Los Angeles Times

As the housing market slows, builders are offering buyer discounts

LOS ANGELES - As the housing market has downshifted, more builders are offering sweeteners to close the deal.

Companies large and small are paying closing costs, buying down mortgage rates and trimming square footage to offer a cheaper abode. Some are countering the high cost of a mortgage with a more direct method - outright lowering prices on newly built homes.

"We are really working a little bit harder ... to get people in the door and to get people excited," said Mark Mullin, a real estate agent selling several new projects in the Los Angeles area.

At the Gallery, a project in the Valley Village neighborhood of Los Angeles, a builder even offered to pay the lease on a Mini Cooper car if potential buyers agreed to go into escrow on a home.

"These are things they were not having to do

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Los Angeles Times

Los Angeles Times4 min readAmerican Government
Nuclear Waste Storage At Yucca Mountain Could Roil Nevada US Senate Race
LOS ANGELES -- More than 3.5 million pounds of highly radioactive nuclear waste is buried on a coastal bluff just south of Orange County, California, near an idyllic beach name-checked in the Beach Boys' iconic "Surfin' U.S.A." Spent fuel rods from t
Los Angeles Times4 min read
Geopolitics And The Winner Of This Season's 'RuPaul's Drag Race'
TAIPEI, Taiwan — To hundreds of thousands of fans around the world who watched this season's finale of the hit reality show "RuPaul's Drag Race," the final plea for victory from one of the contestants wasn't especially memorable. "It would mean a lot
Los Angeles Times5 min readPoverty & Homelessness
Monthly Payments Of $1,000 Could Get Thousands Of Homeless People Off The Streets, Researchers Say
LOS ANGELES -- A monthly payment of $750 to $1,000 would allow thousands of the city's homeless people to find informal housing, living in boarding homes, in shared apartments and with family and friends, according to a policy brief by four prominent

Related Books & Audiobooks