Buying a home is exciting, but it also involves financing, inspections, deadlines, negotiation, title work, insurance, HOA rules, and closing costs. This guide turns the process into a step-by-step roadmap so you can move forward with clarity, confidence, and fewer surprises.
Typical Home Buying Timeline
A pre-approval letter shows sellers that you are financially prepared and gives you a clear price range before you begin touring. Your lender will review income, credit, assets, debt, and estimated monthly payments.
- Compare at least two lenders for rate, fees, responsiveness, and loan options.
- Ask for an estimated monthly payment, not just a maximum purchase price.
- Keep your financial profile stable while shopping: avoid large new debts or job changes.
- Pre-approval letters are often valid for 60–90 days and can be refreshed.
Before looking at homes, clarify your preferred cities, commute, school needs, bedroom count, yard preference, garage needs, budget comfort zone, and non-negotiables. A clear checklist helps avoid emotional and rushed decisions.
- Must-have: price range, bedroom count, commute, school zone, layout, or accessibility needs.
- Nice-to-have: pool, updated kitchen, media room, large yard, or extra office space.
- Deal breakers: major road noise, flood zone concerns, high HOA restrictions, or unacceptable repairs.
- Share this list with your agent so your search can stay focused and efficient.
The right area matters as much as the right house. Compare nearby sales, commute routes, school assignments, neighborhood condition, HOA amenities, property tax rates, and future development plans.
- Visit the neighborhood at different times of day to check traffic, noise, and activity.
- Ask for comparable sales before deciding whether a home is priced fairly.
- Look beyond staging: pay attention to roof age, HVAC, windows, drainage, foundation signs, and layout function.
- In competitive DFW suburbs, strong homes can move quickly, so decision readiness matters.
Your offer is more than the price. It includes financing terms, closing date, option period, earnest money, title preferences, seller concessions, included items, and any additional terms that help protect you.
- Use recent comparable sales to support the offer price.
- Balance competitiveness with protection; the strongest offer is not always the highest price.
- Earnest money is usually credited back to you at closing if the transaction closes successfully.
- The option period gives you time to inspect and negotiate before fully committing.
Once under contract, schedule a professional inspection immediately. The inspection report helps you understand the home's condition and decide whether to negotiate repairs, request credits, proceed, or terminate during the option period.
- Review roof, foundation, HVAC, plumbing, electrical, drainage, windows, and safety items.
- Consider specialty inspections for sewer line, pool, foundation engineer, termites, or mold if concerns arise.
- Focus repair negotiations on major systems, safety issues, and hidden defects rather than cosmetic items.
- Attend the inspection summary if possible and ask questions directly.
If the home is in an HOA, review the resale certificate, bylaws, CC&Rs, dues, transfer fees, leasing restrictions, architectural rules, and any pending violations or assessments.
- Are rentals allowed, and are there minimum lease terms?
- Are there rules about exterior changes, fences, pools, parking, pets, or landscaping?
- Are there unpaid dues, violations, lawsuits, or special assessments?
- What amenities are included, and what are the monthly or annual dues?
Your monthly housing cost may include principal, interest, taxes, insurance, HOA dues, mortgage insurance, and maintenance reserves. In Texas, property taxes are a major part of the budget and should be reviewed carefully.
- Request insurance quotes early, especially for older roofs, pools, flood zones, or prior claim history.
- Check county appraisal district records for assessed value and tax history.
- For primary residences, ask about homestead exemption eligibility after closing.
- Use conservative estimates so your payment remains comfortable after closing.
The lender orders the appraisal, verifies final documentation, and works toward loan approval. The title company searches ownership history and checks for liens or claims that must be resolved before closing.
- Respond quickly to lender requests for updated pay stubs, bank statements, explanations, or documents.
- Do not open new credit cards, finance furniture, buy a car, or move large funds without lender guidance.
- Review the title commitment and ask questions about exceptions or easements.
- If appraisal comes in low, discuss options: renegotiate, bring funds, challenge value, or use contract protections.
Before closing, you will receive a Closing Disclosure with final loan terms, cash to close, taxes, prepaids, title fees, lender fees, and credits. Review every line and ask questions before wiring funds.
- Verify wiring instructions directly with the title company using a trusted phone number.
- Never rely only on emailed wiring instructions; wire fraud is a real risk.
- Bring valid identification and confirm whether closing is in person, mobile notary, or remote where permitted.
- Schedule utilities, moving plans, insurance start date, and mail forwarding before possession.
The final walkthrough confirms the property is in the agreed condition, negotiated repairs are complete, and included items remain. After signing and funding, the transaction closes and keys are released according to the contract.
- Test lights, appliances, HVAC, plumbing, garage doors, and visible repairs.
- Confirm the seller removed personal property unless otherwise agreed.
- Bring your questions to closing; do not sign anything you do not understand.
- After closing, store your settlement statement, warranty info, inspection report, and insurance documents.