Posts Tagged ‘ruhl&ruhl’

How to Assess the Real Cost of a Fixer-Upper

Thursday, September 9th, 2010

Trying to decide whether to buy a fixer-upper house? Follow these seven steps, and you’ll know how much you can afford, how much to offer, and whether a fixer-upper house is right for you.

1. Decide what you can do yourself

TV remodeling shows make home improvement work look like a snap. In the real world, attempting a difficult remodeling job that you don’t know how to do will take longer than you think and can lead to less-than-professional results that won’t increase the value of your fixer-upper house. 

Ask yourself these questions:

  • Do you really have the skills to do it? Some tasks, like stripping wallpaper and painting, are relatively easy. Others, like electrical work, can be dangerous when done by amateurs.
  • Do you really have the time and desire to do it? Can you take time off work to renovate your fixer-upper house? If not, will you be stressed out by living in a work zone for months while you complete projects on the weekends?

2. Price the cost of repairs and remodeling before you make an offer

  • Get your contractor into the house to do a walk-through, so he can give you a written cost estimate on the tasks he’s going to do.
  • If you’re doing the work yourself, price the supplies.
  • Either way, tack on 10% to 20% to cover unforeseen problems that often arise with a fixer-upper house.

If you are looking for a contractor or need help finding a vendor check out Ruhl&Ruhl Home Service Vendors.

3. Check permit costs

  • Ask local officials if the work you’re going to do requires a permit and how much those permits cost. Doing work without a permit may save money, but it’ll cause problems when you resell your home.  In some cases the City will fine you if work without a permit is completed.
  • Decide if you want to get the permits yourself or have the contractor arrange for them. Getting permits can be time-consuming and frustrating. Inspectors may force you to do additional work, or change the way you want to do a project, before they give you the permit.
  • Factor the time and aggravation of permits into your plans.

4. Double-check pricing on structural work

If your fixer-upper home needs major structural work, hire a structural engineer for $500 to $700 to inspect the home before you put in an offer so you can be confident you’ve uncovered and conservatively budgeted for the full extent of the problems.

Get written estimates for repairs before you commit to buying a home with structural issues.

Don’t purchase a home that needs major structural work unless:

  • You’re getting it at a steep discount
  • You’re sure you’ve uncovered the extent of the problem
  • You know the problem can be fixed
  • You have a binding written estimate for the repairs

5. Check the cost of financing

Be sure you have enough money for a down payment, closing costs, and repairs without draining your savings.

If you’re planning to fund the repairs with a home equity or home improvement loan:

  • Get yourself pre-approved for both loans before you make an offer.  Ruhl&Ruhl Realtors mortgage company,  1862 Mortgage can help with all your financial needs.
  • Make the deal contingent on getting both the purchase money loan and the renovation money loan, so you’re not forced to close the sale when you have no loan to fix the house.
  • Consider the Federal Housing Administration’s Section 203(k) program, which lets qualified purchasers wrap up to $35,000 into their mortgages to upgrade their home before they move in.

6. Calculate your fair purchase offer

Take the fair market value of the property (what it would be worth if it were in good condition and remodeled to current tastes) and subtract the upgrade and repair costs.

For example: Your target fixer-upper house has a 1960s kitchen, metallic wallpaper, shag carpet, and high levels of radon in the basement.

Your comparison house, in the same subdivision, sold last month for $200,000. That house had a newer kitchen, no wallpaper, was recently re-carpeted, and has a radon mitigation system in its basement.

The cost to remodel the kitchen, remove the wallpaper, carpet the house, and put in a radon mitigation system is $40,000. Your bid for the house should be $160,000.

Ask your real estate agent if it’s a good idea to share your cost estimates with the sellers, to prove your offer is fair. 

7. Include inspection contingencies in your offer

Don’t rely on your friends or your contractor to eyeball your fixer-upper house. Hire pros to do common inspections like:

  • Home inspection. This is key in a fixer-upper assessment. The home inspector will uncover hidden issues in need of replacement or repair. You may know you want to replace those 1970s kitchen cabinets, but the home inspector has a meter that will detect the water leak behind them.
  • Radon, mold, lead-based paint
  • Septic and well
  • Pest

Most home inspection contingencies let you go back to the sellers and ask them to do the repairs, or give you cash at closing to pay for the repairs. The seller can also opt to simply back out of the deal, as can you, if the inspection turns up something you don’t want to deal with.

