10 Smart Questions to Ask Your Buyer’s Agent Before You Ever Tour a Home in San Antonio

by Tami Price

10 Smart Questions to Ask Your Buyer’s Agent Before You Ever Tour a Home in San Antonio Starting a home search in San Antonio without the right information in place can cost a buyer time, money, and negotiating leverage in ways that are difficult to recover once the search is underway and specific homes have created emotional investment. The questions a buyer asks their agent before the first showing reveal whether the agent has the market knowledge, transactional experience, and strategic orientation to protect the buyer's interests throughout a process that moves quickly and carries significant financial consequences at every decision point. Tami Price, REALTOR®, a San Antonio real estate professional and Air Force veteran with nearly two decades of local market experience, notes that the buyers who move through the San Antonio market most confidently and effectively are almost always those who established clear expectations, asked the right preparatory questions, and understood the full picture before any specific home created pressure to act.

For first-time buyers, military families evaluating VA loans, and move-up buyers in San Antonio, Schertz, Cibolo, Helotes, Converse, and Boerne, the ten questions below represent the information that separates a reactive, pressure-driven search from a deliberate, strategy-grounded one. Asking all of them before the first showing produces a buyer who evaluates each home against a clear framework rather than one who makes decisions in the moment with inadequate preparation for what the process actually requires.

Why Do the Questions Before the First Showing Determine the Quality of Everything That Follows?

The home search experience is shaped primarily by the preparation that precedes it rather than by the specific homes that become available, because a buyer with a clear financial framework, market understanding, offer strategy, and communication structure evaluates each opportunity objectively while a buyer without those foundations makes increasingly reactive decisions as the search progresses and emotional investment accumulates. The first showing is not the beginning of the homebuying process. The preparation conversation with the agent before that showing is, and the quality of that conversation determines how effectively the buyer can use every subsequent piece of information the search produces.

In San Antonio's 2026 market, where inventory levels are more balanced, financing strategies carry more weight than they did during the peak years, and buyers have more time to evaluate options carefully, the agent relationship and preparation quality matter more than they did when market urgency compensated for planning gaps. Buyers who invest the time to ask these ten questions before the search begins consistently navigate the process with more confidence, fewer surprises, and better financial outcomes than those who start touring without establishing this foundation.

1. How Does a Strong Buyer's Agent Determine What I Can Realistically Afford in San Antonio?

The affordability question deserves a more thorough answer than a lender's pre-approval ceiling provides, because the maximum loan amount a buyer qualifies for and the monthly payment that is genuinely sustainable within the household's financial life are not the same number. A buyer's agent who answers this question well goes beyond referencing the pre-approval amount to walk through how current interest rates translate to monthly payments at different price points, how San Antonio's property tax rates in specific neighborhoods and taxing jurisdictions add to the monthly obligation beyond the mortgage payment, how insurance costs vary by property age and location, and how HOA fees in specific communities affect the total monthly housing cost comparison.

The practical value of this deeper affordability conversation is that it prevents the situation where a buyer searches at the top of their qualification range and discovers after falling in love with a specific home that the total monthly obligation is significantly more than they planned to spend. An agent who helps buyers model total monthly cost for homes in different price ranges and neighborhoods before the search begins gives those buyers the ability to evaluate each opportunity against a complete financial picture rather than a headline price number. Buyers who identify their payment comfort zone before touring homes consistently make offer decisions with more financial confidence than those who discover their true comfort zone only when they receive the first escrow analysis after closing.

Q: What is the difference between what my lender says I can afford and what a buyer's agent says I should target in San Antonio?

A: The lender's pre-approval reflects the maximum loan amount that income, debt, and credit support under the loan program's qualification standards. A buyer's agent's affordability guidance considers the full monthly housing cost for specific homes in specific neighborhoods, including taxes, insurance, and HOA fees that the pre-approval calculation does not incorporate. A buyer qualified for a $400,000 loan may face very different total monthly costs depending on whether they are looking in a jurisdiction with a 2 percent effective tax rate and no HOA versus one with a 2.8 percent rate and a $200 monthly HOA, and that difference deserves to be part of the search parameters rather than a discovery after closing.

