Real Estate in New Hampshire

New Hampshire Real Estate Intel

Saturday, July 11, 2026
2 min read
4 stories

Welcome to your daily briefing on real estate developments in New Hampshire. Today we're covering 4 key stories including updates on new hampshire real estate headlines, background & context. Let's dive in.

1

New Hampshire Real Estate Headlines

1 story

1.1

New Hampshire Property Records Search | Owners, Deeds, Permits.

Check property records in New Hampshire, find owner info, search permits & purchase history, lookup up deed, tax, loan and lien records and much more.

Why It Matters

Relevant to real estate professionals operating in NH.

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2

Background & Context

3 stories

2.1

The HOA documents that matter when buying a condo.

Beyond the standard CC&Rs, four documents predict future assessment risk: the reserve study (is the association underfunded?), the most recent two annual budgets, the delinquency report (what % of owners are behind?), and any pending litigation. A reserve-study funding ratio below 30% is a yellow flag; below 10% is red.

Why It Matters

Special assessments in underfunded associations routinely run $10K-$50K per unit and arrive with little notice. The reserve study is a legally required disclosure in most states — but most buyers never ask for it.

2.2

The four title defects that surface after closing.

Even after a clean title commitment, four issues commonly surface post-close: undisclosed easements (often utility), boundary discrepancies between deed and survey, unreleased mortgages from prior owners, and mechanic's liens filed within the lookback window. Owner's title insurance covers most of these; lender's policy alone does not.

Why It Matters

The cost difference between owner's and lender's title insurance is one-time and small; the cost of resolving a title defect without owner's coverage is often five figures.

2.3

Why due-diligence periods are getting shorter — and what survives the squeeze.

In tight markets, sellers compress diligence windows from 30 days to 7-10. The items that survive a compressed window are the ones with hard external dependencies — title work, survey, environmental Phase I — because they cannot be parallelized further. Inspections and financing contingencies tend to get squeezed first.

Why It Matters

Buyers who try to do the same diligence in 1/3 the time produce lower-quality findings and end up with surprises at closing. Knowing what cannot be compressed is the difference between a clean close and a re-trade.

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Issue Summary

DateJul 11, 2026
Stories4
Sections2
Read Time2 min
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