Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#16
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This is great advice. My wife still talks about conversation we had with a couple in the pool when we were visiting my parents a year or so ago. Gave us a lot of great information and were nice as can be.
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#17
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Our list looked like this. - We would only look at homes listed below $xxx price, including bond balance. We had two prices, one with an existing pool, and a lower price for a home without a pool. - Home absolutely had to have a private backyard and room to build a pool/birdcage if one didn’t already exist. Kissing lanai’s were a not starter and a south/west orientation were a bonus. - Home could not be near anything we deemed undesirable, including unwelcomed noise (major road, pickleball courts, etc…), could not be on a residential road with significant traffic, and couldn’t be near something like commercial space or a sewage treatment system. - Home had to be in close proximity to what we deemed to be desirable things, including lots of both Championship and Executive golf, regional recreation centers with sports pools, golf cart accessible shopping and dining options, entertainment venues, and town squares. - Home had to be north of 466A and preferably in the greater Lake Sumter area. - The homes price had to accurately reflect the condition of the home with particular emphasis on important things like the roof, HVAC system, flooring, kitchen, etc… - We had no preference for the homes model/design except it had to have a minimum 2 bed/ 2 bath/two car garage and meet our other higher priority constraints. Based on both our timing and criteria we were pretty much limited to pre owned homes. We rented long term in the fall, retained the services of both a VLS agent and MLS realtor, and identified every home on the market that appeared to fit within our criteria (including a few homes for sale by owner). Very few of the homes that fit our criteria had a pool because of our price constraint. During the next three weeks we saw a few homes almost daily until we saw a total of close to 50 homes. Every home we visited we began our tour outside, and we never went inside almost half the homes after going into the back yard and seeing no privacy, hearing traffic, or hearing/seeing someone we found undesirable. We then reviewed our spreadsheet and made a list of only a few homes to visit again that passed our initial screening. The list was then narrowed down again to six homes. We made a couple offers that fell through, one because of price and the other because we learned the land behind the home had its zoning changed from agricultural to commercial. We crossed a couple other homes off our list after going there after dark and hanging out in the back yard and hearing traffic noise/seeing light pollution that turned us off. At the end, we made a take it or leave it offer of $10 K below asking price on the very first home we visited, with a contingency that we had 10 days to determine that a pool could be built in the back yard. Our offer was accepted and the next day I set up a meeting with a pool designer from T&D who pulled the homes plot plan and sketched out a pool design that would fit within zoning requirements. Buying the home was lots of work, but we wanted to be one and done and to this day have no regrets. At the end of the day, we got our home, built a beautiful brand new pool and birdcage, did extensive landscaping, stained and sealed our driveway, screened in our front porch, put in an overhead garage door screen, put in a new slider going to the birdcage, bought three golf carts and a used BMW convertible, and came in right at our maximum home price budget with everything. After almost 9 years we did have to put on a new roof and we will be needing a new HVAC in a couple years, but we knew that going in and it was reflected in the homes price. Hope this information and thought process helps the OP, and best of luck. |
#18
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Always best of luck to the new owners and hopefully they find the right place the first time. |
#19
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Such as?
__________________
I wish I knew what I don’t know. |
#20
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Florida room faces west
Florida room 8 ft deep wish original owner stretched it to 10 ft or more. Basically stretched house so our kitchen was bigger and garage longer. Happy with what we have and have made it work. |
#21
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I agree with the above post. Make a list of your must haves. Things you can't compromise on. i.e. Type of home and size. Size of garage, two cars plus golf cart or whatever. Regarding heat. That was one of my primary concerns. I used to perspire in New England at 75F. First, you do get used to it and as you get older even like it. Summer is a great time to visit cooler places or take tours. And it only took me 10 years in the south, to learn that a northerner always looks for the closest parking place and a southerner looks for the closest shady parking place. That lesson can apply to any activity. Remember, you can spend some time here first before you buy. Best Wishes |
#22
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We are too. Where are you tinking of buying?
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#24
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Welcome and enjoy your time in The Villages! I recommend that you do go for a visit in July. That way, you’ll find out if you “can take the heat,” as you said. I’ve seen that people feel differently about high temps — some enjoy it, others spend a lot of time in the A/C (like me)! |
#25
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My husband and I have lived here now 19 years. The first summer seemed a little hot----but there is something true about developing "Florida Blood". Now the heat does not bother us as much. We love the summers as well as the other seasons. Our lanai and birdcage faces North and we never get any direct sun. We have ceiling fans in our lanai and can be out there year around. Don't let the fear of heat scare you away. We are from Indiana, and there have been summers when it is hotter there than here. Welcome, and you will love living here.
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#26
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Great decision.
We did ours in 2019. I spent 4 days talking to as many people as possible to find negative views. I never found anyone who regreted their decision to move/retire here. I only found people who regretted working longer so they had more money to retire, only to find their health deteriorated in those extra years. After 4 days we placed a deposit on a designer lot, went home thought about it, came back 90 days later to finish up with designers only to conclude we actually hated the lot we’d originally chosen. The Villages is great though and we swapped for a different one that is PERFECT. We have brilliant neighbours which is also a massive plus. So my tips. Go look at properties at different times of the day and night. We don’t have any noise from traffic, but man does the wildlife make a racket after dark (we like that - its part if the appeal of being here). Watch GoldwingNuts videos, not just current but some of the past, then go look at the neighbourhoods from his videos to see how the areas have changed once people move in. Do your research on future developments, your perfect lot may not be on the market when your here, waiting until its comes available is well worth it. We love it here and like so many others have said, the only bad thing is leaving !!!!! One last thing. Some have said don’t just go new. One plus side of a new village is that most people are first timers and are looking for new friends. That said, if your friendly, like a chat, you’ll soon meet your neighbours and will feel at home straight away. And finally…. Ask if your village has a Facebook page. If not start one. We have around 500 people in ours who are there for you. Our organises lots of socials, puts out birthday wishes, recommends tradesmen, warns of prowlers, always has someone whose available to drive you or accompany you somewhere. Last edited by Ashley from UK; 05-05-2024 at 06:22 AM. Reason: Add thoughts |
#27
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If you are a Golfer shopping for homes in The Villages DO NOT purchase a New Home in the Southern Areas, which lack enough Executive Golf Courses. Rather, I suggest that you buy a pre-owned home in the Middle or Northern areas which have plenty of Executive golf courses nearby. Also, the Bond is usually paid off on homes in the North and Middle areas, plus you are MUCH CLOSER to Shopping & Restaurants. Golfers shopping for homes in The Villages should NOT purchase a New Home in the Southern Areas, which lack enough Executive Golf Courses. Rather, they should buy a pre-owned home in the Middle or Northern areas which have plenty of Executive golf courses nearby. Also, the Bond is usually paid off on homes in the North and Middle areas, plus you are MUCH CLOSER to Shopping & Restaurants.
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#28
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Any chance you’d be willing to share some of your hindsight?
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#29
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When we first moved here, we told or sales agent that we did not want to look at new construction. We bought a four-year-old home right in the middle of our target area. Our second home, bought four years later, was new construction. The difference made me regret not buying new the first time.
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#30
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Welcome, and good luck on the pursuit of happiness. The Villages truly has something for everyone, and you will no doubt find your slice of paradise here. And, as has been mentioned, pay no heed to the naysayers, curmudgeons, and developer-haters that occupy this and other online platforms.
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