2. What Is Actually Happening in the San Antonio Market Right Now in My Specific Price Range?

Market conditions in San Antonio vary meaningfully across price ranges and neighborhoods, and a buyer who receives a general market overview without specific data for their target search area is operating on information that may not accurately reflect what they will encounter when they begin making offer decisions. An agent who answers this question well provides current inventory levels in the buyer's specific price range, average days-on-market for comparable homes in the neighborhoods the buyer is considering, recent sale-to-list-price ratios that reveal how much negotiating room currently exists, and any specific dynamics like active new construction competition or seasonal inventory patterns that are likely to affect the search.

This specific market picture is what allows buyers to calibrate their offer strategy accurately rather than applying generic assumptions that may be too aggressive in a slow segment or too conservative in an active one. The buyers who enter the San Antonio market with current, segment-specific data consistently make faster and more confident decisions when the right home appears than those who are learning market conditions reactively during the search process. For context on current San Antonio market conditions and how they affect buyers across different price ranges, that resource provides the data-informed perspective that makes market calibration most useful.

3. How Do You Help Buyers Compete When Multiple Offers Are in Play in San Antonio?

Even in a more balanced San Antonio market, specific homes in desirable price ranges and well-positioned neighborhoods continue to attract multiple interested buyers, and a buyer who does not understand the offer structuring strategies that create competitive positioning in those situations risks losing well-priced, well-located homes to buyers whose agents provided better strategic guidance. An agent who answers this question well explains how offer price, earnest money amount, option period structure, financing contingency presentation, and closing timeline flexibility can each be calibrated to create a more competitive offer without requiring the buyer to eliminate protections or exceed financial boundaries that were established for good reasons.

The answer to this question also reveals whether the agent has a genuine strategic framework for competitive offer situations or whether their approach is simply to encourage buyers to offer more and waive contingencies, which protects the agent's commission by getting offers accepted without necessarily protecting the buyer's interests. An agent with genuine competitive offer expertise can explain specifically how different combinations of terms create different risk and competitiveness profiles, and can recommend the approach that balances competitive positioning with the buyer's specific financial situation and risk tolerance. For buyers evaluating San Antonio's home buying process, understanding how offer strategy fits into the full transaction sequence provides useful context for this conversation.

Q: Is it ever smart to offer above asking price in San Antonio's 2026 market, and how should my agent advise me on this?

A: Whether offering above list price makes sense depends on the specific home's relationship to comparable sales, not on a general policy about the current market. A home priced below comparable sales in an active neighborhood may warrant an above-list offer that is still within the range comparable sales support. A home priced at or above comparable sales should not be pushed further above list price without a specific competitive reason, because the appraisal risk of offering above comparable sale support creates a financial exposure that benefits neither the buyer's wallet nor the transaction's likelihood of closing cleanly. An agent who recommends above-list pricing should be able to identify specific comparable sales that support the higher price, not simply encourage it as a competitive tactic.

4. How Do You Identify Potential Problems With a Home Before I Make an Offer?

The value of an experienced agent during a showing extends well beyond unlocking the door and providing access to the property, and buyers who expect their agent to simply facilitate their emotional response to each home without providing substantive analytical guidance are working with a professional whose value proposition is significantly narrower than what an experienced local agent can provide. An agent who answers this question well describes specifically what they look for during showings, including structural condition signals like cracking patterns, settlement indicators, and moisture evidence, functional layout concerns that affect livability and resale positioning, and location or neighborhood factors that affect long-term value in ways that the showing experience does not naturally surface.

This pre-offer home evaluation is the earliest stage at which an experienced agent protects the buyer from committing emotional investment to a property with significant undisclosed issues, because issues identified before an offer is made allow the buyer to choose a different home without losing earnest money or option period fees. Issues identified only after the inspection, when the buyer is already under contract, put the buyer in the position of either accepting known problems, paying for repairs, or exercising the option period exit at a cost that the pre-offer evaluation would have avoided entirely. Buyers who work with agents who provide substantive pre-offer home evaluation consistently make better property selections than those whose agents defer all condition evaluation to the inspection phase.

5. What Is Your Step-by-Step Process Once I Find a Home I Want to Offer On?

Understanding the offer and contract process before any specific home creates urgency is one of the most effective ways to reduce decision pressure during the most consequential moments of the homebuying process, because buyers who understand what comes next at each stage make faster, more confident decisions than those who are learning the sequence in real time while a clock is running. An agent who answers this question well walks through the specific steps from the decision to offer through offer preparation and submission, counter-offer or acceptance, earnest money delivery, the option period and its uses and deadlines, the inspection process and repair negotiation, the appraisal and its implications, and the closing process including final walkthrough and closing day expectations.

