will begin to fail as the Homeowners Dues will not be paid. To be fair to the lenders, Fannie Mae and Freddy Mac will not insure these loans.
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We first noticed this disturbing trend with properties that provided amenities to guests such as shuttle service, swimming pools and on property check in desks. This has now spread to properties that have none of the above. The underwriters are getting on the internet and google the name of the project and if they find a certain percentage of short term rental units within that project they deny funding. I witnessed this first hand as a Quail Run unit that I had under contract was turned down for financing. Quail Run consists of approximately eighty two and three bedroom units. One common Hot Tub and playground, no shuttle, no on site check in but there happens to be seven units available for rent on a short term basis by Pioneer Ridge Management. Although the percentage is less than 10% the project was still denied for lending.
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Due to this current practice Buyers either have to bring cash to the table or the Seller has to be willing to provide seller carried financing. Some projects are holding emergency HOA meetings to discuss the possibility of changing their regulations to not allow short term rentals thus allowing their units to be sold via financing. This will have an adverse effect on the owners who purchased the unit understanding the rules at the time of purchase to allow short term rentals.
 As you might expect this issue is having dire consequences for people who need to sell their resort condos. From the lenders side it is a self fulfilling prophesies.
Posted in Financing, Steamboat Condominiums, Uncategorized | No Comments »
Monday, November 23rd, 2009
This morning we woke up to four inches of new snow with the weatherman calling for an additional two before the day is done. This may be the last natural snow before the ski area’s grand opening on Thanksgiving Day. But what has been tradition is that the day before Thanksgiving the ski area will be open for “Scholarship Day”, where anyone can ski but buy a lift ticket, with all proceeds going to local youth scholarships.
If you’re looking for an inexpensive Steamboat Springs condominium on the slopes, consider this one bedroom and one bath Storm Meadows condo. Consisting of 591 square feet, it comes furnished and is listed for sale at only $254,900. In a highly sought after location, the property will provide steady rental income for the new owner.
Almost directly across from Storm Meadows and on the other end of the price spectrum is a five bedroom, four and a half bath Edgemont condominium that is scheduled to be completed this ski season. At 3,900 square feet, this slopeside condo is listed at $4,956,000. This owner will enjoy spectacular views of the entire Yampa Valley and a spacious open floorplan ideal for entertaining. Edgemont owners will have a host of indoor and outdoor amenities that will bring families together both inside and outside of the home. Two finish schemes available to choose from, and two optional, professionally designed furniture packages available for purchase.
Give us a call today for more information on either of these two slopeside condominiums, or to find you something in-between.
Tags: steamboat ski resort, steamboat skiing, steamboat springs real estate Posted in Steamboat Condominiums, The Steamboat Lifestyle | No Comments »
Sunday, August 23rd, 2009
By Susana Field
There are so many properties to look at!
A gentleman and his adult son walked into our office last weekend after first finding us on this website. They were looking for a two to three bedroom condominium near the ski area to occassionally use for themselves but otherwise to earn income for them through a managed nightly rental program.
They wanted it turn-key, furnished and ready to go, and they didn’t want to spend over $400,000. Plus they had only 24 hours before they were heading back home to California.
For that afternoon and the next morning we looked at properties non-stop. Because we were on such short notice I could only get us into vacant units; thankfully for buyers (but not for sellers obviously) there are A LOT of vacant units. And still we didn’t see everything before they had to get into their car and head west!
I’m going to return to some of the units and take video to e-mail them. I’m going to run the numbers on an Investment Spreadheet we have. And I’m going to keep my eyes peeled for anything else that comes on the market.
Twenty years ago was the last time they were in Steamboat. I repeat: twenty years. “Telluride and Aspen arte too expensive”, they said. “And everything around Vail, Copper and Breckenridge is too accessible to the Denver crowds. Steamboat”, they decided, ”is just right.”
And I’m sure the turn-key, nightly-rental condominium they decide on will be “just right” too. After all, they have so many to choose from, and so many at just the right price.
But if you’re coming to town, you might want to give yourself more than 24 hours to look. There is just so much to see!
Posted in Buying Tips, Real Estate Opportunities, Steamboat Condominiums | No Comments »
Monday, July 6th, 2009
By Susana Field
So what’s been selling in Steamboat Springs over the first half of 2009?
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According to our Multiple Listing Service stats: 53 residential units sold, of which 15 were single family homes, 15 were townhomes and 23 were condos.
Let’s take a look at the single family homes first:
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The least expensive home which sold in the first half of the year was in the neighborhood called Steamboat II, located west of town. A lot of the houses there were built in the 1970s and are of modest size, so it’s no surprise that is where the least expensive purchase occurred. It was a 1771 square foot, three-bedroom home with two bathrooms and a two-car garage. The asking price was $489,000 and it sold for $450,000.
The most expensive single-family home sale was for an 8536 square foot, 5 bedroom, and five bathroom home with a two car garage, located in the gorgeous valley of Strawberry Park right outside of town.
And town homes?
The least expensive town home which sold was an older town home above town in a small development called Suncrest. It was a 1267 square foot, three bedroom, two bathroom and one-car garage home, and sold for $295,000 after an asking price of $329,000.
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The most expensive town home sold for full price at $1,995,000, had four bedrooms, three bathrooms and a two-car garage, and was located in the beautiful, new Stonewood development near the ski area.
Now condos:
Of the 23 which sold, the one with the smallest price tag sold for $180,000 ($205,000 asking price). It was in Walton Village, in what’s considered The Mountain area, to the east of the ski area. At 565 square feet it has one bedroom and one bathroom.
The most expensive condo sold for $1,118,250 (asking price of $1,245,000) and at 1836 square feet, it has three bedrooms, three bathrooms and a one-car garage. This one is located at the new Trappeur’s at Bear Lodge very close to the ski area base.
And contrary to what you might be thinking, these were not all cash sales! Most of these were bought with financing so yes, people are getting loans out there – those lucky devils!
Let us know how we can help you be one of them!
Posted in Market Trends, Steamboat Condominiums, Steamboat Single Family Homes, Steamboat Springs Real Estate - General Information, Steamboat Town Homes | No Comments »
Wednesday, June 3rd, 2009
By Doug
Have you checked out our May newsletter yet? The focus for this month was looking at the residential market in Steamboat Springs, and how it has fared over the past five years. I must say that I was very surprised in the findings. Keeping in mind the research was done on what has sold and not what is listed, the number of sales has dropped considerably, but the price at which homes, town homes and condominiums in Steamboat Springs have been purchased for has actually maintained itself quite well in these tough economic times. To see the report and all of the great information, please check out the “Monthly Newsletters” section of the “Buyer’s Toolbox” link above.
Regarding the residential market in Steamboat Springs, if you are looking for a great lot to build a single family home, consider this “Best Buy”:
Great lot ready to build with a wonderful location in Wildhorse Meadows. Walking distance amenities include the gondola, tennis center, athletic fields, Strings in the Mountains Center, and more! The lot borders open space and offers Ski Area, Emerald and Flat Top Mtn. views. In the future, Wildhorse owners will enjoy use of The Ranch House, Wildhorse Athletic Club Steamboat Country Store and trail system. All utilities are to the lot line. In a neighborhood that already has a spec home setting the standard at $3.295m, this price, of $495,000, is a great value (lot values typically represent 25% to 35% of total value).
If this property sounds like something you are interested in, give us a call / email today. We’d be happy to provide you with pictures, maps, etc and answer any questions you may have.
Tags: steamboat condominiums, steamboat homes, steamboat real estate, steamboat town homes Posted in Market Trends, Steamboat Condominiums, Steamboat Single Family Homes, Steamboat Springs Real Estate - General Information, Steamboat Town Homes | No Comments »
Friday, May 29th, 2009
It’s time to be OUTSIDE!!! So whether your plan is to rollerblade the Yampa River core trail, mountain bike Spring Creek trail to Buffalo pass, play eighteen holes of golf at the Haymaker Golf course or simply have a picnic lunch in little toots park, it’s time to enjoy the weather. On the way , no doubt, you will see people of all ages on the soccer and baseball fields, some kayakers and fishermen. As you pass them just give them a nice wave and a friendly Steamboat hello as is our custom. Steamboat Springs, after all, is all about recreation and friendliness.
Speaking of friendly, there is a very friendly deal on the market in Quail Run condominiums. It is a two bedroom one bath unit with an attached garage and 993 square feet of room for $299,900.00. This second floor unit was built in 1999 and has vaulted ceilings so it seems like there is even more room along with a gas fireplace. The next lower priced one is listed at $369,000.00 and the last one of this size to sell went for $ 392,000.00. One of the unique items at Quail Run is that all the heating and hot water is included in the HOA fees. At $313.00 per month this includes water, sewer, trash, cable TV, exterior building maintenance, exterior building insurance, lawn maintenance, snow plowing and shoveling and a common area hot tub.Â
Also included in the HOA, and something you should always ask about, is Capital Reserves. A portion of every month’s dues goes into a fund for future maintenance or improvements. Most healthy home owner associations have this valuable tool in place. Most healthy home owner associations also have a 10 to 20 year maintenance plan in place with costs and timelines. This allows you to look into the future and see what is on the horizon as far as needed repairs. The Capital Reserve account can be used to fund these improvements in a couple of ways. If it is a minor project then the entire amount can be taken from this account. If it is a major expenditure then this account can be used to leverage a loan to pay for the repairs and/or replacement of the item. This method means that there should be no major special assessments dropped on your door step. Also remember that once you own a property then you are a part of the HOA and can, and should, be actively involved in the HOA’s decision making.
Posted in Real Estate Opportunities, Steamboat Condominiums, The Steamboat Lifestyle | No Comments »
Friday, May 22nd, 2009
Spring is finally here in beautiful Steamboat Springs, Colorado! Numerous flowering crabapples have bloomed in glorious shades of white and pink over the last several days, and colorful flowers are popping out everywhere. Memorial Day Weekend marks the first of numerous events scheduled for this spring/summer season, including the Historic Places Bike Tour, the Urbane Rail Jam and the 29th Annual Yampa River Festival.
If you have been waiting for that special opportunity to purchase a second home here in Steamboat Springs, Bear Lodge at Trappeur’s Crossing is offering a great financing deal to their next 5 buyers. Secured through Countrywide/Bank of America, the introductory rate will be 2.5% for the first year, 3.5% for the second year, 4.5% for the 3rd year, and 5.5% for the remaining years of a 7 year ARM. Current prices range from $299,000 for a 1 bed/1 bath up to $1,595,000 for a 5 bed/5 bath unit. The property offers numerous amenities, including indoor/outdoor pools, hot tubs, sauna, winter on-call van shuttle service, ski valet, tennis courts, fitness center, and heated underground parking.
Please call or e-mail us for more information about this great opportunity in Steamboat – and have a great and SAFE Memorial Day Weekend. If you’re in Steamboat this weekend, stop by our office – we will be open Sat., Sun., and Mon., from 10 a.m. until 2 p.m.
Posted in Best Buys, Financing, Luxury Real Estate, New developments, Real Estate Opportunities, Steamboat Condominiums, Steamboat Springs Real Estate - General Information | No Comments »
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