
6 June 2016 | 26 replies
I guess I'm biased though, here in Florida you could buy 11 terrific SFH for that price.

15 February 2018 | 9 replies
I may have confirmation bias here, but I'd much rather take my time looking through a vacant property than rush through because tenants are home and it's awkward.

11 May 2019 | 41 replies
I would say Cleveland, Ohio but seeing as I live here & sell Cleveland real estate that would be an incredibly biased opinion.

6 March 2018 | 3 replies
Hey @Yash BajpaiFull disclosure, I'm bias because I'm a broker, but ALWAYS have your own agent.

18 September 2017 | 8 replies
In my experience, these agencies are just as lazy and biased as some of the complaints.

5 October 2017 | 7 replies
@Baris Berk Lots of people have hindsight bias exacerbated by a misunderstanding of the 2008 Financial Crisis that drive them to expect when RE prices get to high the bottom drops out everywhere. 2008 was a credit bubble that drove a Real Estate bubble.

13 March 2017 | 45 replies
@Scott Trench I think you have a case of confirmation bias....as I may too.

14 February 2016 | 11 replies
Full disclosure I am a certified Xero advisor so I am biased.

30 November 2016 | 9 replies
Realtors and lenders are always paid on the size of the deal not your cash in so there will always be a bias to the maximum leverage.

11 March 2016 | 10 replies
You're more likely to find homes in the 1,200 - 1,500sf range and rates are still relatively reasonable.Of course, living and selling in the SE Cape may make me a bit biased.