Showing posts with label ND Parents. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ND Parents. Show all posts

Saturday, June 6, 2026

5 Questions Every Notre Dame Property Buyer Must Ask Before an Offer

ND Buyer Playbook · Post 7 of 9 · Both Audiences

5 questions every buyer near Notre Dame should ask before making an offer

Most buyers ask about price, square footage, and distance to campus. Those are the obvious questions. These are the five that actually determine whether a property is the right one — and most people never think to ask them.

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate · 8 min read
📋 Both ND Parents & Alumni ✅ Pre-purchase checklist ✅ Applies to all property types

After years of helping buyers in the Notre Dame market, I've noticed a pattern. The buyers who feel great about their purchase three years later almost always asked a different set of questions than the ones who have regrets. It's not about being smarter or more experienced. It's about knowing which questions this specific market demands — and the ND-adjacent market has some genuinely unique wrinkles that most generic real estate advice doesn't cover.

I'm Tim Vicsik with Trueblood Real Estate. This post is a pullback-the-curtain moment — the five questions I walk every buyer through before we write an offer. Some of them will be obvious in hindsight. A few will surprise you. All five will change how you look at the next listing you tour.

Whether you're an ND parent buying housing for your student or an alumnus buying your permanent game-day headquarters, these questions apply equally. The answers you get will tell you more about a property's real value — and real risk — than anything on the listing sheet.

· · ·
5 questions
01
Question
The one that bites buyers most often

"What are the HOA's exact rental rules — and have they changed recently?"

Why most buyers never ask this

They assume that because a condo is near Notre Dame — and Notre Dame is a major rental market — rentals must be permitted. That assumption is wrong often enough to matter. A lot.

This is the question I ask on behalf of every single buyer I work with, before they fall in love with a unit. The Notre Dame-adjacent market has a significant number of condo associations with rental restrictions that range from manageable to deal-breaking, depending on your strategy.

What you need to know specifically: Does the building allow short-term rentals (Airbnb, VRBO)? If so, is there a minimum stay requirement? Is there a cap on how many units in the building can be rented at once? Are there occupancy limits? Has the board amended the rental rules in the last two years — and is another amendment in discussion?

That last question matters because HOA rental policies change. A building that allowed STRs when the previous owner bought it may have since voted to restrict them. A building that currently allows them may be one contentious board meeting away from a prohibition. I read the current rules and the last two years of meeting minutes for every property a buyer is seriously considering. The meeting minutes often telegraph where the association is heading before the rules formally change.

✅ Good answer

"Short-term rentals are permitted with a 3-night minimum. The policy was last reviewed in 2023 and there are no pending amendments."

🚩 Red flag

"I'm not sure — you'll need to check the HOA docs." Or: rental restrictions buried in an amendment from 18 months ago that the listing agent didn't mention.

Tim's take

"I've seen buyers make offers on units they believed were perfect for game-day rentals, only to discover the HOA banned STRs two years prior. Reading the docs yourself is table stakes — but reading the meeting minutes is where the real intelligence is. That's what I do before any offer goes in."

02
Question
The question hiding behind the listing photo

"What does the reserve fund study actually say — and when was it last done?"

Why most buyers never ask this

Because the question doesn't appear anywhere on the listing sheet, and most buyer's agents don't know to ask for it. It's also not a fun topic. But it's arguably the most important financial question in a condo purchase.

A reserve fund study is a professional assessment of a condo building's long-term capital needs — roof replacement, parking structure repairs, elevator modernization, HVAC system overhauls — and whether the association is saving enough money each month to cover them when the time comes. A fully funded reserve means those costs are planned for. An underfunded reserve means one of two things is coming: a special assessment (a lump-sum bill to every owner, sometimes in the tens of thousands) or deferred maintenance that quietly erodes the building's value and lendability.

