Category: Buyer Advice
Subtitle: A practical look at the mistakes that can cost buyers money, confidence, and peace of mind, and how to avoid them before you write an offer.
Buying a home is exciting.
It should be.
You’re imagining a different daily life. A better kitchen. More space. A yard. A shorter commute. A community that fits your family. Maybe a garage, a basement, a lake nearby, or simply a place that finally feels like yours.
But excitement can also make people move too quickly.
I’ve seen that many times over 34 years in real estate. Good people. Smart people. Buyers who did their homework online and still nearly made decisions that could have cost them a lot of money.
Not because they were careless.
Because buying a home is emotional, and the process can move fast.
My job is to help you slow down where it matters, act quickly when it makes sense, and avoid the mistakes that are easy to make when pressure, competition, and emotion are all involved.
Here are four of the most common mistakes I see Calgary home buyers make, and what I’d want you to do instead.
Mistake 1: Letting Emotion Drive the Negotiation
It’s natural to feel attached when you find a home you love.
That first moment can be powerful. You walk in, and suddenly you’re picturing furniture placement, Christmas mornings, summer barbecues, the kids choosing bedrooms, or quiet evenings in a kitchen that finally feels right.
There’s nothing wrong with that.
Emotion is part of buying a home.
The mistake happens when emotion starts making the decisions by itself.
That’s when buyers stretch too far, ignore comparable sales, overlook condition issues, or get caught up in a bidding situation without a clear ceiling. They stop asking, “Is this the right decision?” and start thinking, “I can’t lose this house.”
That’s a dangerous place to negotiate from.
A home may be beautiful and still not be worth what someone is asking. A home may have multiple offers and still not justify going beyond your comfort level. A home may feel perfect and still come with concerns that need to be respected.
Before we write an offer, I want my buyers to understand the recent sales, the neighbourhood demand, the condition of the property, and the point where the price stops making sense.
That number matters.
Not because we’re trying to be difficult. Because once the excitement settles, you still have to live with the mortgage payment.
What to Do Instead
Before you offer, decide on your walk-away number.
Not in the middle of the negotiation.
Before.
That number should be based on your budget, the home’s value, the recent comparable sales, your comfort level, and what else is available in the market.
When you set that number clearly, you protect yourself from making a decision under pressure.
I’ve told buyers before, “This is a good house, but not at that price.”
That’s not always the easiest thing to hear in the moment. But it’s often the advice that saves people from regret later.
A good agent should help you stay grounded when your emotions are running ahead of the numbers.
Mistake 2: Underestimating the Total Cost of Ownership
A mortgage payment is only one part of owning a home.
It’s usually the biggest part, yes. But it’s not the whole picture.
This is where buyers, especially first-time buyers, can get caught off guard. They work hard to save the down payment. They get pre-approved. They find a home that fits the monthly mortgage amount. Then the other costs start showing up.
Property taxes. Home insurance. Utilities. Condo fees, if applicable. Maintenance. Repairs. Legal fees. Moving costs. Window coverings. Furniture. Tools. Snow removal. Lawn care. Appliances that may need replacing sooner than expected.
It adds up.
And it adds up quickly right after possession, when your savings may already feel lighter than usual.
I never want a buyer to feel house poor.
A home should give you stability, not put you in a position where every unexpected bill becomes stressful.
What to Do Instead
Build your budget around real life, not just approval numbers.
Your lender may approve you for a certain amount, but that doesn’t automatically mean you should spend that full amount. There’s a difference between qualifying for a home and comfortably owning it.
Before you start seriously viewing homes, look at the full monthly picture:
Mortgage payment
Property taxes
Insurance
Utilities
Condo fees, if applicable
Maintenance savings
Transportation costs
Childcare, groceries, debt payments, and other regular expenses
A cushion for unexpected repairs
I also recommend setting aside money for the first year of ownership.
Even a well-maintained home will ask something of you. Maybe it’s small. Maybe it’s a new washer, a fence repair, furnace servicing, or a few pieces of furniture that suddenly become necessary.
Being ready for that makes the move feel much better.
Mistake 3: Forgetting About Resale Value
Most buyers don’t want to think about selling when they’re buying.
I understand that. You’re trying to find a home, not plan your exit.
But resale value matters from the beginning.
Life changes. Families grow. Jobs shift. Parents age. Children move out. Priorities change. A home that works today may not be the home you stay in forever.
So when we’re looking at a property, I’m always thinking about both sides of the decision.
Does this home work for you now?
And will other buyers understand its value later?
That second question matters.
Some homes are harder to resell because of factors buyers overlook when they’re excited. A poor layout. A busy road. Limited parking. Too many stairs for the likely buyer pool. An awkward lot. A basement development that looks finished but feels impractical. A property type that appeals to a narrower audience.
