Buy | Sell | Thrive at Home Live.Laugh. Real Estate March 17, 2026
Artificial intelligence is everywhere right now. It can draft emails, summarize contracts, generate renovation ideas, and even analyze photos of your HVAC system — heck, it even helped us finalize this blog.
Keep in mind, AI is a tool. It’s not your advisor, advocate, fiduciary, and definitely not your neighbor.
This April, in the spirit of Integrity and Fair Housing Month, let’s talk about how to leverage AI the smart way if you're a home buyer, home seller, or homeowner — and where you still want a real human in your corner.
Instead of separating buyers, sellers, and homeowners, let’s simplify this.
No matter where you are — buying, selling, or simply maintaining what you own — these three rules apply.
AI is only as good as the prompt you give it.
If you ask vague questions, you'll get vague answers.
Examples of vague prompts:
“Should I buy this house?”
“Is this a good price?”
“Is my home worth more this year?”
That’s not strategy. That’s fishing for reassurance.
Instead, anchor your prompts to facts.
Ask questions like:
“I'm considering a 1950 home with original plumbing. What maintenance risks should I budget for in the next 5–10 years?”
“Based on current 30-year fixed mortgage trends, what financial scenarios should I model before increasing my budget by $50,000?”
Try prompts like:
“What buyer objections are common for homes built in 1975, and how can sellers proactively address them?”
“Create a pre-listing repair checklist ranked by ROI.”
Examples include:
“Based on a 2,000 sq ft home built in 1995, what energy efficiency upgrades typically have the fastest payback period?”
“What maintenance items, if deferred, become the most expensive long-term?”
Specific questions turn AI into a research assistant — not a decision-maker.
AI tends to mirror your tone and direction.
If you ask:
“This seems like a great deal, right?”
You'll likely get validation.
Instead, pressure-test your thinking.
Ask:
“Give me five reasons this purchase could benefit me financially, and two concerns.”
“What risks am I underestimating in this market?”
Try:
“What are the strongest arguments a buyer might use to negotiate my price down?”
“If this home sits on the market for 30 days, what are the likely causes?”
Ask:
“If I skip upgrading insulation, what could that cost me over 10 years in energy loss?”
Use AI to stress-test your optimism — not inflate it.
Confidence is powerful. So is objectivity.
AI reflects patterns from public information. It does not independently fact-check itself.
If your tool can browse the web, require links.
Ask:
“Cite your sources and provide direct links for any data referenced.”
If it cannot browse, pivot.
Ask:
“List the types of public data sources I should verify this information against.”
Then cross-check using sources such as:
County tax records
City planning and zoning portals
State licensing databases
Federal or state energy incentive websites
Market data from trusted real estate professionals
Ask about infrastructure plans, zoning updates, and resale trends — not opinions about who lives there.
Use AI to understand pricing concepts, not to set your list price in isolation.
Verify tax credits, rebate programs, and energy efficiency claims before investing.
AI can be a powerful research partner and an incredibly efficient tool.
But verification is still your responsibility — and having a knowledgeable professional in your corner still matters.
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