In the Notre Dame market specifically, several condo buildings are aging stock — constructed in the 1980s and 1990s — and their reserve fund health varies dramatically. A building with a $240,000 condo that looks identical to one next door may be carrying a reserve deficit that will produce a $15,000 special assessment in the next three years. The listing won't tell you that. The reserve study will.

Mortgage lenders increasingly scrutinize reserve fund health as well. Post-Surfside lending rules mean that buildings with underfunded reserves or deferred maintenance can become difficult to finance — which compresses your resale buyer pool significantly.

✅ Good answer

Reserve study completed within the last 3 years. Funding level at 70% or above. No pending special assessments. Monthly HOA fees reflect current reserve contribution targets.

🚩 Red flag

Reserve study is more than 5 years old. Funding level below 50%. Recent special assessment, or rumors of one. HOA fees haven't been raised in years despite aging building systems.

Tim's take

"The reserve study is the document most buyers never see and most agents never mention. I request it on every condo purchase — and I know how to read it. A healthy reserve is part of what makes a condo near Notre Dame a sound long-term investment. An unhealthy one is a liability hiding behind a nice kitchen renovation."

03
Question
The income question most buyers estimate instead of verify

"What has this specific unit actually rented for — not what the neighborhood averages?"

Why most buyers never ask this

Because it requires unit-level data, not just neighborhood data — and neighborhood averages are much easier to find. But they can be meaningfully misleading in this market.

The Notre Dame rental market doesn't behave uniformly across neighborhoods or even within buildings. A 2BR on the third floor facing the courtyard in a building with a gym and covered parking commands a materially different rent than a 2BR on the ground floor of a building two blocks away with surface parking. Both might be described as "2BR condo near Notre Dame." Their actual rental histories are not the same number.

If the property has been a rental, ask for the actual lease history — not the landlord's estimate of what it could rent for, but what it did rent for, and whether there were vacancy gaps. If it hasn't been rented before, look at comparable units in the same building that have. Recent sales and rental data for specific buildings near Notre Dame tell a much more reliable story than general area comps.

For the roommate income strategy — where an ND parent rents individual bedrooms rather than the whole unit — the question shifts to what per-bedroom rates are currently commanding in that specific building. That rate varies by proximity to campus, building amenities, and what competing units in the same building are asking. I track this at the building level, not just the zip code level.

✅ Good answer

Actual signed leases showing consistent occupancy at or above current market rates. Low vacancy between tenants. Rent that aligns with — or exceeds — comparable active listings nearby.

🚩 Red flag

"We estimate it would rent for X" — with no actual lease history. Multiple vacancy periods. Rent significantly below what comparable buildings are achieving. Owner occupied with no rental data at all.

Tim's take

"Neighborhood averages are a starting point. Unit-level history is the actual data. I pull both, and I cross-reference what sellers claim against what's actually leased in that building. The gap between those numbers sometimes changes the entire investment math."

04
Question
The one that separates the ND market from every other

"What is the actual walking time to Notre Dame Stadium — and does the route work on game day?"

Why most buyers never ask this precisely enough

They check the map. They see "0.8 miles." They assume that's the same as "walkable." It isn't always — especially on a fall Saturday with 80,000 people moving in the same direction.

Distance to Notre Dame Stadium is the single most differentiating factor in the ND-adjacent real estate market — both for personal enjoyment and for short-term rental pricing. But raw distance on a map doesn't tell the whole story. What matters is the actual game-day walking experience: the route, the terrain, the traffic flow, the pedestrian infrastructure between the property and the stadium gates.

A property that's technically 0.7 miles from the stadium but requires crossing a major arterial road clogged with game-day traffic is a meaningfully different experience — and a meaningfully lower STR premium — than a property that's 0.9 miles away with a clean, pedestrian-friendly path through campus-adjacent streets. I know these routes personally. I've walked them on game days. That ground-level knowledge matters more than Google Maps' straight-line measurement.

For alumni buyers, this question is about experience. For game-day rental income, it's about pricing power. STR platforms show clearly that properties within a clean 10-minute walk command 25–40% higher game-weekend nightly rates than those that are technically the same mileage but less walkable in practice. That premium compounds across an entire football season.