If that happens, this isn’t the right fixer-upper house for you. Go back to the beginningand start again.

Keep checking RuhlHomes.com for the most up to date information on the real estate market!

Courtesy of: Houselogic

Pending Home Sales on the Rise

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

Following a sharp drop in the months immediately after the expiration of the home buyer tax credit, pending home sales have modestly risen, according to the National Association of Realtors.

The Pending Home Sales Index, a forward-looking indicator, rose 5.2% to 79.4 based on contracts signed in July from a downwardly revised 75.5 in June, but remains 19.1% below July 2009 when it was 98.1. The data reflects contracts and not closings, which normally occur with a lag time of one or two months.

Lawrence Yun, NAR chief economist, cautioned that there would be a long recovery process. “Home sales will remain soft in the months ahead, but improved affordability conditions should help with a recovery,” he said. “But the recovery looks to be a long process. Home buyers over the past year got a great deal, and buyers for the balance of this year have an edge over sellers. For those who bought at or near the peak several years ago, particularly in markets experiencing big bubbles, it may take over a decade to fully recover lost equity.”

Yun added, “Affordability could reach a generational high in the second half of this year because of rock-bottom mortgage interest rates, helped partly by the Fed’s very accommodative monetary policy. The loan underwriting standards are tighter, but home buyers can improve their chances of getting a loan by staying well within their budget.”

The PHSI in the Northeast rose 6.3% to 62.5 in July but is 21.1% below a year ago. In the Midwest the index increased 4.1% to 66.7 but remains 25.7% below July 2009. Pending home sales in the South rose 1.2% to an index of 86.3, but are 15.6% lower than a year ago. In the West the index jumped 11.6% to 95.0 but is 17.6% below July 2009.

The national index had fallen 29.9% in May and another 2.8% in June.

For more information, visit www.realtor.org.

Keep checking RuhlHomes.com for the most up to date information on the real estate market!

Courtesy of: RisMedia

Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS Participates in Student Hunger Drive

Thursday, September 2nd, 2010

Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS proudly collected 10,947 pounds of food for the 2010 Student Hunger Drive Corporate Challenge and earned the prize for the Most Creative Company at the annual Clucky awards.

 “I am so proud of our company’s participation in such a wonderful community organization,” said Caroline Ruhl, President of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS. “There was quite the competition between our offices this year, which really pushed our donations to the next level.”

 Each of the Ruhl&Ruhl offices that participated, including Bettendorf, Clinton, Corporate, Davenport and Moline, had unique events to get the donations collected, such as penny wars and potlucks.

 It was a record setting year for the organization, collecting 77,432 pounds of food for the River Bend Foodbank in the corporate challenge. The Student Food Drive is an effort conducted by area high school students to collect and donate food to the River Bend Foodbank. The Foodbank serves over 300 charitable feeding programs throughout a 22 county service area. This year, the Quad-City Times received the overall prize by collecting 13,144 total pounds of food.

 A special thanks goes out to our team of volunteers: Rose Wulgaret, Moline Office; Pat Johnson, Davenport Office; Marybeth Chupka, Bettendorf Office; Norm Vande Kamp, Clinton Office; Doug Himmelman, Corporate Office; Bridget Drenter, Corporate Office; Allyson Holub, Corporate Office and Sally Atwell, Corporate Office.

 A family-owned company since 1862, Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS annually sells nearly 3,800 homes in eastern Iowa, western Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin.  Caroline Ruhl is the President and owner of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, and is the fourth generation of the Ruhl family to lead the residential brokerage and home services company.  Headquartered in Davenport, Iowa, the company has 250 sales associates and 50 employees based in sales offices located in Bettendorf, Cedar Rapids, Clinton, Coralville, Davenport, DeWitt, Dubuque, Maquoketa, and Muscatine, in Iowa, and in Moline, Illinois.  In addition to residential sales, Ruhl&Ruhl offers services in relocation, new home sales, farm sales, senior services, real estate investment, property management and mortgage services through 1862 Mortgage.  For more information on Ruhl&Ruhl, visit their website at http://www.ruhlhomes.com/ .

Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS Announces New Cedar Rapids Office

Thursday, August 12th, 2010

Caroline Ruhl, President of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, is pleased to announce the addition of a Cedar Rapids Office.

Ruhl&Ruhl is the 96th largest residential real estate company in the country in sales transactions, according to the National Association of Realtors. They are the largest real estate company in eastern Iowa.

Cedar Rapids will be Ruhl&Ruhl’s 10th office – their other residential sales offices are located in Bettendorf, Davenport, Clinton, Coralville, DeWitt, Maquoketa, Muscatine and Dubuque, Iowa; and in Moline, Illinois.

The company belongs to 11 different Multiple Listing Services and properties for sale from all these markets are available to the public on their website at RuhlHomes.com. The 253 agent company has been serving families in the region since 1862 and Caroline Ruhl is the 4th generation of Ruhl’s to lead the organization. Her son, Chris Beason, is the 5th generation and works in their Davenport Office.

 “We are excited to open an office in Cedar Rapids so we can better serve our current and future clients in the area,” said Ruhl.

Ruhl&Ruhl currently has 19 agents who belong to the Cedar Rapids MLS and two more in pre-licensing classes. The company recently opened a temporary office located at 383 Collins Road, NE, Suite 100, Cedar Rapids. Working from this office are Cedar Rapids agents Carole and Dana Benson, Kathy Louvar, Tim Stanley, and Mary Kay Starks and Rod Starks from Delhi. Soon to be licensed are Beth Brockette and Marilyn Gill.

Ruhl&Ruhl has been marketing homes in Cedar Rapids for four years with agents from their Coralville office who also belong to the Cedar Rapids MLS. Those agents are: Jim Cannon, Paul Ellis, Travis Hiatt, Chad Keune, Lisa Lynes, Mike Morrow, Kelley Myers, Jean Newlin-Schnake, Anna Pauly, Tia Perez, Marc Simpson, Roxanne Sisneros and Jeremy Willis.

Ruhl&Ruhl will have a grand opening at their new office at 5805 Council Street, NE, Cedar Rapids in November. This state-of-the-art facility is currently in the design and build-out stage.

The people at Ruhl&Ruhl are committed to making the home buying and home selling experience easy, fun and hassle free. “Our clients need sales associates they can trust who will be their knowledgeable advocates, guiding them through the home sale or home purchase process. Our people really care about our clients and strive to exceed expectations. At Ruhl&Ruhl, our people are the difference,” said Ruhl.

In addition to residential sales, Ruhl&Ruhl specializes in relocation services, working with top companies such as Cartus, Primacy, Prudential and SIRVA. The company also offers services in real estate investments, new home sales, land development, farm sales, senior services, property management, home vendor services, and mortgage services through 1862 Mortgage.

Ruhl&Ruhl is a family-owned company that annually sells nearly 3,800 homes in eastern Iowa, western Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin. The company started in a little German grocery store in west Davenport, Iowa, from which insurance and real estate also were sold. Now, Ruhl&Ruhl has grown to more than 253 sales associates, 52 employees and 10 offices, yet their commitment to providing service with quality, value and integrity remains firmly rooted.

For more information on Ruhl&Ruhl, visit our new office at 383 Collins Road, NE, Suite 100, Cedar Rapids, call 319.373.7845 or visit us online at RuhlHomes.com.

Mike Wendt Assumes Role as Ruhl&Ruhl General Sales Manager

Friday, July 16th, 2010

Caroline Ruhl, President of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, is pleased to announce that Michael R. Wendt II has assumed the role of Ruhl&Ruhl General Sales Manager.

Wendt, who has worked at Ruhl&Ruhl for two years as the Legal Compliance and Customer Relations Manager, will continue his current duties for the company in addition to being the direct report for Ruhl&Ruhl office managers.

“We are pleased that Mike is stepping up to a new challenge,” Ruhl said. “He has demonstrated his tremendous skills and knowledge, which make him well-suited for this new role.”
 
