
The 5 Biggest Financial Mistakes Homeowners Make (And How to Avoid Them)
Owning a home is one of the most powerful wealth-building tools available to everyday families. But like any powerful tool, it can work against you if it's not used wisely. These are the five financial mistakes I see homeowners make most often — and what to do instead.
Mistake #1: Neglecting Maintenance Until It Becomes a Crisis
Deferred maintenance is one of the most expensive decisions a homeowner can make. A small roof leak ignored becomes a $15,000 repair. A minor plumbing issue becomes water damage. A failing HVAC system becomes an emergency replacement at the worst possible time.
Treating your home like the asset it is means budgeting 1-2% of your home's value annually for maintenance and addressing issues early. It protects your investment and your sanity.
Mistake #2: Over-Improving for the Neighborhood
Not all renovations return their cost at resale. A $100,000 kitchen remodel in a neighborhood where homes top out at $350,000 will rarely return full value. Before any major improvement, understand your neighborhood's ceiling and invest accordingly. The goal is to be competitive — not to price yourself out of your own market.
Mistake #3: Tapping Home Equity for Depreciating Assets
Home equity lines of credit and cash-out refinances can be useful financial tools — but using them to finance vacations, vehicles, or consumer spending converts your appreciating asset into a liability. Your equity is wealth. Protect it.
Mistake #4: Ignoring the Homestead Exemption
Florida's homestead exemption can save eligible homeowners thousands of dollars in property taxes annually — and the Save Our Homes cap limits how much your assessed value can increase each year. Many homeowners either don't apply or don't fully understand the benefit they're entitled to. If you own your primary residence in Florida and haven't applied, this should be your next phone call.
Mistake #5: Waiting Too Long to Sell
Market timing is never perfect, but waiting for the absolute peak often means missing the window. Homeowners who stay too long in a softening market leave equity on the table. If your home has appreciated significantly and your life circumstances support a move, the conversation about selling is worth having sooner rather than later.
Your home is likely your largest asset. Managing it with the same intention you'd bring to any investment makes all the difference.
I'm Lisa Rhodes, Broker/Owner of Rhodes Realty Group, where all Rhodes lead home.
📞 813-756-8667 | rhodesrealtygroup.com