✅ Good answer

12 minutes or less on a pedestrian-friendly route. No major road crossings against heavy game-day traffic. On or adjacent to a standard tailgate/walk-in corridor alumni use regularly.

🚩 Red flag

Map distance looks close, but the walking route crosses heavily trafficked intersections or goes through areas that become impassable on game day. "Walkable" as described by the listing agent, but not in practice.

Tim's take

"I tell every buyer: don't evaluate a property near Notre Dame Stadium without walking it on a game day — or asking someone who has. I've done those walks hundreds of times. The difference between a 10-minute walk and a 10-minute walk that's actually enjoyable on a packed fall Saturday is real, and it shows up in both your personal experience and your rental rates."

05
Question
The exit question most buyers skip entirely

"Who will buy this property when I'm ready to sell — and what will they pay?"

Why most buyers never ask this

Because they're focused on buying, not selling. But the best time to think about your exit is before you enter — and in the ND market, the buyer pool for resale is unusual in ways that matter.

Most real estate markets are bought and sold by local move-up buyers, downsizers, and job-driven relocators. The Notre Dame-adjacent market attracts a different buyer: ND parents, alumni from across the country, university faculty, and out-of-state investors who understand the market's unique demand drivers. That's a much more nationally distributed — and in many ways more durable — buyer pool than a typical local market.

What this means practically: when you're evaluating a property near campus, think about which of those buyer types would want it, and what they'd pay. A ground-floor studio that suits a single student may be a harder resale than a 2BR with parking that works for a parent, an alumnus, and a faculty member equally. The broadest possible resale audience is a meaningful part of long-term value.

Look at recent comparable sales in the same building — not citywide comps, and not comps from three years ago. Recent ND-area condo sales tell you what the market is actually paying right now for units like the one you're considering. That data should match the seller's asking price reasonably closely. If there's a significant gap, the burden is on the seller to explain it.

Also worth asking: how long do properties in this building typically stay on market, and how close to asking price do they sell? Buildings where units sit 60+ days and close at 5–8% below list are telling you something different than buildings where properties close in 14 days at or above list. The market snapshot for the ND area gives you the baseline; building-specific data comes from someone who's actually sold in those buildings.

✅ Good answer

Comparable units in the building have sold within 90 days of listing at or near asking price. Buyers came from multiple demographic groups (parents, alumni, faculty). No history of price reductions or withdrawn listings in the building.

🚩 Red flag

Comparable units in the building have a history of extended days on market, significant price reductions, or difficulty with financing (often tied to reserve fund issues). Very narrow buyer appeal — suits only one specific use case.

Tim's take

"I pull building-specific sale history before any offer. How a building has traded in the last 24 months tells me more about future resale conditions than any broader market stat. If I see a pattern of stale listings or declining prices within a specific building while the surrounding market is healthy, that's a signal I take seriously — and share honestly with buyers."

· · ·
🎁 Bonus question — the one that almost never gets asked

"What does the seller actually know about this property that isn't in the disclosures?"

Indiana disclosure law covers what sellers are required to tell you. It doesn't cover everything they know. In my experience, a direct conversation — conducted through a buyer's agent who knows how to ask — surfaces things that never make it onto the disclosure form: the HOA dispute in progress, the neighbors who've complained about noise, the parking spot that's technically "deeded" but practically contested, the roof that was patched rather than replaced. None of those things are necessarily deal-breakers. All of them are worth knowing before you're under contract rather than after.