Prior to his position at Ruhl&Ruhl, Wendt was an associate with the law firm of Califf & Harper, P.C. in Moline. He received his undergraduate degrees from Drake University in 1997 and his Master’s Degree in Urban and Regional Planning, as well as his M.B.A. focusing on Real Estate Finance, from the Henry B. Tippie School of Management at the University of Iowa in 1999. In 2005 he received his Law degree from the University Of Illinois College Of Law, and joined the Illinois Bar in 2005, and the Iowa Bar in 2006. Wendt has also been a licensed Broker since 2004 and is currently licensed in Iowa, Illinois and Wisconsin. 
 
Wendt is a native of Moline and currently sits on the board of the Moline Youth Football Association, is a member of the Moline Plan Commission, and is President of the Quad Cities Illini Club. Wendt is also a member of both the Optimist and Rotary clubs in Moline. He and his wife Eileen Wendt have three kids; Kendall, Carson and Jack. 

A family-owned company since 1862, Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS annually sells approximately 3,400 homes in eastern Iowa, western Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin.  Caroline Ruhl is the President and owner of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, and is the fourth generation of the Ruhl family to lead the residential brokerage and home services company.  Headquartered in Davenport, Iowa, the company has 250 sales associates and 50 employees based in sales offices located in Bettendorf, Cedar Rapids, Clinton, Coralville, Davenport, DeWitt, Dubuque, Maquoketa, and Muscatine, in Iowa, and in Moline, Illinois.  In addition to residential sales, Ruhl&Ruhl offers services in relocation, new home sales, farm sales, senior services, real estate investment, property management and mortgage services through 1862 Mortgage.  For more information on Ruhl&Ruhl, visit their website at www.RuhlHomes.com .

Tax Credit Deadline Extended

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

After a close call with the deadline, Congress has passed an extension of the Homebuyer Tax Credit closing deadline until September 30, 2010.  The extension applies only to transactions that have signed contracts in place as of April 30, 2010 that have not yet closed.  This new deadline applies to both the $8,000 tax credit for first-time homebuyers and the $6,500 tax credit for repeat homebuyers. Congress sited unique circumstances and a back log of closings as factors in not being able to make the original closing date deadline of June 30, 2010. 

The legislation is designed to create a seamless extension to the new closing deadline for an eligible transaction.  There would be no gap between June 30 and the date the President signs the bill into law, which he is anticipated to do so this week.

Keep checking RuhlHomes.com for the most up to date information on the real estate market.

Head Shave for Hospice

Thursday, June 10th, 2010

After nearly six months of growing his hair (and many hairstyles, much to the ado of his agents!), Jeff Hefel, Ruhl&Ruhl’s Dubuque Manager, posed the following challenge:

Raise $2,000 for Hospice of Dubuque and I will shave my head – raise it by June 1, and I will wear a Mohawk for a week!

After raising $2,230, here are the results!


 

Ruhl&Ruhl Outsells Mel Foster Company

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010

For the first time ever, Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, the residential company, outsold Mel Foster Company in sales volume for the year of 2009.

According to the Real Trends 500 Report, Ruhl&Ruhl was ranked 174th nationally based on sales volume. There are over 8,000 real estate companies in the country. Mel Foster Co. was ranked 178th.

Ruhl&Ruhl’s residential sales volume in 2009 was $547,890,896 and the company had 3,770 transactions, at an average sales price of $145,329. On average, Ruhl&Ruhl sales associates sold 16.1 properties per agent in 2009, as either the listing agent or selling agent.

Mel Foster reported their residential sales volume in 2009 was $532,828,648 and they did 3,939 transactions, averaging $141,334 per deal. This equated to “almost 14 deals per agent,” according to their press release in the Quad City Times.

Real Trends also ranks companies by their number of transactions. Ruhl&Ruhl ranked 102 and Mel Foster ranked 93. Caroline Ruhl, President of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS notes that she is proud of her agents for outselling Foster agents based on doing 16.1 transactions per agent compared to Foster agents “doing almost 14 deals per agent.” She also is confident their residential volume will again exceed Mel Foster’s volume in 2010.

Ruhl&Ruhl had previously reported that they had outsold Mel Foster when they combined their residential volume of $547,890,896 with NAI Commercial Company’s sales volume of $147,692,346, giving the combined companies a total volume of $695,583,242.

Mel Foster had reported a total residential and commercial sales volume of $600,480,000 for 2009, down 12% from 2008.

