7 Holiday Decorating Choices That Could Wreck Your Home

 
 

Holiday decorations can enliven the season, but they can also harm your home if used improperly or installed wrong.

Learn from an experienced contractor how holiday decor can damage your home—and how to easily fix it.

Candles Causing Fires or Furniture Damage

Candles are a common cause of holiday home damage and fires. Open flames can quickly ignite holiday decor. Heat from candles can scorch wooden furniture, add soot to walls, and melt the finish. While hardened wax drips can be removed, it's a difficult process.

Candle damage is easy to avoid: use flameless candles. If you're accustomed to fake-looking nonflammable candles, check out the newer types, as they look more realistic than ever.

For those who prefer candles with flames, place them only in sturdy nonflammable holders that won't tip. Keep them at least a foot away from anything that can catch on fire, such as curtains, greenery, or ornaments.

Improperly Anchored Outdoor Decor

Large outdoor decorations may look harmless. But when they aren't properly anchored, they can damage your yard.

"I've had clients call after the holidays asking why their sprinkler system isn't working, only to find out a holiday inflatable stake has pierced a water line," says Kevin McLister, production manager at BOLT Builders.

  • Anchor exterior holiday decorations—especially inflatables.

  • Use sandbags or soft anchors instead of sharp metal stakes.

  • Avoid installing anything heavy or sharp over underground utility lines.

  • Check your yard layout before staking anything into the ground.

Overloaded Extension Cords

Extension cords not only extend the reach of holiday lights; they're often paired with plug adapters that can connect up to six devices or light strands to a single extension cord. Overloaded extension cords can melt and cause fires, and coiled extension cords produce even more heat

"Distribute plugs across multiple outlets or use power strips with built-in surge protection," McLister says.

Uncoil extension cords. Always double-check that the lights used indoors are meant for indoor use, not outdoor use.

Overloaded Lights

Lights are a festive delight during the holidays. But plugging too many strands into an outlet can trip a circuit breaker or cause a fire.

"I've seen countless holiday light setups trip circuit breakers and melt cords," McLister says. "We all love holiday lights, but it's easy to get carried away with them," he adds.

McLister recommends LED lights instead of incandescent lights. LED lights use less power and produce less heat.

Check the light's package to verify how many sets of lights can be connected for either a 15V or 20V circuit breaker.

Placing Heavy Decor

Holiday decor can be heavy and oversized. Placed on walls and mantels, these decorations can pull drywall anchors out of the wall or damage walls and mantels. It's easy to overestimate how much weight hooks can hold, especially when overloaded with garlands, stockings, and lights.

To prevent damage to walls or mantels, use only light decor. Install adhesive hooks. Designed to be removable, adhesive hooks won't damage surfaces. Space the decor evenly to distribute pressure.

Dry Trees

A real tree provides some of the best holiday memories. But if it's not regularly watered, it can catch fire or scorch surfaces.

"People don't realize how fast a tree can catch on fire when it's dry, and even modern lights pose a risk," McLister says.

Experts estimate that a dry tree can ignite in seven seconds and be fully consumed by fire in one minute.1 To prevent this:

  • Keep your tree stand full of water and check the water level daily.

  • Place the tree at least four inches away from fireplaces, space heaters, or anything that produces heat or flames.

  • Use LED lights that stay cooler than traditional incandescent lights.

  • Never use candles on the tree.

Fasteners on Roof Trim or Gutters

Fastening outdoor holiday decor with staples, screws, or nails on the roof or gutters can lead to long-term problems.

"Every hole, no matter the size, can let moisture in and lead to wood rot, roof leaks, or poor gutter irrigation," says McLister.

Use plastic light clips that slide under shingles. Hooks can be clipped onto gutters to avoid puncturing the surface. Affordable and reusable, these fasteners won't damage your roof, gutters, siding, or trim.

Read more at the spruce

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How To Tell If the Bones of a House Are Good Without an Inspection

 
 

Finding the right home can be an arduous journey, with countless considerations along the way.

Ideally, buyers would find a home that’s affordable, turnkey, and in the perfect neighborhood, but recent years have shown that sacrifices are often necessary to become a homeowner.

If you happen to find an older home that checks two of those boxes, it might be worth the investment. As the song goes, “the house don’t fall when the bones are good”—but how can you know for sure without an inspection?