· · ·

The complete pre-offer checklist — pull this out before every showing

Notre Dame Area Buyer Pre-Offer Checklist
Tim Vicsik · Trueblood Real Estate · ND-Condos.com
HOA docs reviewed — rental rules, pet policy, occupancy limits, STR permissions confirmed in writing
Meeting minutes read (last 24 months) — pending rule changes, special assessments in discussion, building disputes identified
Reserve fund study obtained — funding level confirmed, last study dated, special assessment history reviewed
Unit-level rental history verified — actual signed leases or comparable in-building leases, not neighborhood estimates
Game-day walkability confirmed — route walked or verified by someone who has, not just map distance
Building-specific comp analysis pulled — last 24 months of sales in this building, days on market, sale-to-list ratio
Resale buyer pool analyzed — unit type, location, and features mapped to likely future buyer demographics
Seller conversation conducted — direct questions through the agent about known issues not on the disclosure form
Lendability confirmed — condo project approved for conventional/FHA financing, owner-occupancy ratio checked
Investment math run at unit level — actual purchase price × actual rental income × conservative appreciation = real projected return
📋
Step-by-step · ND-Condos.com
The Complete ND Parent & Buyer Guide
Financing, HOAs, timelines, and what to look for — everything in one place before you make an offer.
Read the Guide →
· · ·

Why most buyers skip these questions

It's not laziness. It's that nobody told them to ask. Most real estate transactions near Notre Dame are handled by agents who work across the entire South Bend market — they're generalists who know some things about a lot of neighborhoods. What they typically don't have is the building-specific institutional knowledge that makes these five questions answerable: which buildings have historically had reserve fund problems, which HOA boards are prone to changing rental policies, which buildings produce reliable STR income and which ones prohibit it entirely.

The ND-adjacent market is small enough and specific enough that deep local knowledge isn't a luxury — it's a genuine competitive advantage for buyers. Knowing the right questions is step one. Having a local expert who can answer them from direct experience is step two.

These are the exact questions I walk every buyer through before we write an offer. The answers have saved people from expensive mistakes more times than I can count — and confirmed great decisions just as often.

— Tim Vicsik, Trueblood Real Estate
Where should we go from here?

"These are the exact questions I walk every buyer through in our first conversation. I'm just curious — if you've been looking at properties near Notre Dame already, have you gotten solid answers to any of these? Because the ones that are hard to answer are usually the most important ones. Where should we go from here?"

If you're actively looking at properties near Notre Dame — or just starting to think about it — the most useful next step is a conversation about the specific buildings and neighborhoods on your list. Browse what's currently available at ND-Condos.com, bring your questions, and I'll bring the building-specific answers.

Want Tim to walk you through your specific situation?

Bring the address. I'll bring the HOA docs, the reserve fund data, the rental history, the comp analysis, and a direct answer to every question on the checklist above. 15 minutes. No obligation.

Call or text Tim: 574-329-9587  ·  Tim@TimVicsik.com  ·  ND-Condos.com

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate

Tim specializes in condos and homes near the University of Notre Dame, helping ND parents, alumni, and relocating buyers navigate one of the Midwest's most unique real estate markets. A South Bend area resident for over 50 years, Tim's market knowledge isn't Googleable — it's built from hundreds of transactions across the specific buildings, blocks, and HOA boards that define the ND-adjacent market.

Wednesday, June 3, 2026

What Does a Condo Near Notre Dame Cost? 2025 Market Guide

ND Area Market Report · Both Audiences · South Bend, IN

What does a condo near Notre Dame actually cost? A market reality check

Google "South Bend housing market" and you'll get numbers that have nothing to do with the half-mile radius around Notre Dame's campus. Here's what the market nearest to campus actually looks like — tier by tier, number by number.

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate · 9 min read
Updated: Q2 2026 · Based on 2025–2026 ND-area market data

The first thing I tell every buyer who comes to me with a Zillow screenshot or a "South Bend median price" headline: that number describes a city. It does not describe the Notre Dame market. The $65,000 house on the southeast side and the $400,000 condo on Eddy Street share a zip code — they are not in the same market.

I'm Tim Vicsik with Trueblood Real Estate. The Notre Dame-adjacent market is the only market I focus on, which means I watch it the way a meteorologist watches a specific weather system — not the national forecast. What I'm going to give you in this post is what buyers coming from Chicago, the coasts, Texas, and everywhere else actually need: a real, tier-by-tier price breakdown of what your dollar buys near Notre Dame right now.