A family-owned company since 1862, Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS annually sells approximately 3,400 homes in eastern Iowa, western Illinois and southwestern Wisconsin.  Caroline Ruhl is the President and owner of Ruhl&Ruhl REALTORS, and is the fourth generation of the Ruhl family to lead the residential brokerage and home services company.  Headquartered in Davenport, Iowa, the company has 250 sales associates and 50 employees based in sales offices located in Bettendorf, Bellevue, Clinton, Coralville, Davenport, DeWitt, Dubuque, Maquoketa, and Muscatine, in Iowa, and in Moline, Illinois.  In addition to residential sales, Ruhl&Ruhl offers services in relocation, new home sales, farm sales, senior services, real estate investment, property management and mortgage services through 1862 Mortgage.  For more information on Ruhl&Ruhl, visit their website at http://www.ruhlhomes.com/ .

Q-C’s new homes market shows signs of growth

Friday, March 19th, 2010

Larry Fisher Jared Kerkhoff is the builder of this home on Westminster Road in the Valley Winds addition in Bettendorf.Quad-City home builders and real estate professionals are gearing up for what they believe will be a strong year for sales of new homes.

That hope comes despite a mixed national outlook.

Sales of newly built, single-family homes declined 11.2 percent in January to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 309,000 units, the slowest pace on record, according to figures released by the U.S. Commerce Department.

The Midwest was the only region of the country to register an increase in new-home sales in January, posting a 2.1 percent gain from December. The Northeast and West recorded double-digit declines, of 35.1 percent and 11.9 percent, respectively, and the South saw a 9.5 percent decline.

January numbers in the Quad-Cities were flat.

Dave Falk, director of new construction and development for Ruhl & Ruhl Realtors, said that in Scott and Rock Island counties, overall sales of new housing units slipped from 13 a year ago to 12.

But Falk said he believes 2010 will begin to show noticeable improvement over 2009.

“In the first month, in middle of a hard winter, it is tough to compare. But we had more sale activities of new construction with pendings so far this year than last year and there are more pre-sold homes, where a buyer writes a contract and the builder builds it. But we will have to wait until the end of the first quarter to see what we’ve got.”

He said what the numbers do not show is the positive feedback from builders and real estate agents.

Sue Clark-Nissen, chief executive officer of the Quad-City Area Realtor Association, shares Falk’s enthusiasm for 2010.

“To me, (the numbers) show a little more confidence with consumers. If we have consumer confidence in January, it is going to follow in the coming weeks. We are holding our own here.”

Dave Prochaska, owner of Dave Prochaska Construction Inc., has been in the business for more than 30 years and formerly was a real estate agent.

Currently, he is building five homes in subdivisions, three in Prairie Heights in Davenport, one in Cody’s Hunt in LeClaire, Iowa, and one in Loft Acres in Princeton, Iowa.

“That is a lot for winter. Normally, I would be doing about three homes,” he said.

Three of the five are pre-sold, meaning they are being custom-built for buyers. Two others are spec homes, meaning they are built on speculation without specific buyers, Prochaska said.

“You used to see more spec houses,” he said. “As builders, it is easier to build spec houses, but they are also riskier. My approach is somewhat conservative: Never have more than two spec houses sitting at a time.

“Hopefully, we will see a better year than last year. But it might take five or six years to get back to where we were in 2006.”

Jared Kerkhoff of Bettendorf is owner of Jared Kerkhoff Homes Inc. He has been building homes for 10 years and serves as president of the Quad-Cities Home Builders & Remodeling Association board.

He builds mostly higher-end homes in Valley Wynds additions of Bettendorf. “It has been successful even in trying times,” he said.

He closed on eight new homes last year. While his work has remained steady, that is not the case for all builders. “It could be a lot worse,” he said. “Some people out there are not doing so well. It is tough to see that for builders. Some builders are hurting right now.”

He deals mostly with pre-sold homes. “I do one or two specs at a time,” he said, although that can be a “high-risk game. But I try to make the safe gamble. I buy land in safe places. It take what the market gives me.”

“The nice thing about the Quad-Cities is when we see inventories getting high, we put the hammers down. Right now, home builders and the real estate market are poised to do pretty well.”