This walkthrough also reveals whether the agent manages transactions through a structured, documented process or reactively in response to each development as it arises, which is meaningful information about how well the buyer's interests will be protected when the transaction encounters the complications that a meaningful percentage of real estate transactions experience between contract and closing. Buyers who understand the full process before going under contract can anticipate each milestone, respond to each development from a position of knowledge, and make the time-sensitive decisions that transactions require without the paralysis that unfamiliar process creates for buyers who are learning it under deadline pressure.

Q: What is the option period in a Texas real estate contract and how should I use it?

A: The option period is a defined number of days, typically five to ten days in a San Antonio transaction, during which the buyer pays a negotiated option fee for the unrestricted right to exit the contract for any reason and receive the earnest money back. It is used to conduct the inspection and evaluate the findings, to negotiate repairs or credits based on inspection results, and to make the final determination that the home is the right purchase given all available information. Buyers who understand the option period before going under contract use it deliberately as the due diligence window it is designed to be rather than treating it as a formality that expires without meaningful use.

6. How Do You Handle Appraisal Gaps or Pricing Concerns in a San Antonio Transaction?

Appraisal gaps occur when a home's appraised value comes in below the contract price, and buyers who have not discussed this scenario with their agent before submitting an offer sometimes discover mid-transaction that they have neither the financial resources to cover the gap nor the contract protection to exit without losing earnest money. An agent who answers this question well explains how they evaluate appraisal risk before submitting each offer, what contract language protects the buyer if the appraisal comes in low, what the buyer's options are when a gap occurs, and how offer price relative to comparable sales is the primary tool for managing appraisal risk before it becomes a problem.

For VA loan buyers in San Antonio, the appraisal gap question carries additional significance because the VA loan's structure means a low appraisal requires resolution before the loan can close, and the resolution options available to the buyer depend heavily on what the contract says about appraisal outcomes. Buyers using VA financing should specifically ask their agent about VA appraisal contingency language and how it differs from standard appraisal contingency protection in other loan types, because understanding this distinction before an offer is submitted is the only reliable way to ensure the right protection is in the contract before it is needed.

7. Do You Have Specific Experience With My Type of Purchase?

Real estate transactions vary significantly in their specific requirements, risks, and processes depending on the type of purchase, and an agent whose experience is concentrated in one transaction type may provide guidance that is incomplete or inaccurate when applied to a different one. VA loan transactions involve specific appraisal standards, entitlement considerations, and occupancy requirements that conventional transactions do not. New construction purchases involve proprietary builder contracts, construction phase inspection coordination, and builder incentive evaluation that resale purchases do not. Military relocation purchases involve PCS timeline coordination, remote purchasing logistics, and sometimes VA loan assumption considerations that civilian relocations do not.

A buyer whose situation involves any of these specific transaction types deserves an agent with demonstrated experience in that specific context rather than one who handles the occasional example alongside a primarily different practice. The most productive way to evaluate experience with a specific transaction type is to ask how many similar transactions the agent has completed in the past twelve months and what the most common complications are in those transactions, because an agent with genuine experience will answer with specific examples while one with limited exposure will respond in general terms that do not reflect transactional knowledge. For buyers seeking guidance on finding the best real estate agent in San Antonio for their specific situation, that resource covers the full evaluation framework for agent selection.

Q: Why does it matter whether my buyer's agent has specific VA loan experience if my lender handles the financing?

A: The lender handles the financing mechanics, but the agent handles the contract terms, inspection coordination, appraisal management, and overall transaction strategy, all of which interact with VA loan requirements in ways that an agent without VA experience may not anticipate or address correctly. Builder contracts that conflict with VA appraisal contingency requirements, inspection timelines that do not account for VA property condition standards, and offer terms that create VA loan eligibility complications are all issues that an experienced VA agent identifies and addresses proactively while an inexperienced one discovers reactively when they create transaction complications near the closing date.

8. How Do You Coordinate Inspections and Due Diligence Throughout the Option Period?

Inspection coordination is one of the most time-sensitive and consequential aspects of the transaction that occurs entirely within the option period, and buyers who do not understand how their agent manages this process sometimes discover that deadlines pass without the information they needed to negotiate repairs or make a fully informed purchase decision. An agent who answers this question well describes how quickly inspections are typically scheduled after contract execution, which types of specialist evaluations are recommended for different property types and conditions, how inspection findings are communicated to the buyer, and how the agent guides the repair negotiation strategy based on what the inspection reveals.