No averages pulled from zip codes that include the whole city. No numbers that will leave you shocked when you see actual listings. Just the honest market, explained clearly.

· · ·

First: why the South Bend median price is misleading for ND buyers

⚠️ The number most buyers see first — vs. the number that actually matters
What Zillow / Google shows you
~$191,000
South Bend citywide median home price — includes all neighborhoods, price points, and conditions across the entire city.
What the ND-adjacent market actually looks like
$220K–$700K+
The realistic range for properties within meaningful distance of campus — from solid entry-level condos to Harter Heights homes steps from the stadium.

The South Bend citywide median is $191,000. The Notre Dame-adjacent market operates at a completely different level — and for good reason. This isn't a factory town or a workforce housing market. The demand drivers here are a $20B+ endowment university, seven home football Saturdays drawing 80,000+ fans each, a deeply loyal global alumni base, and an essentially fixed supply of property within walking or biking distance of campus. Those factors don't respond to Fed rate moves the way normal housing markets do. They create a floor that holds.

The result: Harter Heights — the neighborhood literally steps from Notre Dame Stadium — carries a median sale price of $600,000–$687,000, nearly four times the citywide median. That gap isn't a bubble. It's the price of proximity to one of the most recognizable institutions in the country.

$687K
▲ 4.2% YoY
Harter Heights median sale price
2.29
Months of supply
Strong seller's market (<3 = seller's)
−22%
YoY inventory drop
ND-area supply tightening significantly
$352
▲ 49.8% $/sq ft YoY
Harter Heights price per sq ft

Sources: Redfin, Homes.com, MLS data, nd-condos.com market tracking. Data reflects 2025–Q1 2026 ND-area market conditions.

· · ·

The four price tiers — what your budget actually buys

Here's how I think about the ND-area market in terms of what different budgets realistically deliver. These ranges are based on what's actually traded hands recently — not listing prices, not wishful thinking.

Tier 1 · Entry Level
$150,000 – $220,000
The investor's entry point — strong rental yield, older stock
1BR–2BR
Typical unit size

This tier exists, but it requires the most due diligence. At $150,000–$220,000 near Notre Dame, you're typically looking at older condo buildings in the Mishawaka Avenue corridor or South Bend's near east side, smaller one-bedroom units, or properties that need some updating. These are not the walkable-to-campus units that command premium rents, but they're in the Notre Dame demand zone and they benefit from the same underlying market forces.

The investment math at this tier can be compelling for buyers who are comfortable with a little more management involvement — older buildings sometimes have deferred maintenance or less professional HOA management. The reward is lower acquisition cost and, in some cases, higher rental yield as a percentage of price. The risk is that resale and appreciation are less predictable than in the premium tiers.

Best for: First-time ND-area investors, buyers with tighter budgets who still want exposure to ND demand, longer-horizon holds. Not ideal for parents who want a turnkey student housing solution without management headaches.

$95K–$220K
Condos in this range
$250–$400
Typical monthly HOA
30–60 days
Avg. days on market
Highest rental yield % Investor-friendly More due diligence needed Older building stock
Tier 2 · Mid-Market Sweet Spot
$220,000 – $320,000
The most active tier — best selection, strongest rental demand
2BR–3BR
Typical unit size

This is where most ND parent buyers and alumni investors end up — and for good reason. The mid-market tier offers the widest selection of properties, the deepest rental demand pool, and the best overall combination of price, quality, and location. You're looking at well-maintained 2BR condos and townhomes in the Angela Boulevard corridor and parts of the Mishawaka corridor, along with some older Eddy Street Commons units.

Eddy Street Commons units like the Legends Row condominiums — specifically designed for the Notre Dame community — started "from the mid-$250,000s" and represent exactly this tier. These are professionally managed buildings with HOA oversight, modern finishes, and the kind of location that makes rental demand essentially self-sustaining. The University of Notre Dame's community will always want to live here.

