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Determine Your Financial Foundation - Calculate Your Home Equity
Before anything else, you need to understand your purchasing power. Your first step should be to determine approximately how much you have in your current home after your mortgage loan balance is paid off.
The Home Equity Formula is Simple:
Current Home Value - Outstanding Mortgage Balance = Home Equity
Outstanding Mortgage Balance: Check your latest mortgage statement or contact your lender for this exact figure
The net equity is the cash you will potentially have available to fund the down payment and closing costs on your new home.
Meet With A Local Mortgage Lender
- What the cost of your new loan would be (pre-approval).
- Whether you need to sell your home first to access the equity for the down payment and avoid carrying multiple debts.
- Whether you can use your own funds for a down payment and carry both mortgages for a short period of time while you sell your current house. Lenders will assess your debt-to-income ratio (DTI) to see if you qualify to pay two mortgage payments simultaneously.
This financial clarity is the key to choosing the right strategy for your family.


Once you know your financial capacity, your local Lakewood realtor can help you employ one of several proven strategies to manage the simultaneous sale and purchase:
Contingent Purchase Offer
Risk/Reward: Lower risk for you, as you won't own two homes at once. However, in a competitive seller's market like Rocky River often experiences, this contingency can make your offer less attractive to sellers, who typically prefer non-contingent buyers.
Bridge Loan Financing
Risk/Reward: Allows you to make a strong, non-contingent offer on your new home and move at your own pace. The risk is that bridge loans typically have higher interest rates and fees, and you still need to sell your old house before th loan term ends (often 6-12 months).
Sell First, Buy Later (with a Contingency)
Risk/Reward: Eliminates the risk of carrying two mortgages and provides a definitive amount of cash for your new purchase. The downside is that you may need to move twice or feel rushed to find a new house during the rent-back period.




