How to Prepare Your Home for Holiday Guests By Joe Szabo, Scottsdale Real Estate Team
Valet welcome
If parking in your neighborhood is limited, be sure to reserve your off-street spot for your guests. Go out ahead of time and track down a convenient street spot if you need to — just don’t make your guests spend their first moments at your place looking for a parking space.Prep the porch
This area is the first thing guests see when visiting your home, so make sure it is well lit, freshly swept and outfitted with clean cushions and fresh plants.Grab-and-go
Create a simple breakfast station by keeping fresh fruit, breakfast cereals and other essentials together on the counter for early risers. Give guests a quick kitchen tour the night before so they can get their morning coffee or tea without waiting for you in the morning. If you want to set an extra-special table, adding a monogrammed mug and a small flower arrangement is lovely and doesn’t take much extra effort.Make it casual
Cleaning your home before guests arrive is a must; however, keeping the atmosphere around the house as close to normal as possible will help put guests at ease. Newspapers on the coffee table and a casual playlist in the background set the stage for relaxation.Stock the essentials
Your guest room doesn’t need to be outfitted like a four-star hotel, but certain basics should be in place to make your visitor comfortable. The essentials include fresh sheets, pillows and blankets on the bed, window coverings, a working light, bath towels, a wastebasket and a cleared shelf and hanging area in the closet. Bonus items include a fan, iPod docking station, clock, hairdryer, snacks, mini toiletries such as razors, aspirin and hairspray, and a surge protector for charging devices.Allow for downtime
It’s too easy to over-plan activities for holiday guests. Having a few tentative outings or other visitors on the agenda can be helpful, but avoid the urge to fill every last minute. Most guests will really appreciate some blocks of unstructured time to relax, chat, read, nap or even venture out on their own.Jump right in
When dinnertime rolls around, feel free to have guests pitch in with a few simple tasks in the kitchen. Ask them to set the table, pour the wine, choose the music, or prep greens for a salad, and soon your visitors will be feeling right at home. Please note that this Scottsdale Real Estate Blog is for informational purposes and not intended to take the place of a licensed Scottsdale Real Estate Agent. The Szabo Group offers first class real estate services to clients in the Scottsdale Greater Phoenix Metropolitan Area in the buying and selling of Luxury homes in Arizona. Award winning Realtors and Re/MAX top producers and best real estate agent for Luxury Homes in Scottsdale, The Szabo group delivers experience, knowledge, dedication and proven results. Contact Joe Szabo at 480.688.2020, info@ScottsdaleRealEstateTeam.com or visit www.scottsdalerealestateteam.com to find out more about Scottsdale Homes for Sale and Estates for Sale in Scottsdale and to search the Scottsdale MLS for Scottsdale Home Listings.Rates Near 2014 Lows: What You Need to Know Before Locking In By Joe Szabo, Scottsdale Real Estate Team
Understanding the rate market
Most home mortgages in the U.S. are eventually packaged into bonds, and rates change as mortgage bonds trade in the open market each day. Bonds pay a rate of return to investors each year. These “rates” rise when bond prices fall, and fall when bond prices rise — then consumer mortgage rates typically follow suit. Bond markets tend to behave the opposite of stock markets in that bonds tend to sell (mortgage rates up) on positive economic outlooks and rally (mortgage rates down) on negative economic outlooks. Since mid-October, a more negative economic outlook has pushed bond prices higher and mortgage rates lower, and it’s been driven by a variety of factors, including:- Minutes from the Fed’s Sept. 17 rate policy meeting were released Oct. 8, confirming that, even though the Fed is slowly unwinding post-crisis rate stimulus programs, it maintains a cautious economic outlook. This sentiment also contributed to a big stock selloff, which further helped bond prices rise and rates drop.
- Persistent weakness among European consumers and banks
- Overall lackluster U.S. economic growth data
- The continued threat of Ebola spreading to the U.S.