For the roommate rental income strategy covered in the ND parent buying guide, this tier is where the numbers pencil out best. A 2BR at $250,000 with one roommate at $750/month brings your effective monthly cost below $1,100 in many scenarios.

$220K–$320K
Purchase range
$250–$350
Typical monthly HOA
14–30 days
Avg. days on market
Best overall value Widest selection Strong appreciation history Competitive — moves fast
Tier 3 · Premium
$320,000 – $550,000
Luxury condos, townhomes, and smaller homes close to campus
2BR–4BR
Typical unit size

Step up to this tier and the quality of finishes, proximity to campus, and property condition shift noticeably. You're now looking at newer construction townhomes and condos on or near Notre Dame Avenue — like The Residences on Notre Dame Ave, with units "starting in the $300s" just one block from Trader Joe's and Eddy Street Commons — along with well-positioned Harter Heights properties and larger multi-bedroom units designed specifically for the ND market.

This is also the tier where game-day rental income starts generating serious numbers. Properties at this price point and location can command $1,200–$2,400 per game weekend on short-term rental platforms. If the unit allows STRs (always check the HOA docs — see below), that income stream can be meaningful across Notre Dame's 7-game home schedule.

Alumni buyers treating this as a personal retreat more than a pure investment tend to gravitate here. The location quality justifies the premium, and the long-term hold case is strong given the demonstrated appreciation in this segment.

$320K–$550K
Purchase range
$300–$500
Typical monthly HOA
7–21 days
Avg. days on market
Best game-day rental income Luxury finishes Newer construction Moves very quickly
Tier 4 · Luxury / Harter Heights
$550,000 – $800,000+
The most coveted addresses — steps from the stadium
3BR–5BR
Typical size

Harter Heights is in a category of its own. This is South Bend's most prestigious address — a neighborhood of historic homes literally steps from Notre Dame Stadium, with a median sale price of $600,000–$687,000 and appreciation of 4.2% year-over-year as of late 2025. The price per square foot hit $352 — up nearly 50% year over year. These are not vanity numbers. They reflect what serious buyers are willing to pay for one of the most recognizable residential addresses in college football.

At the top of this tier you'll also find new custom construction: there are currently spec homes being built less than two blocks south of Angela Boulevard — 5BR/6BA properties with views of campus, luxury finishes, and price tags approaching $1 million. These are not typical "near campus" properties. They're generational assets for buyers who want the absolute best.

Notre Dame homes and villas in this tier are rare, move fast, and rarely see price reductions. If this is your target range, you need to be ready to move when something comes to market — not spend two weeks thinking about it.

$600K–$800K+
Typical range
Varies
HOA or none (homes)
<14 days
Avg. days on market
Strongest long-term appreciation Walking distance to stadium Very limited inventory Generational hold asset
🏠
Browse current inventory · ND-Condos.com
Notre Dame Condos & Homes For Sale — Current Listings
Updated regularly with active listings across all four tiers. See what's available at your price point right now.
See Listings →
· · ·

The HOA fee: what you're actually paying for

HOA fees are the number that makes buyers nervous — and understandably so. Paying $300/month on top of a mortgage feels like throwing money away, especially if you've never lived in a managed condo building. Let me reframe that number.

In a well-run condo development near Notre Dame, your HOA fee is essentially pre-paying for a set of expenses that single-family homeowners pay out of pocket — often at worse timing and higher stress. Here's what a typical $300/month HOA fee in a quality ND-area building actually covers:

What $300/month in HOA fees typically includes near Notre Dame
Based on mid-market condo buildings in the ND-adjacent corridor
🏗️ Exterior maintenance & building upkeep
~$60–80/mo value
❄️ Snow removal & landscaping (South Bend winters are real)
~$50–70/mo value
🏊 Amenities: pool, fitness center, common areas
~$40–60/mo value
💧 Water / sewer (included in some buildings)
~$40–60/mo value
🔒 Building insurance (exterior / structural)
~$30–50/mo value
🏦 Reserve fund contributions (roof, mechanicals, future repairs)
~$40–60/mo value
Total equivalent value of services covered
$260–$380/mo

