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Buying land - anybody done it?

Discussion in 'BBS Hangout' started by Dr of Dunk, Mar 27, 2009.

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  1. Dr of Dunk

    Dr of Dunk Clutch Crew

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    Have any of you bought land before? Are there any gotchas or things you should look out for like possible scams or warning signs, additional expenses that most people don't expect, etc. I'm looking to buy about 5-10 acres in the next couple of years to possibly build a house on in about 10-15 years. Do you know of any good sites, forums or books with information regarding this? I'm just researching right now.
     
  2. leebigez

    leebigez Member

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    No different than buying a house. Decide where you want the land and go from there. If you have x amount, you can consider it farmland and write it off. I wish I wouldve bought some of the land in between dickinson and league city a few years back when it was availible. Now its crazy there and someone got paid big time.
     
  3. Yonkers

    Yonkers Member

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    I would say taxes are a big concern. Unless you think that the land will just sky rocket in value, I would say take the money you would have used to buy the land and the money you would have spent in taxes and up keep... invest it... and buy the land when you are ready to move forward.
     
  4. Bandwagoner

    Bandwagoner Member

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    Deed search and survey are good ideas that cost more.


    Depending on where you are buying the land it is good to have someone with cows or something on it so they will keep it up and mowed. Plus you can then claim an agricultural tax credit.
     
  5. Furious Jam

    Furious Jam Member
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    Here are two words for you: "title insurance". And as a bonus, three more words: "real estate attorney". Or, if you want to save a few grand, just roll the dice and hope it all works out for the best. But understand that if something goes wrong, you can't just return land like returning a toaster to Target, nor can you simply give it away - you're stuck with it.
     
  6. shastarocket

    shastarocket Member

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    Lol, some of those people would be my girlfriend's family!
     
  7. Dubious

    Dubious Member

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    Things to consider:

    Mineral rights

    ETJ's or who controls your development approvals and what development rules apply

    water access ie. subsidence district control of wells

    sewer access or local septic tank rules

    electrical access

    rights of way and easements

    land use controls or lack thereof for your neighbors ie. pig farms, gas wells etc.

    drainage issues ie. floodplains and runoff storage requirements

    Title issues

    MUD district and MUD taxes

    Tax designation rules (Ag or not)

    If you are out in the country, your county commissioner is a good place to start.
     
  8. Dr of Dunk

    Dr of Dunk Clutch Crew

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    Thanks for the ideas, guys - I appreciate it.

    Dubious,

    Your comments about mineral rights, water/sewer access, etc. was along the lines of what I was looking for.
     
  9. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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    As long as you're buying to build your house, I'm all for it! :)

    If you're buying to hold on to raw land, let me convince you otherwise.
     
  10. shastarocket

    shastarocket Member

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    Please convince me! i have heard good things about buying raw land as a future investment to sell later to some franchise. I feel like the opinions are biased b/c the people involved had good insight and a few lucky breaks. I feel like they were the exception, not the norm.
     
  11. Dubious

    Dubious Member

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    Back before the oil bust of '88 I used to be a Landscape Architect/Land Planner and worked on these kinds issues in Ft Bend County. There used to be Realtors that specialized in rural properties that would be pretty knowledgeable about most everything. They were usually plugged in the the County Judge and the local politics too. There probably still are some and they would be worth their %.
     
  12. MadMax

    MadMax Member

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    exception...not the norm.

    raw land is risky as hell. i'm not a believer. and i work with a group that buys, manages and turns over distressed assets! :)

    ask the people who own raw land in Galveston right now how that's working for them.
     
  13. shastarocket

    shastarocket Member

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    Point taken, don't get involved unless you know what you are getting yourself into AND have the appropriate income to absorb the risk
     
  14. codell

    codell Member

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    Have your builder look at the land and give you an idea on the clearing/builup costs.

    I only bought an acre, but ended up spending $15,000 on clearing and dirty buildup (which is almost what a I paid for the acre).

    Also get soil tests done. If you have "bad" soil, you could end up with alot more dirt work prior to building.
     
  15. Dr of Dunk

    Dr of Dunk Clutch Crew

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    Well, thanks a whole freakin' lot. lol.

    Actually I was going to buy now to build on maybe 10 years down the road. I was looking to see if I can find some cheaper acreage now in tougher times when I see people selling land and prices dropping (or it seems like it anyway - I haven't looked too seriously).
     

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