001-858-304-5437 if your timeline is urgent or you want to talk through the situation.
Buyer consultation
Plan your California purchase
Use this when you want to understand budget, target markets, pre-approval, offer terms, inspection risk, insurance, and the next step before touring or writing offers.
Short answer
How do I request california buyer consultation?
Use this when you want to understand budget, target markets, pre-approval, offer terms, inspection risk, insurance, and the next step before touring or writing offers.
What to include
Details that make the follow-up more useful
How the request is used
What a useful real estate follow-up should cover
A good response should not feel like a generic sales call. It should connect to the page you were reading, the market you entered, your goal, and the timeline you selected. If you are selling, the follow-up should help clarify value range, likely buyer demand, preparation work, disclosure concerns, net proceeds, and whether your timing is realistic. If you are buying, it should help clarify budget, cash-to-close, financing strength, offer strategy, inspection risk, insurance, and which markets fit your constraints.
For high-stakes situations such as probate, inherited property, divorce, tenant-occupied homes, fire-zone insurance, unpermitted work, liens, cash offers, relocation timing, or affordability pressure, the first conversation should separate what can be answered from public information from what needs document review or a licensed professional. That protects the visitor and keeps the next step useful.
Example requests
Examples of requests that lead to better answers
“I own a 3-bed home in San Diego, may sell within 90 days, have an older roof, and want to know whether to repair before listing.”
“I am pre-approved up to $850k, looking in Sacramento and Elk Grove, and want to understand cash-to-close and offer strength.”
“I am comparing Irvine and Anaheim, need a market report by property type, and want to know whether sellers are negotiating.”
“I received a cash offer, but I need to compare fees, repairs, closing date, certainty, and likely net proceeds if I list.”
Primary sources to verify
- California Department of Real Estate escrow, agency, consumer guidance, licensing
- California Housing Finance Agency first-time buyers, down payment assistance, loan programs
- California Franchise Tax Board taxes, capital gains, withholding
- Internal Revenue Service capital gains exclusion, tax reporting, 1031 exchange