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The 3 Sides To Every Home Purchase: Price, Location, and Features

The 3 Sides To Every Home Purchase: Price, Location, and Features

Every home purchase has three sides: price, location, and features. The conventional wisdom — repeated by most buyers and most agents — is that you can only satisfy two of the three. Pick the right location at the right price and sacrifice features. Get the features and location you want and pay more than you planned. Most buyers accept this trade-off as a given. After 24 years in this market, I don't. A motivated, patient buyer working with someone who knows the market and has systems in place can often get to 90% or better on all three sides — which beats settling for two every time. Ty Lacroix, Broker at The Envelope Real Estate Group, and Michael Theisen have spent 24 years helping London buyers find homes that don't ask them to give up what matters most.

Every home purchase has three sides. Price. Location. Features. The conventional wisdom — accepted by most buyers and repeated by most agents — is that you can only satisfy two of them. The third always gives way.

The Home Buyers Pyramid

I strongly disagree with that as an absolute rule. A motivated, patient buyer working with a broker who knows the market and has proper systems in place can often satisfy all three — maybe not 100% on each, but 90% across all three beats 100% on two and nothing on the third every time. As a buyer in London, Ontario, I suspect you'd agree.

Here's how each side actually works in practice.

Price

Price is what you're qualified for — not what you wish you could spend, and not what a seller wishes you'd pay. If you're approved to buy up to $800,000, looking at homes priced at $900,000 leads to one of two outcomes: you discourage yourself before finding anything you can actually have, or you end up making an offer that requires $80,000 to $100,000 off the asking price, which most sellers at that price point will find insulting regardless of market conditions.

That said, I've seen sellers with unrealistic expectations drop their price by $100,000 or more after months of no showings and no offers. A reasonable buyer working with a reasonable seller can make the price side of the pyramid work. The key word on both sides is “reasonable.

Location

Location may be the most important side of the pyramid for most buyers — and the one least worth compromising. Regardless of price or features, if you don't feel right about where a home sits, you won't buy it, and you shouldn't. Your comfort with the neighbourhood, the street, the commute, the proximity to family or amenities — these things don't improve after you move in. They're fixed. Get them right.

The good news is that London's established neighbourhoods — Byron, Westmount, Riverbend, Old South, Sunningdale, Lambeth, and others — offer genuine variety across different price points and feature profiles. Location doesn't have to be the side that breaks the pyramid. It has to be the side you're clearest about before you start looking.

Features

What are your must-haves? What would be nice? What genuinely doesn't matter? Most buyers arrive at this conversation with a long list that hasn't been ranked — and then spend showings reacting to homes emotionally rather than measuring them against what actually matters.

Here's the practical approach: draw a line in the sand on your true must-haves. One bathroom or two. Main-floor bedroom or not. Garage or no garage. These are non-negotiable. Everything else — the kitchen style, the basement finish, the backyard size — belongs on a separate list, one you can trade against without compromising what you actually need.

I have yet to find a home that checks 100% of anyone's boxes. The buyers who do best are the ones who know which boxes are load-bearing and which ones aren't.

Why All Three Are More Achievable Than Most Buyers Think

The reason buyers are told to accept two out of three is usually one of two things: either the search is being run too narrowly, or the buyer hasn't been clear enough with themselves about what's truly non-negotiable versus merely preferred. When price, location, and features are defined properly — not as a wish list, but as a ranked set of real priorities — the number of homes that satisfy all three expands meaningfully.

If you're finding it genuinely difficult to locate the right home in London, one of the three sides isn't aligned. That's the honest diagnostic. And fixing it almost always starts with a conversation that clarifies which side, and why.


Still looking for the home that checks the boxes that actually matter? Reach out for a private conversation — no pressure, no pitch.

For the complete buyer framework: London Ontario Home Buying Strategy →

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