Posts Tagged “Retirement Homes Communities in Halifax”

Tech Tips For Seniors In Search Of A Real Estate Agent

Tech Tips For Seniors In Search Of A Real Estate Agent
Tech Tips For Seniors In Search Of A Real Estate Agent

If you are ready to sell your home, you may look back upon previous experiences you had with real estate agents and anticipate plenty of paperwork will be part of your current transaction. Your real estate agent is likely to use tools that are based on technology while relying less on the tried-and-true techniques you remember from the past.

Not surprisingly, technology plays a big part in modern real estate practice.

Your home is online

As in the past, real estate sales occur after prospective buyers have seen your home and decide to buy it. Rather than relying on classified ads in the Sunday newspaper, most buyers search properties online anytime day or night. Instead of physically visiting numerous properties, they view visual tours of many properties before selecting ones that they want to see in person.

Your agent may hold a “broker’s open” so that other area agents can view your home, and host open houses for the general public. Some sellers view the lack of open houses as inaction on the part of the agent. In reality, agents set up individual showings for interested prospects who saw your home online or heard about it from their agent.

Your agent may communicate with you via email or text

In selecting your agent, you should verify how he will communicate with you. Your agent may call you on the phone but will notify you of showings with a quick text or email message. If you are not savvy you need to make sure you are an agent that knows your preferences.

Many seniors have computers and printers that sit unused in their homes. If you have been meaning to improve your tech skills, now this is a great time. Let your grandson or niece give you some lessons on basics such as how to send and receive emails and texts, open attachments, and scan documents.

Real estate is much closer to being paperless than in the past

Your computer skills will come in handy as your agent may even scan documents and send them to you via an email attachment. You may be required to sign documents by typing your name in an online form on your smartphone, tablet, or laptop to complete the transaction without meeting the other party face-to-face.

Request Your Complimentary Copy of My “Preparing to Downsize” Report

Make Sure Your Agent Is On The Same Page

These modern ways of conducting real estate are both effective and efficient. it is very important for you to have a discussion with your Realtor about selling your property and communicating the progress.

As an agent in Halifax who often works with senior home sellers, I will discuss with you in the first meeting how I will go about selling your house. We will develop a mutually acceptable way to communicate about how things are going.

Call Me For Real Estate Success

When you are buying or selling a home, don’t waste time. Give me a call for experience, market knowledge, correct pricing. I have a sincere interest in helping you fulfill your real estate goals. If you are ready to sell your home for maximum value start by clicking here and scheduling an appointment.



Roy Thomas SRES® (Senior’s Real Estate Specialist) is a REALTOR® with Sutton Group Professional Realty. Since 1991, Roy specializes in helping retirees with their later in life real estate transactions. Call Roy at 902-497-3031 or contact Roy here

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Should A Downtown Halifax Condo Be Your Next Move?

Make Your Next Halifax Home A Condo

Retiring soon and planning on selling your long-term home to embrace condo living? Hoping to live downtown? If so, your timing is impeccable as condominium developments are hot in Halifax at the moment.

The Rise Of Downtown Condos In Halifax

Just a few years ago, condos were a minor development on the urban landscape. Since 2012, the number of new multi-unit construction projects in the downtown area has skyrocketed. About 2,000 units are expected to be on the market by 2018. Most of these are expected to serve the growing single dweller population of Halifax. In 2011, 29% of occupied dwellings were one or two-person single-dwelling households.

The condo building boom is in part a result of a conscious effort by the city of Halifax. Promoting downtown living by overhauling outdated regulations in its 2009 HRM by Design plan. This permitted taller buildings and quicker planning application approval. The condominiums will potentially increase the number of people living in the city. New residents will be well served by the existing infrastructure of schools, sewers, and other services.

Request Your Complimentary Copy of My “Preparing to Downsize” Report

Who Is Buying The New Halifax Condo Builds?

Who is buying these units? Three diverse groups are typical buyers. Empty-nesters, young professionals, and parents of college students are purchasing investment housing. Many of the units offer desirable amenities. Along with proximity to a culture that is particularly appealing to seniors. Seniors want to continue a vibrant active lifestyle without the hassle of carrying for a big house.

Many upscale properties include stainless steel and marble kitchens and other in-suite luxuries. With an indoor pool, high-end restaurants nearby, and luxury shopping. If you enjoy being in the center of things, these new condominium units offer an inviting way to do so.

