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Fraud, Family, 2026

Fraud, Family, 2026

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Overview In a season built for nostalgia, Deborah Morton makes a sharper point. The holidays are not only for catching up. They are for taking stock. Around a crowded table, the real question is not “How was your year?” It is “What does the next chapter require of this family, and are our homes helping or hurting that plan?”

This episode of Inside Georgia Real Estate threads three realities into one message. First affordability has stretched the path to homeownership so far that many first-time buyers are now over 40, by Deborah’s account. Second, the stakes of “doing it yourself” have risen, because fraud is no longer clumsy. It is polished, persistent, and increasingly automated. Third, 2026 may loosen the market’s grip, but it will not replace preparation.

What lands hardest is the contrast. A home is where we gather to feel safe, yet the biggest threats described here arrive through ordinary channels: a convincing email, a perfect set of documents, a deed that changes hands quietly. Deborah’s point is simple. Trust is not a strategy. Verification is. And the clock is already ticking.

Key Takeaways • Homeownership is still the most common engine for household net worth, and delaying it delays compounding. • If you want to help a younger buyer, a documented down payment gift can be safer than co-signing, which ties up your credit. • Start the conversation with aging parents early, and lead with care, not urgency. • “Preparation” is a 6 to 12 month habit, not a weekend scramble. • Real estate fraud is expanding. Verify identities, documents, and wiring instructions with a phone call to a known number. • A flatter market can still be fair. Professional execution matters more when margins are tighter.

Caller Q&A • Lynn: Asked about selling a home to her daughter while buying another nearby using a legacy trust. Deborah invited Lynn to message her through the website so the team can address the details.

Looking Ahead • Deborah expects 2026 to feel more balanced, with more negotiating room and a healthier give and take. Plan for options, not predictions. • She cited NAR chief economist Lawrence Yun’s outlook of a 14 percent rise in transactions in 2026, after two unusually low-volume years. • More inventory and more ready buyers could unfreeze decisions for families who delayed moves. • Fewer part-time agents may remain in the business, which could elevate professionalism for consumers who choose full-time expertise.

Practical Tips • For families: Use holiday time to map life stages, caregiving needs, and who may need to live closer to whom. • For buyers: Lock down credit access, keep spending steady, reduce debt, and aim for six months of clean payments before a mortgage application year. • For sellers: Declutter early, donate what you do not need, and assess visible fixes like walkways, decks, and gutters well before listing. • For everyone: Treat any “new wiring instructions” as suspicious until confirmed by voice with the closing attorney or lender. • For owners: Check your county’s property records occasionally, and see if your county offers deed or tax record alerts.

Timestamps

• 00:01 Holiday topics, fraud, and 2026 expectations

• 01:03 The holiday table as a planning meeting

• 03:38 Down payment help vs co-signing risks

• 06:38 Gentle conversations about aging in place

• 09:14 What buyer preparation really looks like

• 13:35 Seller prep: declutter, donate, and repair early

• 17:22 Three fraud scenarios, and how wire scams work

• 23:53 Market outlook for 2026, plus the agent shakeout

• 29:30 Lynn’s legacy trust question

• 30:40 The “bad listing” cautionary tale

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