The repair negotiation component of this answer is particularly revealing, because it demonstrates whether the agent approaches the inspection as a buyer advocacy tool or as a hurdle to close rather than a protection to exercise. An agent with genuine buyer advocacy orientation will explain how different types of inspection findings translate into different negotiation approaches, including which findings warrant direct repair requests, which warrant credit requests, and which findings should prompt reconsideration of the purchase itself at the agreed price. Buyers who understand this framework before going under contract approach the option period as an information-gathering and negotiation opportunity rather than as an anxiety-producing waiting period with unclear implications for what comes next.

9. How Will We Communicate Throughout the Homebuying Process?

Communication expectations established before the search begins prevent the frustration that arises when buyer and agent have different assumptions about response times, update frequency, and the appropriate channel for time-sensitive information. A buyer who expects same-day responses to questions and proactive updates on new listings and market developments has a fundamentally different communication need than one who prefers weekly check-ins and consolidated information, and both types of buyers are better served when the expectation is established explicitly rather than discovered through friction after the relationship is underway.

An agent who answers this question well describes their typical response time for buyer questions, the channels they use for different types of communication including text for time-sensitive alerts and email for detailed information, how they notify buyers of new listings that match the search criteria, how frequently they provide market updates relevant to the active search, and what the communication protocol is during the contract period when deadlines make timely information exchange particularly consequential. For military buyers who may be purchasing remotely from another duty station, this communication question is especially important because the buyer's physical absence from San Antonio makes the quality and frequency of agent communication the primary mechanism through which the buyer stays informed and engaged throughout the transaction.

10. What Should I Be Doing Right Now to Prepare Before Touring Any Homes?

This question reveals whether the agent approaches buyer representation as a reactive facilitation service, where they simply respond to what buyers request, or as a proactive advisory relationship, where they guide buyers through preparation steps that produce better outcomes than the buyer would achieve without that guidance. An agent who answers this question well provides a specific, actionable preparation checklist rather than a general encouragement to get pre-approved, because the full preparation for an effective home search involves more specific steps than the single most obvious one.

A comprehensive preparation guidance answer should include completing VA or conventional lender pre-approval before any showings so that qualification documentation is ready when an offer decision must be made quickly, understanding the full monthly cost picture for homes in the target price range including taxes and insurance so that the search parameters reflect genuine affordability rather than maximum qualification, reviewing the basics of the Texas real estate contract so that contract terms are not being learned for the first time under offer submission pressure, establishing clear search criteria for must-have and nice-to-have features so that each home can be evaluated objectively rather than emotionally, and understanding the overall transaction timeline so that each step feels anticipated rather than surprising. For a comprehensive overview of the full home buying process in San Antonio, that resource provides the step-by-step context that makes each preparation item most meaningful.

Expert Insight from Tami Price

The ten questions in this guide are the ones that separate buyers who feel prepared and confident throughout the San Antonio homebuying process from those who feel reactive and uncertain at each new decision point, and the difference between those two experiences is almost entirely a function of the preparation conversation that either did or did not happen before the first showing. The quality of the agent relationship is established in the first substantive conversation, and the answers to these ten questions reveal whether the agent brings the market knowledge, transactional experience, and strategic orientation that genuinely serves the buyer's interests or primarily facilitates access to listings. Tami Price, REALTOR®, a USAF veteran and San Antonio real estate professional with nearly two decades of local market experience, builds her buyer consultations around exactly this kind of substantive preparation conversation, because she knows that buyers who understand the process, the market, and the strategy before they tour their first home consistently make better decisions throughout what follows.

Her sustained experience with first-time buyers, military families using VA loans, and move-up buyers navigating simultaneous transactions gives her the breadth to answer each of the ten questions from real transactional experience rather than from general real estate guidance, and that depth of specific experience is what makes the preparation conversation genuinely useful rather than procedurally complete.

"The buyers who have the most satisfying home purchases are the ones who came in knowing what to expect at each step and feeling confident in the strategy behind each decision," says Tami Price, REALTOR®. "The ten questions in this guide are how you get there before you ever walk into a home. The answers you receive tell you whether the agent you are working with can actually take you there, or whether you need to keep looking."