Brisk Sales Characterize The Halifax Condo Market

While the units may not appeal to all seniors, demand for the units has been brisk. The sales indicate pent-up demand for downtown housing. A recently announced condo development sold 80% of its units the opening weekend and sold 90% within five weeks. Prior to the recent building, there were limited options to live downtown. The goal of HRM is to increase residential density downtown by 2034. As a result, 25% of citywide development will the in the downtown area.

Furthermore, with more people opting to buy condos, the rental apartment vacancy rate increased. If you do not want to purchase another dwelling after you sell your home, you will find many desirable rental options as well.



Roy Thomas SRES® (Senior’s Real Estate Specialist) is a REALTOR® with Sutton Group Professional Realty. Since 1991, Roy specializes in helping retirees with their later in life real estate transactions. Call Roy at 902-497-3031 or contact Roy here

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Understanding The Uniqueness Of Condo Ownership

Interested In Buying A Condo? Understanding The Uniqueness Of Ownership

Even if you are an experienced homebuyer who has purchased several properties in your adult life, you may be unprepared for the experience of buying a condo. Although the net result of the process is putting you in a new home, there are unique things to consider when you buy a condominium in Halifax. It pays to have an experienced realtor by your side that can educate you on what is different about buying a condo and help you find a property that will meet your current needs.

Considerations in Buying A Condo – Monthly Fees

If you are a Baby Boomer or retiree, a condo unit can give you the satisfaction of homeownership without some of the maintenance. Whether you buy a condo in a high-rise building or a rancher-style unit, you pay an association fee that covers maintenance for common areas. The monthly association fee is only one of the costs involved in your purchase. Before deciding which condo you want to buy, you need to consider both your monthly fees and your out-of-pocket upfront costs. Include both closing costs and other expenses to make sure that the home is within your budget.

Condo fees vary widely, depending on what they include and where the condo is located. Some may include basics, such as roof and building and lawn maintenance. Also, amenities such as a pool or gym, parking, party rooms, or even basics such as heat. The more the fees include, the more costly they are, so they can range from a few hundred dollars a month to well over $1,000.

Upfront Costs Of Ownership

Your closing costs are likely to include:

  • Mortgage broker or application fee
  • Bank appraisal fee
  • Land transfer tax
  • Legal fees
  • High ratio mortgage insurance fee
  • Prepaid tax reimbursement
  • Prepaid condo fee reimbursement
  • 2 months of condo fees

For new units, you may also have to pay:

  • Harmonized Sales Tax (HST). You will not have to pay this on most resale units unless the previous owner acquired it for business, made substantial renovations, or claimed input tax credits for improvements
  • Development charges
  • Discharge of developer’s mortgage fee
  • Prepaid occupancy fee payment

When you buy a new condo, built to your specifications from floor plans, your property first closes when you occupy the unit, but you do not become an owner until the building registers with the city, which may take about six months. During this time, you pay occupancy fees to the developer, which include simple interest in your purchase price, estimated monthly tax, and monthly condo fees.

Request Your Complimentary Copy of My “Preparing to Downsize” Report


Call Me For Insights On Condo Purchase And Ownership

To make sure you do not waste your time looking at condos that will be outside your budget, you should first get a mortgage preapproval letter from your lending institution. Armed with this information, you and your Realtor® can zero in on affordable properties you’ll love.

To make sure what you are getting into, you should first seek the counsel of an agent like myself. I have experience in selling condos and can offer you the in-depth information you need to consider condo ownership. Call me today at 902-497-3031



Roy Thomas SRES® (Senior’s Real Estate Specialist) is a REALTOR® with Sutton Group Professional Realty. Since 1991, Roy specializes in helping retirees with their later in life real estate transactions. Call Roy at 902-497-3031 or contact Roy here

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Property With An Income Suite Supplements Retirement Income

Retiring, but need more income? Concerned about the housing options for your parents who are retiring? Want to offer a separate suite for your grown children, rather than having them live with you? In any case, the answer might be to acquire property with an income suite. Throughout Canada, homes with “secondary suites” offer income potential for landlords and excellent housing opportunities for occupants.

Defining A “Secondary Suite”

A secondary suite, which may be located in the basement or adjacent to the home, may be called a granny flat, in-law suite, or second unit. Regardless, a secondary suite has a separate entrance, bathroom, kitchen, and bedrooms, and living areas. Some units sharing parking, yard, laundry, storage space, and even a hallway with the remainder of the home.

Having a secondary suite offers several advantages.

