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How Buying a Home Really Works – And the Mistakes That Cost You Money

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12 Dec 2025
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Buying a home is one of the most important financial decisions most people ever make. What often gets overlooked is that it isn’t one decision at all, but a sequence of approvals, deadlines, and handoffs — and at several points along the way, small mistakes can quietly turn into expensive ones.

Alex Mayer, a real estate agent with Rochester Area Homes by Alex in Rochester, Minnesota, works daily with buyers navigating financing, inspections, appraisals, and closing timelines. After guiding hundreds of transactions from first showing to final signature, he sees the same costly mistakes repeat themselves. What follows is a clear look at how buying a home actually unfolds, and where buyers most often lose money by moving too fast, misunderstanding the rules, or relying on outdated assumptions.

Step 1: Get Pre-Approved for a Mortgage

Who’s involved: You and your mortgage lender
Timeline: Two to three days if your documents are ready
Cost: Free, though a credit check will appear on your report

Common mistake: Thinking pre-qualification means pre-approval.

One of the earliest and most expensive misunderstandings buyers make is confusing mortgage pre-qualification with pre-approval. Pre-qualification is a rough estimate based on self-reported information, while pre-approval means a lender has verified your income, credit, and assets. Sellers care about the latter. “A pre-qualification isn’t enough — sellers want a full pre-approval letter,” Mayer says. Without one, your offer may never be taken seriously, regardless of price.

Step 2: Start House Hunting

Who’s involved: You, your agent, listing agents
Timeline: Days to months, depending on inventory and criteria

Common mistake: Falling in love before doing the math.

Buyers often rush toward the first home that seems workable, or stretch their budget without accounting for taxes, insurance, or long-term maintenance. Touring multiple properties helps establish realistic benchmarks and reduces the chance of buyer’s remorse after closing.

Step 3: Make an Offer

Who’s involved: You, your agent, the seller’s agent
Timeline: One to two days in most markets
Cost: Earnest money deposit, typically one to three percent of the purchase price

Common mistake: Submitting a weak or incomplete offer.

An offer can fall apart if key details are missing or unclear — such as the proposed closing date, how long the offer is valid, or whether the purchase depends on financing or an inspection. Failing to attach a pre-approval letter is another common misstep. “If you don’t include your pre-approval letter, most agents won’t even call you back,” Mayer says.

Some buyers also waive protections that would normally let them walk away — such as the right to renegotiate or cancel if the inspection uncovers major problems, or if their loan approval falls through — in order to appear more competitive. Doing so can leave buyers on the hook for repairs, extra cash, or even the loss of their earnest money if something goes wrong.

Step 4: Home Inspection

Who’s involved: You, your agent, a licensed home inspector
Timeline: Inspection within a week of acceptance; report in 24 to 48 hours
Cost: $300 to $500

Common mistake: Expecting the seller will fix problems that turn up during the inspection.

In competitive markets, an inspection does not guarantee repairs or credits. Sellers may decline requests and move on to a backup offer rather than renegotiate. “Assume you’re buying as-is unless your agent tells you otherwise,” Mayer says. Skipping the inspection entirely to save money or speed up the process can expose buyers to expensive surprises after closing.

Step 5: Appraisal and Final Loan Approval

Who’s involved: Your lender, appraiser, underwriters
Timeline: one to two weeks
Cost: $400 to $600, usually rolled into closing costs

Common mistake: Assuming the deal is essentially done once the offer is accepted.

Once the seller accepts the buyer’s offer, two important reviews happen in parallel, and either one can still change the outcome of the deal. First, the lender orders an appraisal to confirm the home’s value, since the loan amount is based on the appraised value, not the purchase price. If the appraisal comes in low, the lender will only finance a portion of that lower amount. Unless the seller agrees to reduce the price, the buyer must make up the difference in cash or risk losing the home.

At the same time, the lender completes a final review of the buyer’s finances. Even after pre-approval, underwriters recheck credit, income, and debt before issuing final approval. Opening a new credit card, financing a car, or taking on other large obligations during this period can delay or derail the loan — sometimes just days before closing.

Step 6: Final Walkthrough and Closing

Who’s involved: You, your agent, the seller, a title company or attorney
Timeline: Walkthrough 24 to 48 hours before closing; closing takes one to two hours
Cost: Closing costs typically run two to five percent of the purchase price

Common mistake: Treating the walkthrough and closing as formalities.

The final walkthrough takes place shortly before closing and is not another showing. Its purpose is to confirm that the home is in the same condition it was when you agreed to buy it, and that any repairs or credits negotiated after the inspection were completed as promised. Skipping it or rushing through it can mean discovering damage, missing appliances, or unfinished work after you already own the home.

Closing is the legal transfer of ownership, when you sign the loan documents and finalize all costs associated with the purchase. This is when closing fees are locked in and funds change hands. Signing without reviewing the paperwork — or assuming it matches earlier estimates — can result in unexpected charges or terms that are difficult to challenge once the transaction is complete.

Final Thoughts

Buying a home isn’t complicated, but it is sequential, and each step builds on the one before it. Most costly mistakes happen when buyers rush decisions or assume later steps will fix earlier ones. Understanding how the process actually unfolds, and where the real decision points are, can make the difference between a smooth closing and an expensive lesson.

About the Expert: Alex Mayer is a real estate agent with Rochester Area Homes by Alex in Rochester, Minnesota. He specializes in first-time buyers, relocation clients, and move-up buyers in the Rochester metro area.

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice.