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Every few years the housing market rewrites the rules, and buyers who learned the last set of rules show up unprepared for the new ones. Right now, the rules have changed more than they have at any point in a generation. The buyers who understand that are finding deals. The ones who do not are making expensive mistakes.

Home prices at the national level have held close to their peaks despite a sharp rise in mortgage rates. The reason is supply. The locked-in effect has kept available inventory at historically low levels in most markets, which means the correction that many analysts were expecting simply did not materialize the way the data suggested it should.

Affordability, by the standard measure of what share of median household income goes toward the monthly payment on a median-priced home, is near its worst level since the early 1980s. That is a real problem, and it is not going away quickly. A market can stay unaffordable for longer than most buyers expect to wait. What it means, practically, is that the buyer who can close confidently has more leverage than the headline numbers suggest.

Your credit score affects your rate more directly than most buyers realize. Moving your score up by 40 points before you apply can be worth more than months of rate watching. If your score has room to improve, talk to your loan officer about specific steps to raise it before you apply formally.

If the report surfaces findings that change the financial picture of the deal, you have real choices, and walking away is a legitimate one of them. You can ask the seller to repair specific items before closing. Signing off on a failing roof or a bad HVAC system is not the same house you made an offer on.

A seller with a specific need will sometimes take less money from a buyer who gives them what they actually want. The buyer who calls the listing agent before submitting, asks what matters to the seller, and builds the offer around that information wins more often than the buyer who simply goes the highest.

The timing question, whether to buy now or wait for prices to pull back, is the one that trips up more buyers than any other single factor. No one consistently times the real estate market. The more useful question is not whether now is the right time in the abstract; it is whether you can carry the payment without strain.

Buyers who take the time to prepare before they start looking tend to find that the market is more navigable than the headlines suggest. Before you commit to a direction, browsing homes for sale and market resources can sharpen your picture of what is actually available in your price range.

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