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All Forum Posts by: Russell Strayer

Russell Strayer has started 2 posts and replied 4 times.

Post: Do I need a survey?

Russell StrayerPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
  • Posts 4
  • Votes 5

@Billy Rogers. Yes, get a survey by a local, competent insured surveyor. I am a Licensed Surveyor in the State of Florida and educate clients on a daily basis. Look at a survey like a title commitment. It is an insurance policy. If anything goes wrong with that piece of property that you just paid a lot of money for, you have a certified document by a licensed insured professional guaranteeing otherwise. You will also know where your actual property corners are and what they are and you will know where any encumbrances are and where the current improvements fall relative to your property lines and any easements. Also, when you do decide to put on an addition or add anything to your property you have a plan to submit to the local municipality, contractor or engineer to help expedite the process. It will also help prevent any future issues with your neighbors and potential law suites over fences, etc. For the price of the survey, it would be foolish not to get one. Russ

Post: Importance of Surveys and Flood Insurance Elevation (FEMA) Certificates

Russell StrayerPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
  • Posts 4
  • Votes 5

I am a professional surveyor here in Southwest Florida and work in a family owned company. I am on bigger pockets interested in real estate investing and have came across a few recent posts questioning the need for a land survey so have decided to make a post. Please feel free to chime in or message me any questions, I would like nothing more than to help just one person from making the mistakes we see on a daily basis.

The value of real estate in the general public's eyes has diminished to almost nothing in the recent years, in our experience. With technology increasing substantially and people able to see those "invisible lines" on GIS websites they no longer care to see a hard copy of a survey or even care to ask where the property corners fall. It is an education process that we conduct on a daily basis to realtors and home buyers and the majority of them still do not care about anything but checking off that box to close. They all think we cost too much and they do not understand what we do when it comes to conducting a proper boundary survey with the benefit of a title commitment. 

In the state of Florida there is a thing called a surveyors affidavit. It is used in refinances and real estate transactions where the seller signs that no changes have been made to a survey that was previously completed (sometimes 5+ years ago). The problem with this is that if you get a thorough and complete survey by a capable LOCAL surveyor, you will see a note in the survey that only the parties certified have rights to it and that the survey is only to be used for that particular transaction. It is appalling that people do not hesitate to sign a surveyors affidavit to get by without having a new survey complete! Where is the title affidavit?!? Essentially it is the same thing. Surveyors are an insurance policy and it is very important for real estate professionals aka realtors to point that out. Remember that the cost of a survey is negligible to attorney costs and litigation that can occur over property and in the end you will have a piece of mind where your boundary lines are, where your property corners are and most importantly where the improvements sit on your lot relative to easements and other encumbrances.

When it comes to FEMA flood elevation certificates, just get them complete (again, by a capable LOCAL surveyor). We see clients on a weekly basis that are paying way too much on flood insurance. On a general note, if you are paying more than $1,000 a year on flood insurance you need one complete. If you have one already, try getting another company to do it or see if a local surveyor will take a look at it and see if there is anything they can do to help. Insurance agents rarely understand what you need to do to reduce the cost of flood (they too are guilty of just checking boxes without understanding what they are doing or the affects that it may have). Don't get me wrong, some are very good but in our experience most have no clue. It is up to the home owner to ask the questions about what they can do to reduce the costs of flood insurance. Most of the time they can put in flood vents or retro-fit their house to reduce the costs of flood with minimal costs. Also, insurance companies will refund you for overpaying if you can prove that your house is not rated correctly by an elevation certificate. Engineers and sometimes surveyors can do LOMA or letter of map amendments or flood studies to prove that your house is out of a flood zone or above a base flood.

Ask the questions and do the research, find the knowledgeable insurance agent that has experience with flood insurance, or the realtor that has some experience in boundary law and values property they are helping you purchase. Remember, in the long run it is cheaper to hire a good surveyor that it is a bad one or one at all. Russ

Post: Land Title Surveys

Russell StrayerPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
  • Posts 4
  • Votes 5

@John Veatch I could not agree with you more. I am a professional surveyor here in Southwest Florida and work in a family company. I am on bigger pockets interested in real estate investing and happened to come across your post. The value of real estate in the general public's eyes has diminished to almost nothing in the recent years, in our experience. With technology increasing substantially and people able to see those lines on GIS websites they no longer care to see a hard copy of a survey or even care to ask where the property corners fall. It is an education process that we conduct on a daily basis to realtors and home buyers and the majority of them still do not care about anything but checking off that box. They all still think we cost too much and do not understand what we do when it comes to conducting a proper boundary survey with the benefit of a title commitment. It is appalling that people do not hesitate to sign a surveyors affidavit to get by without having a new survey complete! Where is the title affidavit?!? Essentially it is the same thing. Surveyors are an insurance policy and it is very important for real estate professionals aka realtors to point that out. Remember, in the long run it is cheaper to hire a good surveyor that it is a bad one or one at all. Russ

Post: Hi from Southwest Florida and looking for startup advice

Russell StrayerPosted
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Sarasota, FL
  • Posts 4
  • Votes 5

Hi! I am a new member from Southwest Florida! Born and raised with lots of local knowledge and looking to get into real estate investing!

A little about me... I purchased my first home two years ago through a short sale. The process was atrocious, it took me over 8 months to close, but was well worth it. I bought my first house for around $90,000. The original contract price was $125,000 and my banks appraisal (bofa) came in low and the sellers bank took it. It is a 3 bedroom 2 bath and has a detached mother in-law suite above a 2 car garage with a full bath downstairs and upstairs. I now rent the front and live in the rear. The front rent covers my mortgage and some.

I just refinanced my house (the original mortgage was fha) to get some equity and get out of the fha. If the appraisal comes back with what we are expecting it to, I am looking to use that equity ($40,000) to purchase my first investment home. I am on the fence with flipping or buying a rental property.

Anyone have any pointers or knowledge they are willing to share? Anything helps!