  • By renting out either the main part of the house or the apartment unit, you gain monthly income that can help subsidize your mortgage.
  • It allows you to provide for aging parents or grown children who have not yet left the nest.
  • If you travel frequently, the tenants can watch over the property.
  • If your tenants take care of the lawn or do other duties in exchange for reduced rent, you can eliminate the hassle of finding the help you need to maintain the property. As a retiree,

As a retiree, any of these advantages can help you stretch a retirement income, whether you need to meet the basics or to finance other goals such as travel.

Request Your Complimentary Copy of My “Preparing to Downsize” Report

Are Income Suites Legal?

Throughout Canada, income units have popped up in what was originally single-family property. Unfortunately, not all of these secondary units are legal. Throughout Halifax, and in many other municipalities throughout Canada, municipal zoning requirements may or may not authorize multiple units; they also have zoning requirements that determine what is required to make the secondary apartment legal.

In Halifax, municipal zoning is handled by the Halifax Regional Municipality (HRM), which is actually 21 (currently) separate community plan areas, each of which has one or more land-use bylaws that speak to the zoning for secondary apartments. Whether you are looking to convert part of your home to a secondary apartment or you are planning to buy a property with an income suite to supplement your income, you need to find out the pertinent bylaws for the zone where the property is located.

The essence of a secondary dwelling is that it could be occupied by a separate household which is “an independent and separate housekeeping establishment” even if the separate household is constituted by your parent or child. Some areas are listed as single-family dwelling zones (R-1), which in some areas can be occupied by people related by marriage, cohabitation, blood or adoption, domestic servants, non-paying guests, foster children, and up to three roomers or borders. Having an income suite would violate the law. However, in some areas of Halifax, even an R-1 property can include a self-contained dwelling unit without violating the law.

Plan In Advance For An Inlaw Suite

Although the concept of “asking forgiveness, not permission” works in some cases, violating municipal zoning laws is not one of them. If the applicable HRM prohibits income units or in-law suites, the city can order you as a landlord to restore a converted property to its original permitted use by, for example, removing the second kitchen or creating access between separate growing units. In addition, they can prohibit you as a landlord from receiving income from the rental unit.

In some cases, your lawyer can appeal for a change in the zoning or can seek a determination that your land use was grandfathered by previous law, but the process is time-consuming and costly.

Call Me If You Want Property With A Secondary Apartment

Call Me If You Want Property With A Secondary Apartment

If you want to supplement your retirement income with rent, your best bet is to look at properties where the zoning permits income suites. Renovating a single-family home to include an income suite may not be legal. Call me to see properties throughout the area that offer you the income potential of a legal secondary apartment as well as the other qualities you see in a retirement home.



Roy Thomas SRES® (Senior’s Real Estate Specialist) is a REALTOR® with Sutton Group Professional Realty. Since 1991, Roy specializes in helping retirees with their later in life real estate transactions. Call Roy at 902-497-3031 or contact Roy here

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Don’t Fall Prey To The Seven Deadly Myths Of Real Estate

Don’t Fall Prey To The Seven Deadly Myths Of Real Estate

Buying or selling the home to achieve your retirement goals? Don’t fall prey to myths and preconceived notions that plague the real estate market. Doing so at this time can slow down your progress and make the process of selling a home and buying another more of a chore than it needs to be.

Here are some common misconceptions

1. You’ll save money if you sell yourself without a real estate agent.

Selling real estate involves skills and attention to detail when listing the home, negotiating the price, and guiding the sale through the inspection and loan application phases to completion. Your Realtor® does this for a living, which reduces the likelihood of time delays due to missteps.

2. You don’t need a buyer’s agent when selecting a home

While helpful to you when showing you a home, the agent who lists a home is working for the sellers who are his primary concern. A buyer’s agent can help you negotiate the best deal on the home of your choice and even show you listings that do not even appear online.

Request Your Complimentary Copy of My “Preparing to Downsize” Report

3. You should list your home for more than what you hope to get

While bargaining is a part of the real estate process, you can out-price yourself for the market by listing too high at first. You can lower the price if your home doesn’t sell, but that keeps you on the market longer which can turn off buyers. Buyers love fresh listings! Also, if you set your own price right, you may get multiple offers from buyers who realize your home is a great deal.

4. You can plan on the market going up.

Prices in Canada have been going up, but analysts remind buyers and sellers that “what comes up must come down.” Housing prices are cyclical. The price you list for or pay depends on the market at the time.