Recognized as a RealTrends Verified top real estate agent in San Antonio, a 15-time Five Star Professional Award winner, and the recipient of more than 650 five-star reviews, Tami Price serves first-time buyers, military families, and move-up buyers across San Antonio, Schertz, Cibolo, Helotes, Converse, and Boerne.

Three Key Takeaways

  1. The answers to these ten questions reveal whether a buyer's agent has the market knowledge, transactional experience, and strategic orientation that genuinely protects the buyer's financial interests or whether they primarily facilitate access to listings without the deeper guidance that makes the homebuying process effective. Buyers who ask all ten questions before committing to representation consistently work with agents better suited to their specific situation than those who select based on personality or referral alone without evaluating specific expertise. The investment of thirty minutes in this preparation conversation consistently produces a better agent selection and a better homebuying experience than selecting an agent without it.
  2. Understanding the full process, from market conditions through offer strategy, inspection coordination, appraisal management, and closing logistics, before any specific home creates emotional investment is the preparation that allows buyers to make time-sensitive decisions with confidence rather than anxiety. The homebuying process in San Antonio involves multiple decision points with contractual deadlines that do not accommodate deliberation by buyers who are learning what they should have understood before the search began. Buyers who complete this preparation conversation and understand what is coming at each stage consistently navigate those decision points more effectively than those who encounter each one as a new experience under deadline pressure.
  3. Buyers with specific transaction types, including VA loan buyers, military relocation buyers, and new construction buyers, need agents with demonstrated specific experience in those transaction types rather than agents with general residential real estate experience who handle the occasional example. The questions, risks, and processes in VA transactions, military relocations, and new construction purchases differ meaningfully from standard resale transactions in ways that an agent without specific experience may not anticipate or manage correctly. Asking specifically about experience with the buyer's transaction type, with a request for specific recent examples, is the evaluation step that distinguishes genuine expertise from claimed familiarity.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q. How do I know if a buyer's agent in San Antonio is genuinely working in my interest rather than primarily focused on closing a sale?

A. The clearest indicators are behavioral rather than stated. An agent who volunteers concerns about a property you are interested in rather than waiting for you to ask, who recommends passing on a home that does not serve your stated criteria, who explains the risks of specific offer terms rather than encouraging acceptance of whatever moves the transaction forward, and who answers direct questions about their approach to inspection negotiations and appraisal management with specific examples rather than general assurances is demonstrating buyer-advocate orientation through behavior rather than claiming it through marketing language.

Q. Is it necessary to sign a buyer representation agreement before touring homes with an agent in San Antonio?

A. Texas real estate law requires buyer representation agreements when buyers work with agents on residential transactions, and the terms of that agreement should be clearly understood before it is signed. The agreement defines the scope of representation, the compensation structure, and the exclusivity terms, and buyers benefit from reviewing and discussing these terms before signing rather than signing under the pressure of wanting to tour a specific home. An agent who explains the agreement clearly and is willing to answer questions about its terms before asking for a signature is demonstrating the transparency that the buyer relationship warrants.

Q. What should I do if I am not satisfied with my buyer's agent's answers to these ten questions?

A. Continue the conversation to understand whether the inadequate answers reflect a knowledge gap, a communication style difference, or a genuine misalignment between what the agent offers and what the buyer needs. Some agents who have the relevant experience communicate it less articulately than others, while some who communicate confidently have less depth than their responses suggest. Asking follow-up questions that require specific examples rather than general assertions is the most reliable way to distinguish between these scenarios. If the follow-up questions also produce unsatisfying answers, continuing the agent selection process before committing to representation is the appropriate response.

Q. How does the agent selection question differ for military buyers using VA loans compared to civilian buyers?

A. Military buyers using VA loans need agents with specific VA transaction experience who understand how VA appraisal standards interact with property condition, how VA occupancy requirements affect purchase timing, how entitlement works across multiple purchases, and how to structure offers that address sellers' VA-related concerns without compromising the buyer's benefits. These are specialized knowledge areas that an agent without VA transaction history is unlikely to have, and military buyers who ask directly about VA-specific experience and request examples of recent VA transactions are evaluating the right dimension of the agent's expertise for their specific situation.

Q. Should I get lender pre-approval before meeting with a buyer's agent in San Antonio?

A. Beginning the lender conversation before or simultaneously with the agent selection process is advisable rather than waiting until after agent selection, because the pre-approval process reveals important information about the buyer's financing options, qualification parameters, and any documentation issues that affect the search parameters. An agent who is asked about this in the preparation conversation should be encouraging pre-approval before the search begins rather than suggesting it can happen later, because buyers who enter the active search without pre-approval documentation lose competitive ground to those who have it completed when an offer opportunity presents itself.

