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Posts from January 2026

The Cameron Compass

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Uncategorized | 131 Posts
January
5

You'll hear "inventory is up" or "inventory is tight." But what does that mean for Volusia County real estate?

Inventory is simply the number of homes available right now. When inventory rises, buyers often get more choices and negotiating room. When it shrinks, well-prepared buyers and well-priced listings tend to move faster.

Also watch days on market and price reductions. A market can have "more listings" and still be competitive if the best homes are moving quickly. On the flip side, a market can look busy but be sluggish if many listings are overpriced.

At Adams, Cameron & Co., Realtors, we track local patterns so you can make decisions based on what's happening—not he...

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January
4

"Volusia County homes for sale" covers a lot of ground—coastal, inland, historic, newer subdivisions, and rural pockets. Instead of guessing, compare areas using the same three categories:

1) Commute + access: main roads, bridges, and daily drive patterns.
2) Home types: condos, single-family, townhomes, new construction, acreage.
3) Price behavior: list-to-sale patterns, days on market, and typical condition at each price point.

Then, compare individual listings by total cost of ownership: insurance expectations, utilities, HOA/condo fees (if applicable), and likely repair timelines.

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January
3

Buying in Daytona Beach area can be exciting—and expensive if you skip basics. Here are five common mistakes we help buyers avoid:

  1. Touring before getting numbers: Know your comfortable monthly payment range early.

  2. Falling for staging: Look past décor and focus on roof, HVAC, windows, and layout.

  3. Ignoring days on market: Time tells a story—pricing, condition, or market shift.

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January
2

Searching "Daytona Beach homes for sale" can feel like drinking from a firehose. Start with three filters that cut through noise: location basics (zip code or area), budget range, and property type (single-family, condo, townhouse). Then add "must-haves" like garage, pool, or single-story—only after you've seen what's realistic in today's inventory.

Next, compare homes using the same yardstick: price per square foot, condition, age of major systems (roof/HVAC), and days on market. A home priced right usually attracts attention quickly; a home that lingers may need a strategy shift.

At Adams, Cameron & Co., Realtors, we help buyers sort listings into three buckets: "buy-now," "watch," and "walk-away." That way you s...

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January
1

Online listings are great—until they aren't. When you search Daytona Beach real estate, the biggest gaps are usually insurance considerations, flood zones, HOA rules (if any), and the true condition of big-ticket items.

A listing might look perfect and still carry hidden costs. Before you fall in love, confirm:

  • Roof age + material (often impacts insurance options)

  • HVAC age + service history

  • Windows/doors (effici...

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