đ˝ Albany's Got Billsâand We're Not Just Talking Utility!
Why Your Realtorâs 2025 Agenda Could Make Homeownership a Little Less... Spicy
If youâve ever tried buying a home in New York and thought, âWow, this process feels like ordering brunch at a trendy Brooklyn cafĂŠâexpensive, confusing, and everyoneâs pretending itâs normalââyouâre not alone.
Thankfully, Realtors in New York (our real estate Avengers) are stepping in with a legislative lineup tighter than Ryeâs inventory. Hereâs what theyâre fighting forâand why it matters to you, whether you're buying, selling, or still scrolling Zillow at 2 a.m.
đ° First-Time Buyer Power-Ups
First Home Savings Program â Tax-deductible savings accounts to buy your first home. It's like a 401(k), but for finally escaping your roommateâs 2 a.m. blender smoothies.
First Home Grant Program â $10,000 in free money. Not a typo. You just have to live in the house for 5 years (so...not a vacation fund, folks).
Mortgage Recording Tax Exemption â If youâre buying your first home, why should you pay extra just to record the debt you're taking on? NYSAR says skip itâand we agree.
đď¸ Vacant Properties = Future Homes
Letâs turn empty lots into cozy homes, not bonus dog parks for raccoons. Tax incentives could encourage builders to do just that. More homes = fewer bidding wars = slightly lower blood pressure for buyers.
đ§ž SONYMA: Now With Extra Perks!
A proposal to expand low-interest mortgages to recent grads and trade program heroes. Because you shouldnât need a PhD in finance just to afford a front porch.
đľď¸ââď¸ Protecting the Buyer Experience
Buyer Rep Agreements â Think of it like DTR (âdefine the relationshipâ) for real estate. Know whoâs working for you, how they get paid, and what to expect. Itâs transparency, not a trick question.
Banning 40-Year Listing Contracts â Because selling your house shouldnât feel like you joined a timeshare cult in 1985.
đŤ What NYSAR Opposes (And You Should Too)
Overreaching Wetland Regs â No shade to frogs, but the 2025 wetland expansion could freeze housing development across NY, especially in cities that desperately need more homes. NYSAR says: letâs protect nature and peopleâs ability to afford shelter.
If youâre reading this and thinking, âDang, real estate is wild,ââyouâre not wrong. But thatâs why weâre watching Albany, advocating for you, and making sure homeownership isnât just for the ultra-rich or the ultra-lucky.
đ Want to know how these bills could impact your next move?
Ask Hollingsworth About Real Estate.
(Or just send me a DMâIâm friendlier than your landlord.)