5. You will get back what you spend on renovations.

If you have invested money on upgrades, you may sell your house more quickly and even get some of your money back, but it is unlikely that you will get more than 60 to 70% back on popular renovations such as doing major kitchen or bathroom.

6. You should renovate and update your kitchen or bathroom before you sell

It’s true that these rooms often sell a home, but buyers may not share your taste. You may be better off freshening up these spaces with a good paint in due faucets rather than spending thousands.

7. You need to have open houses on your property to get it sold.

Buyers love open houses because they are permissible evidence that the agent is “doing something” to move your property. In reality, few people buy homes at open houses. Your agent may be working behind the scenes to get your home sold through a broker’s open for other real estate agents and through online marketing.


Call Me For Real Estate Success

When you are buying or selling a home, don’t waste time. Give me a call for experience, market knowledge, correct pricing, and a sincere interest in helping you fulfill your real estate goals. If you are ready to sell your home for maximum value, the best place to start is by clicking here and scheduling an appointment.

Roy Thomas SRES is a Senior’s Real Estate Specialist and a REALTOR® with Sutton Group-Professional Realty. Licensed since 1991, much of Roy’s practice is helping retirees with their later in life moves. Roy can be reached at 902-497-3031, by email.



Roy Thomas SRES® (Senior’s Real Estate Specialist) is a REALTOR® with Sutton Group Professional Realty. Since 1991, Roy specializes in helping retirees with their later in life real estate transactions. Call Roy at 902-497-3031 or contact Roy here



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Are you a Baby Boomer Planning For Your Downsized Home

If you are a Baby Boomer planning your retirement or even a retired person with too much house on your hands, downsizing may be a hot topic in your household. Before you make a move, it is important to consider what you need. Your current home may have both possessions you can do without and spacing do not need on a regular basis, but it is important to have a good idea of your needs and before you make the move.

Where Will You Do What You Love?

Many people who want to downsize are empty-nesters who no longer have children at home. You may have turned Sally’s room into a craft and sewing room or Dave’s room into a guest room. If you need space for your hobbies or you have a steady flow of guests, you need to provide for these uses in a new home.

If you still enjoy the activities and hobbies you’ve done all your life, it is important for you to find a place to store equipment and find space to do what you like in your new place. Renting a small, nearby storage unit might be an excellent way to store equipment for camping or skiing, as well as Christmas decorations and other seasonal items. Having an extra room in your house that you can use to do projects can also serve as a guest room – or you can direct guests to a nearby motel.

Of course, if you need live-in help, or have a friend living with you, your downsizing plans must include a room and perhaps even a separate bathroom for them.

Store What Your Kids Don’t Want

As you clean up your closets, you may pack up unused clothes and gather unneeded items to sell or donate. What do you do with the boxes of old pictures and family heirlooms? Scanning your pictures, going through your family heirlooms, and dividing the photos and the other goodies among your kids can cut down on some clutter.

You may decide in some family heirlooms are not important to keep, but whatever is left can also go to a storage unit. If you have fragile items that could be damaged in very hot or cold conditions, make sure your storage spaces is climate control.

Request Your Complimentary Copy of My “Preparing to Downsize” Report

Consider The Layout Of Your New Location

In moving to the new space, you might want your new location to accommodate a valued piece of furniture, incorporate some new household items you want to acquire, or allow for you to pursue your interests.

  • Always wanted to upgrade your double bed to a king or queen sized model? Make finding a new place with a bedroom big enough to accommodate it a priority.
  • Have a large comfortable sectional couch you love? Make sure it will fit in new places you consider.
  • Love to cook and bake? An island, and plenty of counter space might be crucial in a new place
  • A gardener, inside or out? Your new place should have south facing windows for indoor plants and a little space outside to grow flowers or vegetables.

Finding Your Dream Downsized Home

In considering all you want in your downsized house, you must remember that the more nonnegotiable “demands” you place on your realtor or rental agent, the harder it will be to find a place within a limited budget. If you are able to build a new home or have an ample budget, you may be able to find what you want more easily.

If you are looking to buy or sell a house with a space that can be an income unit or separate space for parents or children, call me today. If you are ready to sell your home for maximum value, the best place to start is by clicking here and scheduling an appointment.



Roy Thomas SRES® (Senior’s Real Estate Specialist) is a REALTOR® with Sutton Group Professional Realty. Since 1991, Roy specializes in helping retirees with their later in life real estate transactions. Call Roy at 902-497-3031 or contact Roy here

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