Buyer's Guide · 9 Steps

Buying a home
in Boise,
without the
theatrics.

A real timeline. The order things happen. The decisions you're actually making. The mistakes I'd rather you not make. Read it in fifteen minutes, refer back to it when you need to.

STEP 01

Decide what you're actually buying.

A home is the most expensive asset for a lifestyle most people will ever buy. Before square footage, decide: Block? Commute? Garden? Garage? Walk to coffee, or quiet at 9pm?

Time needed
1–2 weeks
Decision to make
Priorities, not features
  • Write down a top-5 list of non-negotiables (commute time, schools, lot, light, parking)
  • Pick 3 candidate neighborhoods and drive them on a Tuesday night and a Sunday morning
  • Talk to people who actually live there before you fall in love with the listing photos
STEP 02

Get pre-approved (not pre-qualified).

Pre-qualification is a guess. Pre-approval is a lender pulling your credit, your tax returns, and your bank statements, and writing a number on a letterhead. Sellers care about the second one.

Time needed
5–7 days
What you'll have
A formal letter
  • Two pay stubs, two months of bank statements, two years of W-2s
  • Get quotes from 2–3 lenders — I can recommend a few I trust
  • Lock or float? Decide with the lender, not on Reddit
STEP 03

Build a real budget — not the lender's max.

The lender will tell you what you can afford. I'll help you figure out what you should spend. The number you can sleep with, not the number that gets you the house with the bigger backyard.

Time needed
1 evening
Use the tool
  • Budget for PITI, not just principal & interest (taxes, insurance count too)
  • Plan for closing costs at 2–3% of purchase price
  • Keep 6 months of mortgage payments in reserve after closing
STEP 04

Tour homes — but tour them well.

3-5 houses on a Saturday is plenty. More than that and they blur. Bring a notebook. Look at the gutter line, the slope of the yard, the neighbor's roof. The kitchen always looks good in a listing.

Time needed
2–6 weeks
Showings / day max
5
  • Take a photo of every room and the basement utilities
  • Drive by at night — different light, different neighbors
  • Ask "Why is the seller moving?" every time
STEP 05

Make the offer.

Price matters, as well as terms. Inspection timeline, financing contingencies, closing date, repair credits — sellers consider them all. We'll write the strongest offer we honestly can.

Time needed
1–2 days
What we write
Purchase & Sale agreement
  • Strong earnest money signals intent (1% of Price)
  • Keep an inspection contingency
  • Utilize my listing agent recon for best offer position
STEP 06

Inspection — bring a flashlight and a friend.

A good inspector talks for an hour and writes a report you'll actually read. We're looking for big-ticket stuff — foundation, roof, electrical, water — and the small stuff that adds up.

Time needed
3–4 hours on-site
Cost
$450–$650
  • Be there for the last hour at minimum
  • Ask about sewer scopes for homes > 50 years old
  • Negotiate credits for health, safety, and structual items, not cosmetics
STEP 07

Appraisal, underwriting, the long quiet.

Two to three weeks where the lender does paperwork and you wait. Don't open new credit cards. Don't buy a new car. Don't quit your job. Sounds obvious. It happens.

Time needed
21–28 days
Your job
Hold steady
  • Respond to lender requests within 24 hours
  • Keep all financial activity boring and predictable
  • If the appraisal comes in low, we have options — don't panic
STEP 08

Closing day.

Bring ID and a cashier's check (or wire receipt). Sign a stack of paper. Get the keys. The whole thing takes 45 minutes if everything's been done right beforehand.

Time needed
45–60 min
What you leave with
Keys
  • Final walkthrough up to 3 days before closing
  • Bring photo ID, all signers present
  • Wire instructions verified by phone or portal, never by email
STEP 09

Move in. Your portal opens.

The day you close, your client portal goes live. Trusted contractors, your property record, a maintenance calendar, the move-in checklist. I'm a text away — for the bike paths, the plumber, the next house, all of it.

Time needed
Forever
  • Change the locks. Always.
  • Find your water shut-off before you need it
  • File the homestead exemption (Idaho Code §63-602G)

Ready when you are.

No pressure pitch. Tell me what you're looking for — even if it's a year away. We'll start with a walk.

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