Dan Dolan, owner of Dolan Homes of Davenport, is a real estate agent for Mel Foster Co. He builds home in subdivisions he has developed in Clinton, Davenport, Blue Grass and Muscatine. He found 2009 to be a strong year. But he knows it has been a struggle for many.

“I think the really scary part has passed,” he said. “I think we will have another good year.”

He said builders like himself, who construct more moderate homes, will fare better. His homes mostly are in the lower $200,000-range.

“People are watching where they spend their money,” he said. “They are looking for quality and value. They have to work with a budget.

“The national trend is homes getting smaller. That part is not going to go away. Smaller homes are more attractive, energy-effective.”

Tom Swanwick is president of RE/MAX River Cities, Bettendorf and a contractor and developer with his own company, Swany Development, building moderately priced homes, mostly in west Davenport.

“We sold four new houses already this year, and we are working on another pre-sold and another four spec houses in a month.”

Swanwick builds homes starting at about $200,000. He has been busy with new homes in large part  because of  land costs in west Davenport. He said one lot may be $30,000 to $40,000 less than a similar sized lot in Bettendorf.

Swanwick also credits programs such as the federal tax credit and Davenport Now for helping to drive  people to buy homes. “I feel real positive about this year,” he said.

His enthusiasm is shared by J.J. Condon, owner of Applestone Homes Inc., which builds custom homes, who says he is “cautiously optimistic.”

“In the Midwest, we never saw the hard times as the rest of country. Here, we put one foot in front of another, and try to make ends meet,” Condon, who also is a real estate agent for Mel Foster, said.

In his case, he sold all of his spec homes over the winter. Two pre-sold in December. “Typically this is a time where you slow down, but this winter has been crazy.”

“After a very long, snowy, cold winter, people are coming out of the woodwork,” added Teresa Rule, a licensed real estate broker with Mel Foster. “I have a lot of buyers interested. I am so busy, I am trying to stay ahead.”

Brian Bowman, executive director of the Quad-Cities Home Builders & Remodelers Association, said several factors might determine how successful the year will be.

“You have a three-layer situation,” he said. “The builders have done their part. The Realtors have done their part. But if the lenders do not do their part, you do not have anything.”

Laura Ernzen, vice president of marketing for IH Mississippi Valley Credit Union in the Quad-Cities, said the criteria for loans has changed in the past 18 to 24 months. However, she said financing is available for qualified borrowers for new-construction home loans.

Taken from www.qctimes.com.

How to score an offer

Friday, November 20th, 2009

You know the house — the nice brick one you drive past every day. The Smith family lives there, and it’s been on the market for months without a buyer.

Yet, there’s the Jones’ house, same model, just around the corner. That yard sign hasn’t been up for more than a few weeks and it already says “under contract.” What do they know that the Smiths don’t?

Real estate is never an exact science, especially in today’s market. But the reality is that sellers who are prepared and ready to sell their home are more likely to accomplish their goals than sellers who don’t make the same commitment to the process.

Here are a few “secrets” that I like to share with my sellers. Whether you’re thinking of selling or buying, I think you’ll agree that these tips can make a big difference.

Professional Staging. Good staging suggests how buyers can make the most out of the home’s area and spaces, and allows them to envision how they can live a clutter-free, ultra-chic lifestyle — even with a family of small children.

Well-maintained landscaping and outdoor living spaces. Everyone wants to view their home as a relaxing retreat. Indulge their fantasy with a lush lawn.

Everything neat as a pin. Minor flaws draw attention away from the finer features of a nice home. Patch, paint, tighten and repair everything before listing your home for sale.

Low price compared to others. If your home is priced lower than others of similar size and quality, you automatically become the buyer’s choice.

Accessible for showing. The more difficult for an agent to show your home, the fewer buyers they will bring. Make your home available on short notice to attract maximum attention.

Great photos on the Web. When your home is entered into the Multiple Listing Service (MLS), it is immediately exposed to thousands of agents and their clients. First impressions make a huge difference! Make sure your home is the “shiny red apple” with professional photos, in “show ready” condition from Day One.

Article Courtsey Of: Allen Tate Realtors


Copyright © 2010 Ruhl & Ruhl REALTORS. All rights reserved. Disclaimer: All content on this blog is my own opinion and should not be treated as fact or relied upon when purchasing or selling real estate.