None of those things automatically make a home wrong.
But they should be priced properly, and you should understand the trade-off before you buy.
What to Do Instead
Think like a future seller, even while you’re buying.
That doesn’t mean being cold or overly analytical. It means being wise.
Ask questions like:
Will this layout appeal to the next buyer?
Is the location a long-term strength or a compromise?
Are there features that limit the buyer pool?
Is the home priced appropriately for its drawbacks?
Does the community have strong demand?
Are nearby amenities, schools, roads, or future developments likely to help or hurt value?
In Calgary, community choice can make a meaningful difference. Established areas, lake communities, new developments, transit access, school options, and commute patterns all affect how buyers respond.
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A home should fit your life first.
But if it also has a strong resale story, that gives you more options down the road.
Mistake 4: Waiving Important Conditions Without Understanding the Risk
In competitive markets, buyers sometimes feel pressure to waive conditions.
Financing. Home inspection. Condo document review. Sale of buyer’s home. These conditions can make an offer less attractive to a seller, depending on the situation.
But they exist for a reason.
They protect you.
The home inspection condition gives you a chance to understand the property’s condition before fully committing. The financing condition helps protect you if the lender, appraisal, or final approval does not line up as expected. Condo document review is critical if you’re buying a condo or townhouse with a corporation involved.
Waiving conditions can sometimes be part of a strategy.
But it should never be done casually.
I’ve seen buyers feel tempted to remove conditions because they’re afraid of losing the home. I understand that pressure. But there’s a big difference between taking a calculated risk and taking a blind one.
What to Do Instead
Understand the risk before you decide.
If you’re considering waiving a condition, slow down and ask:
What could go wrong?
How likely is that risk?
Can we reduce the risk another way?
Do we have documents reviewed ahead of time?
Has financing been fully discussed with the lender?
Are there visible concerns with the property?
Can you financially handle a surprise after possession?
Sometimes the answer may be that a cleaner offer makes sense.
Sometimes the answer is no.
A good agent should explain the trade-off clearly, not push you toward unnecessary risk just to win the deal.
Winning the wrong home under the wrong terms is not a victory.
The Mistake Underneath All the Others
Most buyer mistakes come from the same place.
Rushing.
Rushing to view homes before financing is clear. Rushing to offer before understanding value. Rushing past inspection concerns. Rushing into a neighbourhood without checking whether it fits your daily life.
Buying well usually requires the opposite.
Preparation. Clarity. Patience. Good questions. Calm advice.
That does not mean you move slowly when the right home appears. In Calgary, good homes can still move quickly, and timing matters. But there’s a difference between being prepared to act and being pressured into reacting.
That difference can save you money.
It can also save you a lot of stress.
A Better Way to Buy
The strongest buyers I work with are not always the ones with the biggest budget.
They’re the ones who are prepared.
They know their numbers. They know what they need. They understand the market they’re buying in. They ask good questions. They listen when something does not feel right. They stay calm enough to walk away from the wrong property.
That kind of buyer makes better decisions.
And when the right home comes along, they’re ready.
If you’re early in the process, start with the basics. Get properly pre-approved. Build a realistic budget. Understand the communities you’re considering. Then search with purpose, not panic.
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That’s how you protect yourself before the emotions of a showing or negotiation take over.
My Advice
The goal is not just to buy a home.
The goal is to buy the right home, in the right way, with your eyes open.
Avoiding mistakes does not mean being fearful. It means being informed. It means understanding the numbers, the risks, the property, the neighbourhood, and the long-term fit before you commit.
After 34 years of helping buyers through this process, I can tell you that the best decisions usually feel calm. Not perfect. Not effortless. But steady.
That’s what I want for you.
A home you’re excited about today, and still confident in tomorrow.
About the Author
Vince DeGuiseppe
CIR Realty | The Confidence of Experience. The Comfort of Care.
Vince DeGuiseppe is a local real estate agent in Calgary with CIR Realty. Based in Chestermere, Vince services Calgary and surrounding areas including Okotoks and Chestermere.
Vince works with first-time buyers, families moving up or down, acreage and investment property seekers, luxury buyers and sellers, and seniors downsizing to villas or bungalows.
A lifelong Calgarian, from Mayland Heights and Whitehorn to Chestermere today, Vince brings over 34 years of experience since 1992, closing about 50 deals a year on average.
What sets Vince apart is his white glove service. Clients love direct access to him, with no handoffs to teams. He’ll do whatever it takes: rent trucks for moving day, store forgotten items, mow lawns, or clean homes to ensure seamless transitions.
It’s all about the confidence of experience and the comfort of care.
Ready to talk? Get in touch today.
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