Visual cues that indicate strong bones

“When a house has good bones, everything is still square and leveled—the ultimate visual cue is uniformity,” says Bill Vaughan, CEO and co-owner of FnD Piers in Aurora, TX.

Perform a walk-through of the entire home and check the doors and windows. Do they open, close, and latch smoothly? If the answer is “yes” and the frames are still perfectly square, the home is likely in good shape.

Next, look at the floors. If there are no signs of unevenness or sloping and you can put a pen on them without it rolling, the underlying structure of the home is probably stable.

“Baseboards that flush against the floor without noticeable gaps where the walls meet the floors and ceiling usually mean the house hasn’t settled or shifted much,” explains Vaughan.

Another key cue is proper drainage, like clean gutters with downspouts that extend away from the foundation. This shows preventive care, which is always a good sign and indicates the house isn’t sitting on a wet puddle.

Red flags to watch out for

Any evidence that the structure of the home is being pulled apart should raise concerns.

“This is usually reflected through diagonal and stair-step cracks in the exterior or in the drywall around the corners of doors and windows,” says Vaughan.

These issues aren't cosmetic—they're structural warning signs. Another major flag is poor drainage. If the yard slopes toward the house, the property is literally sitting in a moisture pocket, which is the root cause of most foundation failures.

According to Thomas Borcherding, owner and lead designer at Homestar Design Remodel in St. Louis, trees near the home’s foundation are alarming as well.

“Not only do they pose a real risk to the home's foundation and plumbing due to tree roots, they are also exorbitantly expensive to have removed,” explains Borcherding.

Borcherding also recommends looking out for bathroom ventilation issues.

“Many times bathroom ventilation will terminate into the attic. This can cause mold and mildew problems, which are costly and annoying to resolve,” adds Borcherding.

Other telltale signs there are major issues in a home include awkward layouts with poorly placed load-bearing walls and fresh paint in random patches that’s intended to disguise cracks or leaks.

What warrants a professional inspection

Mitch Coluzzi, head of construction at SoldFast in Des Moines, IA, recommends you focus on the seller first—before you think about an inspection.

“Their honesty and willingness to share details is very telling,” says Coluzzi.

Ask yourself whether they’re open about every issue, or cagey when it comes to certain subjects. Do they encourage you to check out every nook and cranny of the home or keep you from exploring certain rooms or closets?

When sellers are clearly transparent, there’s a much better chance that the property is in good condition. If they’re secretive or reluctant to answer your questions, on the other hand, there are likely larger issues that may be invisible to the naked eye and require an inspection.

Vaughan explains that while you can safely look for symptoms, like cracks, sticky doors, and a sloping yard to evaluate the structure and feel of the home, any noticeable issues with electrical, plumbing, foundation, or roofing make a professional inspector worthwhile.

An inspector can confirm what your eyes suspect and save you from costly surprises in the future.

Read more at Realtor.com

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Mortgage rates expected to hold firm even with another Fed cut on the horizon

 
 

Mortgage rates remain in a holding pattern at the start of December and the general consensus among market experts is that little will change even if the Federal Reserve implements another interest rate cut next week.

Mortgage News Daily reported that 30-year fixed-rate mortgages averaged 6.31% on Monday, virtually unchanged from a week ago.

HousingWire’s Mortgage Rates Center, which relies on locked loan data across all credit profiles, reported 30-year conventional loan rates of 6.36% on Tuesday, down 1 basis point from a week ago. Rates for 30-year loans through the Federal Housing Administration (FHA) averaged 6.13%, up 2 bps during the week, while rates for 30-year jumbo loans were down 1 bps to 6.19%.

The stable nature of mortgage rates in recent weeks is partially tied to the consistency in mortgage spreads. The spread between the 30-year mortgage rate and the 10-year Treasury rate is higher than its historic average of 1.60% to 1.80%, but at a current figure of 2.19%, it’s much lower compared to where it was in late 2023 and late 2024.

“Mortgage spreads were the unsung superheroes of the housing sector this year, because we wouldn’t have had mortgage rates near 6% without them improving,” HousingWire Lead Analyst Logan Mohtashami wrote over the weekend.

Despite the ongoing friction between employment data and inflation data that could pull the economy in opposite directions, interest rate traders are confident that the Federal Reserve will lower benchmark rates on Dec. 10.

The CME Group’s FedWatch tool shows that 87% of traders are anticipating a cut of 25 bps, which would bring the federal funds rate to a range of 3.50% to 3.75%. It hasn’t been that low since September 2022.

