“Only 61 53 49(!) Shopping Days Till Christmas!”
Yeah, I know: there are still officially 57 days left in 2020.
But, that’s cutting it pretty close for would-be home buyers and sellers who want to close by the end of the year.
Here’s my math:
Thanksgiving week: subtract Thursday and Friday (Nov. 26 and 27).
Christmas: subtract Thursday and Friday (Dec. 24 and Dec. 25).
New Year’s Eve: subtract Thursday, Dec. 31 (technically, a work day ” but I’m skeptical how much work is actually going to get done that day).
Total lost days: 5
Step #2: now that ” at least in Minnesota ” key contractual deadlines in residential sales are defined as “calendar,” not “business” days, subtract the weekend days adjacent to key holidays.
Thanksgiving: subtract following Sat. — Sun. (Nov. 28 — 29).
Christmas: subtract following Sat. — Sun. (Dec. 26 — 27).
New Year’s: subtract New Year’s Eve (Dec. 31).
Total additional lost days: 5
If you’re following so far, suddenly, there aren’t 57 days left in 2020 . . . they’re only 47!
Home Sale Timeline
Now, compare that with the typical intervals in a Minnesota home sale:
Buyer’s home inspection: 10 calendar days.
Lender underwriting** (including appraisal): 10-12 calendar days.
Title work: 5-7 calendar days ” more if the home is Torrens rather than abstract, or the owner is a trust or out-of-state.
Total: 27 days.
Of course, that still leaves these two wild cards:
One. How long the parties take to negotiate the Purchase Agreement.
At least in my experience, that can take anywhere from 1-2 days to several weeks, depending on how well-priced the home is; how big a gap the Buyer and Seller need to bridge; and the parties’ availability (or lack thereof) due to family commitments, work schedule(s), and holidays.
Two. Contractor availability.
If the Buyer’s inspection is uneventful . . . never mind.
But, if it turns up any issues that require contractor input ” like determining the condition of the roof, chimney(s), HVAC components, etc., then getting repair estimates ” the parties will likely need to extend the Inspection timetable.
And, just in case you’re wondering . . . no, Thanksgiving week is not a great time to find a chimney contractor (or two).
Bottom line?
Just like objects in your rear-view mirror . . . Dec. 31 is closer than it appears.
**Assumes a financed deal ” i.e., the Buyer needs a mortgage ” vs. a cash purchase.
See also, “3 Reasons to Buy a House in Minnesota in December (and One Reason Not to)“; and “Wait “Til Next Year”: Refrain of Baseball Fans, 2014 Home Sellers (?).”