Q. How does the buyer's agent answer to the market conditions question differ for first-time buyers versus move-up buyers in San Antonio?

A. The underlying market data is the same for both buyer profiles, but the implications and the relevant emphasis differ based on what each buyer is evaluating. For first-time buyers, the market conditions conversation should emphasize how current inventory levels affect timeline expectations, what price ranges offer more negotiating leverage versus less, and how the rate environment affects the purchase price range that is sustainable within their financial position. For move-up buyers, the conditions conversation should address how both the segment they are selling into and the segment they are buying into are behaving, because a coordinated transaction depends on accurate assessment of both sides simultaneously.

Q. What is the most revealing question on this list for evaluating a buyer's agent's quality?

A. The questions about appraisal gap handling and pre-offer home evaluation are among the most revealing because they require specific knowledge rather than general real estate familiarity. An agent who can explain specifically how they evaluate appraisal risk before submitting an offer, what contract language they recommend for buyer protection in different scenarios, and what specific condition signals they look for during showings is demonstrating the kind of applied transactional knowledge that distinguishes experienced buyer advocacy from facilitation. Agents who respond to these questions in vague, general terms are likely more experienced at coordinating transactions than at protecting buyers' financial interests throughout them.

Q. How long should the preparation conversation with a buyer's agent take before the first showing?

A. A thorough preparation conversation covering all ten questions and the buyer's specific situation, including financial position, financing type, transaction type, and timeline, typically takes 45 to 90 minutes. Buyers who feel that an agent is rushing through this conversation or treating it as a brief formality before getting to showings should consider whether the agent's prioritization reflects the balance between facilitation and advocacy that their situation requires. The preparation conversation is not overhead before the real work begins. It is the foundation that makes the real work effective.

The Bottom Line

The quality of a San Antonio home search is determined before the first showing by the quality of the preparation conversation with the buyer's agent, and the ten questions in this guide are the specific content that makes that conversation genuinely useful rather than procedurally complete. Buyers who ask all ten questions, listen carefully to the answers, and select representation based on demonstrated knowledge and genuine buyer advocacy orientation consistently navigate the San Antonio market more effectively than those who select an agent based on availability or referral and discover the gaps in that selection during a transaction that is already underway.

The right buyer's agent for San Antonio's 2026 market brings current, specific market knowledge, demonstrated transactional experience with the buyer's specific purchase type, a clear and protective approach to offer strategy and due diligence, and a communication structure that keeps the buyer informed and prepared at every decision point. Those qualities are revealed by the answers to these ten questions and are not discoverable through any other pre-relationship evaluation method available to buyers before the first showing.

Buyers in San Antonio, Schertz, Cibolo, Helotes, Converse, and Boerne who want to begin the conversation that these ten questions are designed to facilitate are encouraged to book a consultation before any home search activity begins so that the preparation, market knowledge, and strategy foundation are in place before any specific home creates the pressure that makes objective evaluation harder to complete.

Tami Price, REALTOR®

 

Contact Tami Price, REALTOR® | San Antonio, TX

Tami Price, REALTOR®, serves first-time buyers, military families, and move-up buyers across San Antonio, Schertz, Cibolo, Helotes, Converse, and Boerne with nearly two decades of local market experience and a commitment to informed, strategic buyer representation at every stage of the homebuying process.

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✉️ tami@tamiprice.com

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Tami Price's Specialties

  • Buyer and Seller Representation
  • Military Relocations and PCS Moves
  • VA Loan Guidance
  • New Construction
  • First Time Home Buyers
  • Move Up Buyers
  • Downsizing and Rightsizing
  • Strategic Pricing and Market Analysis
  • San Antonio, Schertz, Cibolo, Helotes, Converse, and Boerne

Disclaimer

This blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, financial, or real estate advice. Market conditions, financing options, and individual circumstances vary. Readers should consult qualified professionals, including a licensed lender and real estate agent, before making real estate decisions. Tami Price, REALTOR®, is licensed in Texas and affiliated with Real Broker, LLC. Fair Housing principles apply to all content.

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Tami Price

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4204 Gardendale St., Suite 312, Antonio, TX, 78229, USA

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