Bright MLS chief economist Lisa Sturtevant said last week that she didn’t expect much movement for mortgage rates even with a third straight Fed cut.

“We are entering the traditionally slowest period for the housing market. Monthly home sales are lowest in November, December and January. Listing activity slows down during the winter as prospective sellers set their sights on early spring,” Sturtevant said in written commentary.

“We are in a ‘wait-and-see’ housing market as we head into 2026. There are both buyers and sellers on the sidelines, watching not just where mortgage rates and the economy are headed, but also how confident they feel about their own personal situations.”

What will the Fed do?

Under the watch of Jerome Powell, the Federal Reserve has typically shown solidarity with its monetary policy decisions. But dissension has grown in 2025 and was evident at the central bank’s late October meeting, when Kansas City Fed President Jeffrey Schmid voted for no cut, while Gov. Stephen Miran voted for a larger cut of 50 bps.

An article published Monday by The Wall Street Journal illustrated the divide. It listed four policymakers as “more likely to favor a cut” and five who are “less likely to favor a cut.” Powell, along with Gov. Lisa Cook and Vice Chair Philip Jefferson, could serve as the swing votes as their stances are less clear.

Beyond this month, the direction of interest rates could become more divisive. President Donald Trump is expected to announce Powell’s replacement soon, with the pick likely to align with Trump’s desire for much lower rates.

Kevin Hassett is the rumored frontrunner for the Fed chair job, according to a recent report from Bloomberg. Hassett is the director of the White House National Economic Council and a Trump ally who could push for lower rates on a faster timeline. Other candidates include current Fed governors Christopher Waller and Michelle Bowman; former Fed Gov. Kevin Warsh; and BlackRock executive Rick Rieder.

Whoever takes over as chair when Powell’s term ends in May 2026 will lead similar debates over interest rate policy and its impact on housing demand. And according to Mark Fleming, chief economist at First American, there are other factors at play that will influence home sales and mortgage origination volumes next year.

“An important dynamic for affordability is that household income is expected to rise faster than house prices next year,” Fleming said. “According to the New York Fed’s Survey of Consumer Expectations, median expected household income growth is 2.8 percent. When income growth exceeds house price growth, house-buying power improves — even if mortgage rates don’t decline meaningfully.

“This is a key driver of the roughly 3 percent improvement in affordability we expect between the end of this year and end of 2026, which would return affordability to levels not seen since the summer of 2022.”

Read more at Housingwire

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Are mortgage buydowns a lifeline or a risk for new homebuyers?

 
 

The debate over the large builders’ elevated use of mortgage buydowns — and the potential risks to buyers — isn’t new.

Reigniting the argument, a recent report from the American Enterprise Institute (AEI) asserts that mortgage buydowns among the large builders are artificially inflating new home prices, therefore creating a risk for buyers in the resale market. Publications and industry analysts, citing AEI’s data, added that the practice may help big builders at the expense of their homebuyer customers.

Large homebuilding firms would counter that mortgage buydowns remain the most effective financial tool to close the growing affordability gap, providing households with a bridge from rising rents to homeownership. Buydowns, they assert, allow borrowers to build equity faster, effectively a better deal for homebuyers than pure price cuts.

The debate that has sprung up centers on whether the widespread use of mortgage buydowns has been a net benefit or a net negative for buyers and the housing market at large.

This story doesn’t aim to answer that question definitively, since only time will tell. Instead, it seeks to unpack why big builders are increasingly using mortgage buydowns and to highlight some of the competing perspectives that shape this debate.

Setting up the debate

The 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was barely more than 3.0% at the beginning of 2022, but rose sharply throughout the year to a peak of more than 7.0% in October. By then, public builders had already begun using mortgage buydowns and continued to do so aggressively.

“That left builders in the lurch, particularly large new residential subdivision builders that had a lot of inventory. And so they started using permanent buydowns, quite naturally, to move that inventory rather than lowering prices,” Ed Pinto, Senior Fellow and Codirector at AEI Housing Center, tells HousingWire.

Since 2022, as more would-be homebuyers found themselves priced out of the market for new homes, exacerbated further by spiraling mortgage rates, homebuilders resorted to mortgage buydowns to make their homes more attainable, based on a homebuyer’s monthly payment capacity.

