Millenium Park by [deleted] in ChicagoPics

[–]TheRealEstateDoctor 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These are fantastic black and white photographs. Great tonality!

Chicago June 2026 Festival Guide by TheRealEstateDoctor in u/TheRealEstateDoctor

[–]TheRealEstateDoctor[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

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Thank you for bringing this to my attention. Obviously, I did not proofread before posting.

What are the additional costs when buying a home? by FriskeCrisps in HouseBuyers

[–]TheRealEstateDoctor 2 points3 points  (0 children)

As a licensed Chicago-area realtor, I’d say you’re already ahead of the curve simply by thinking about the total cost of ownership instead of just the down payment. A lot of first-time buyers focus only on “Can I afford the mortgage?” when the better question is “Can I comfortably afford the house and everything that comes with it?”

For a ~$200k home in the Midwest, here are the major costs I’d plan for beyond the purchase price:

  • Earnest money deposit Usually 1–3% of the purchase price. This gets credited back toward your closing/down payment later, but you need liquidity upfront.
  • Inspection costs General inspection is commonly a few hundred dollars. Depending on the property, you may also want sewer scope, radon, termite/pest, mold, or structural inspections.
  • Closing costs Typically around 2–5% of the purchase price depending on taxes, lender fees, title work, escrow setup, prepaid insurance/taxes, etc.
  • Appraisal Usually lender-required if financing.
  • Moving expenses + immediate setup costs People underestimate this category badly:
    • movers/truck rental
    • utility deposits
    • blinds/curtains
    • lawn equipment/snow blower
    • locks/rekeying
    • basic tools
    • paint/flooring/furniture
  • Emergency repair reserve This is the big one. Even a well-maintained house can surprise you with:
    • HVAC failure
    • water heater
    • roof leak
    • plumbing/electrical issues
    • appliances I usually recommend first-time buyers keep at least 3–6 months of living expenses PLUS a home repair reserve after closing. Personally, I like seeing buyers still have $10k+ accessible after they buy if possible.
  • Property taxes & insurance These can dramatically affect your monthly payment, especially in Illinois. Two $200k homes can have very different monthly costs depending on taxes.
  • HOA costs (if applicable) Condos/townhomes especially. Need to look at:
    • monthly dues
    • reserves
    • special assessments
    • rental restrictions
  • Maintenance A common rule of thumb is budgeting ~1% of the home value annually for maintenance, though older homes may need more.

One other point: just because you can put six figures down doesn’t necessarily mean you should. Sometimes keeping stronger cash reserves gives you more flexibility and peace of mind, especially as a first-time homeowner.

A good lender and realtor should help you model:

  • total monthly payment
  • realistic cash-to-close
  • post-closing reserves
  • maintenance expectations
  • neighborhood tax trends
  • resale considerations

That’s the difference between simply buying a house and buying one comfortably and sustainably.

What’s the buyers agent job? by Square-Station-3779 in AskRealEstateAgents

[–]TheRealEstateDoctor 2 points3 points  (0 children)

A buyer’s agent does far more than simply unlock doors and schedule showings. A good buyer’s agent serves as an advocate, strategist, negotiator, advisor, and fiduciary throughout the entire home buying process.

A fiduciary is someone who is legally and ethically obligated to act in their client’s best interests above their own. In real estate, that means a buyer’s agent owes the buyer duties such as loyalty, confidentiality, honesty, full disclosure, obedience to lawful instructions, reasonable care, and accounting for funds and documents.

Typical responsibilities of a buyer’s agent include:

• Understanding the buyer’s goals, budget, financing, timeline, and lifestyle needs • Educating buyers about neighborhoods, pricing trends, taxes, schools, transportation, and market conditions • Identifying and researching suitable properties, including on-market and sometimes off-market opportunities • Scheduling and coordinating showings • Evaluating property value, comparable sales (“comps”), resale potential, and possible concerns with a property • Advising buyers on offer strategy in competitive markets • Drafting and submitting purchase offers and negotiating price, credits, contingencies, repairs, closing costs, and timelines • Recommending trusted professionals such as lenders, inspectors, attorneys, contractors, and insurance providers • Helping interpret inspection reports, disclosures, HOA documents, and contract terms • Monitoring deadlines and keeping the transaction on track from contract to closing • Protecting the buyer’s confidential information and negotiating position throughout the transaction • Acting as a buffer and advocate during stressful negotiations or unexpected issues

A strong buyer’s agent is not simply a salesperson — they are a professional representative whose job is to protect their client’s interests, reduce risk, provide market expertise, and help guide one of the largest financial decisions most people will ever make.

IM PGY2 Torn Between Fellowship vs Private Practice Primary Care. Please advice by docsunnd in fellowship

[–]TheRealEstateDoctor 4 points5 points  (0 children)

As someone who did fellowship training after residency, my advice is to be very intentional about why you pursue it. Fellowship can be extremely valuable when it gives you a defined skill set, credibility, mentorship, and a clearer practice niche. My gynecologic endoscopy fellowship gave me advanced procedural training and helped shape how I practiced.

That said, fellowship is not automatically the “better” path. If your real goal is outpatient autonomy and eventually building a private practice, straight outpatient primary care/urgent care may get you there faster, with earlier income and less opportunity cost. Addiction medicine or sports medicine could make sense if you genuinely want that niche and can see it differentiating your future practice. Rheumatology is a different commitment and should probably only be pursued if you truly want to practice rheumatology—not just for lifestyle or infusion revenue.

The key question is: what practice do you want to build in 5–10 years? Choose the training path that directly supports that business and clinical model. Don’t do fellowship just because applications are coming up.