Part of their motivation at the time was competitive. Existing home listings had fallen off massively earlier, during COVID, and in the pandemic’s aftermath, never materialized, as owners “locked in” with historically low interest rates. This gave homebuilders a once-in-an-era opportunity to serve homebuyers without resale competition. Their ability to offer mortgage buydowns became a catalyst for better-than-expected sales pace from late 2022 through the third or fourth quarter of 2024.

Starting about then, many homebuilders — who’d overestimated ongoing demand in 2024 and 2025 — began having to work through a glut of spec homes, particularly in the South, which generally require more incentives to sell.

Of note, although reports say that up to 70% of all production builders — public and private — use buydowns, this tool is more widely used among large homebuilders. AEI data found that about 64% of new homes sold by the 21 largest builders as of June used a permanent buydown, compared with about 13% among smaller builders. By way of example, 73% of Pulte’s homebuyers last quarter received a mortgage rate buydown.

Many public builders are offering buyers mortgage rates as low as 3.99%. Executives at Smith Douglas Homes said they recently began offering a 3.49% rate on select homes that had been on the market too long. In comparison, the average 30-year FRM sits at 6.23% as of November 26.

These deals are possible because big builders have greater access to capital and can purchase forward commitments. These are arrangements in which lenders agree to sell mortgages in bulk at reduced rates. Essentially, this allows the large builders to assign those cheaper loans to homebuyers in a way that smaller builders and individual homeowners can’t match.

While these deals come at a cost, permanent buydowns are more cost-effective for builders than price reductions. According to Pinto’s research, lowering a buyer’s mortgage rate by 100 basis points sets a builder back about 3.2% of the sales price. Meanwhile, the same builder would need to cut the sales price by 10% to achieve the same monthly mortgage payment.

Additionally, permanent buydowns funded by builders through bulk forward commitments are not counted toward seller concession limits. According to AEI, if these buydown costs were included, roughly 25% of GSE loans and 66% of FHA loans on new homes sold by major builders would surpass the 6% cap on seller concessions. This means that many current permanent buydown programs wouldn’t be feasible without this loophole.

A Morgan Stanley report from July estimated that about 75% of new homes backed by Ginnie Mae and 30% of new homes backed by Freddie Mac and Fannie Mae include buydowns. The report further alleged that buyers using Ginnie Mae-backed mortgages pay a sales price about 12% higher due to elevated mortgage buydowns.

Pinto echoed this perspective, calling out the 21 largest builders for artificially inflating new home prices by 10-12%. To back up this claim, he presented data showing that new home prices from large builders are noticeably higher than those of competing homes from smaller builders and existing homeowners.

The recent allegation making headlines is that prices charged by the largest builders may be artificially inflated. Even though they offer lower mortgage rates, this could pose a risk for buyers, critics warn.

Is this a bad deal for buyers?

Does this trend pose a risk for buyers? It depends on who you ask.

The risk, according to critics, is that homeowners who buy at a potentially inflated price could end up owing more than what their homes are worth soon after closing. This could be especially pronounced in certain southern or western markets where new homes are plentiful, and prices are either stagnant or falling.

If the home were to hit the resale market in just a few years, it might sell for less. The risk is that the buyer would therefore be underwater.

Most economic and real estate industry forecasts predict that home prices will stabilize and rise slightly in 2026. Many of those forecasts avow uncertainty risks.

In a prior conversation with The Builder’s Daily, New Home Star founder David Rice warned that builders might be “setting a precedent that could backfire when those homes hit the resale market.”

However, there isn’t necessarily a greater risk for buyers who hold on to a property for longer, especially for a decade or more. This is because property values, even if they might decline in the short term, will typically be more favorable to homeowners in the long run.

Joel Berner, Senior Economist at Realtor.com, said that elevated mortgage buydowns could very well be inflating housing prices. From his perspective, this may pose a risk for the market. However, he also said that many people don’t care how mortgage payments come down, as long as they can afford the payments.

“If I am a buyer, and let’s say my budget is $2,500 for a monthly payment, I don’t care what my purchase price is. I don’t care what my mortgage rate is. I’ve got $2,500 a month that I can pay. Then if [builders] cut those mortgage rates down, you can keep the base price a little bit higher,” he said.

Realtor.com data shows that new home prices increased only 0.2% year-over-year and are down 4.0% from their peak in 2022. Due to high mortgage buydowns and stagnant new-home prices, the average mortgage payment for buyers purchasing a new home is now only $30 more than for those buying existing homes.

“We might actually be seeing that these prices are a little bit inflated, even as they’re falling right now, just because people are willing to come to the bargaining table. And if the bargaining chip you offer me is a low rate, then I’ll take that, because I don’t really care, as long as it doesn’t change my monthly payment,” Berner said.

Large homebuilders argue that mortgage buydowns are the best tool for affordability

Paul Romanowski, President and CEO at D.R. Horton, argued during a recent Q4 earnings that mortgage buydowns are a better deal for buyers than price cuts.

“I think for our buyer, again, it still comes back to the monthly payment. And the most attractive monthly payment we can put them in is with a lower rate. And I think it’s a benefit to the homeowner over time in terms of, they’re paying down more of their principal,” he said.

Public builder representatives contacted by HousingWire declined to comment for this story. However, the large builders may contend that mortgage buydowns sustain base sale prices and preserve comparable values in a community, while still improving buyer affordability.

Ken Gear, CEO of Leading Builders of America, an advocacy organization representing many large homebuilders, echoed Romanowski’s statement that mortgage buydowns are a tool for buyers to build equity faster. Buyers, he argued, want to build equity quickly with a mortgage payment they can afford, and aren’t as concerned with what the purchase price is.

He also argued that buydowns offer a more realistic pathway to affordability, as equivalent price reductions aren’t feasible and would cost builders’ operating margins much more.

“The buydown gives you a lower monthly payment, but you can’t lower the price enough to match that lower payment and still make a profit,” he said, arguing that some recent analyses on the topic are skewed.

Gear additionally argued that lower mortgage rates have another benefit — buyers with lower rates tend to remain in their homes for longer. Gear pointed to this trend to counter the arguments that there is a greater risk to some new home buyers if the price of their properties were to drop.

“We know from the current lock-in effect that people with lower rates tend to stay in their homes longer, and they tend to be a better risk. So I think the lower rate is, and especially in a falling rate environment or falling price environment, a better policy risk as well. The value of the collateral remains strong, and buyers who are building equity faster are more likely to stay in their home and not foreclose,” he explained.

The FHA’s Neighborhood Watch and Compare Ratio data, released in September, analyzed the percentage of loans from all lenders with 2,000 or more FHA originations over the prior two-year period that were seriously delinquent.

Mortgages among the 10 large homebuilder lenders in the report ranged from 1.11% to 1.52% seriously delinquent, compared with a national average of 2.37%. This indicates relatively strong payment performance among the homebuilder-affiliated lenders.

The bottom line

Buyers in the current market are strained. While a low mortgage rate sounds attractive, critics say that mortgage buydowns are a bad deal for buyers, especially in the short term.

The large public builders counter that generous mortgage buydowns are a proven way to address home seekers’ pursuit of homeownership, while maintaining sustainable profit margins.

This, however, grants the large public operators an upper hand that the smaller private builders can’t match. Large builders continue to gain more market share year after year. If the trend of elevated mortgage buydowns among their public counterparts continues, private homebuilders could be at an ongoing competitive disadvantage.

Read more at Housingwire

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Read before you reheat: The real deadline for eating, storing Thanksgiving leftovers

 
 

Once Thanksgiving is over, leftovers are the gifts that keep on giving.

But before you reach for another plate, it’s important to know how long it’s actually safe to enjoy your turkey, mashed potatoes and pies.

The 2-hour rule

According to FoodSafety.gov, perishable food needs to be refrigerated two hours after coming out of the fridge or oven. After that time period, bacteria begins to multiply quickly, especially when food sits out at room temperature during family gatherings.

Monday is your cutoff day

If you've been enjoying Thanksgiving dinner all weekend, that's great, but Monday is your last day. Experts recommend that after refrigerating food for four days, it should either be thrown out or frozen for a later time.

How long should you freeze it?

Over time, frozen food tends to lose quality and flavor, but here are some general recommendations from health experts about how long you can keep something frozen:

  • Cooked turkey: 2-3 months

  • Gravy: 2-3 months

  • Pies and Cakes: 2-3 months

  • Cooked stuffing and mashed potatoes: 1-2 months

Labeling containers with the date can help you keep track of expiration dates.

Reheating leftovers safely

Cover your food when reheating not only because it keeps the microwave clean, but also because it helps your food heat evenly. Make sure your food reaches 165 degrees Fahrenheit before digging in to stay safe.

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