Notice what's not on that list: the surprise $8,000 furnace replacement, the $4,000 roof repair after a harsh winter, or the $200/month lawn and snow service you'd be paying as a house owner. Condo insurance on an ND-area unit runs just $490–$600 annually ($41–$50/month) compared to $2,000–$2,500/year for a comparable house. That's $150–$200/month in your favor, before you factor in all the maintenance the HOA absorbs.

The one HOA question that matters most

Not all HOA fees are equal — and the fee amount alone tells you almost nothing. What matters is the reserve fund health. A building with a fully-funded reserve rarely hits owners with special assessments. A building with an underfunded reserve is a ticking clock. Before you fall in love with any condo near Notre Dame, I pull the HOA financials and reserve study. That document tells me more about the real cost of ownership than the listing price does. For a deeper breakdown, read my post on condo vs. house cost near Notre Dame.

· · ·

Days on market: how fast this market actually moves

With just 2.29 months of supply in the South Bend-Mishawaka metro — a strong seller's market — and inventory down 22% year-over-year, the ND-adjacent market does not reward slow decision-making. Here's what the timing reality looks like by tier:

Price Tier Typical Days on Market Offer Strategy Seasonal Notes
$150K–$220K 30–60 days Standard — time to evaluateBuyer-friendly Most flexibility; less competition at this tier
$220K–$320K 14–30 days Move within days of listingBalanced Spring listing season most competitive (Mar–May)
$320K–$550K 7–21 days Pre-approved and ready to offerSeller's market Game-day adjacent units can get multiple offers
$550K+ <14 days (often faster) Strongest offer, cleanest termsSeller's market Harter Heights inventory is extremely limited year-round

The practical takeaway: if you're targeting the mid-market tier or above, the time to get pre-approved and establish your search criteria is before you find a property you love — not after. Buyers who arrive to a showing without pre-approval regularly lose properties to buyers who do. This market does not have a "think about it for a week" culture in the tiers that matter most to ND buyers.

Prices move fast in this market. The question I always ask buyers is: what's your timeline? Because that one answer changes the entire strategy.

— Tim Vicsik, Trueblood Real Estate
· · ·

What the seasonal market means for you

The ND-adjacent market has a distinct seasonal rhythm that most buyers don't know about — and that creates real opportunity for those who do:

Winter (December–February): Lowest competition. Out-of-state buyers hesitate. Listings are fewer, but motivated sellers are more negotiable. If you can visit South Bend in January, you'll face less competition than at any other time of year — and South Bend winters, while real, aren't a reason to avoid a solid property.

Spring (March–May): Maximum inventory, maximum competition. Most listings come to market. Most buyers are also active. This is when you'll have the most to choose from and the most people competing for the same properties. Being pre-approved and decisive matters most here.

Summer (June–August): Strong demand from families relocating before the school year. Buyers hoping prices will dip in summer are usually disappointed — the market runs on university cycles, not interest rate news.

Football season (September–November): A unique window. Alumni and parents visiting for games sometimes make spontaneous purchase decisions. If you've been thinking about it all year, coming to South Bend for a home game and working with a local agent is genuinely how some of the best transactions happen.

📊
Live data · ND-Condos.com
Notre Dame Market Snapshot — Current Conditions
Updated regularly: active inventory, median prices, days on market, and what's moving fastest right now.
View Snapshot →
· · ·

The honest bottom line on ND-area pricing

The Notre Dame-adjacent market is more expensive than the South Bend citywide median — sometimes dramatically so. That premium is real, and you should go in with eyes open about what you're paying for.

What you're paying for is a market with structural demand that doesn't go away. A university that has been here since 1842 and isn't moving. An alumni base of over 150,000 living graduates who maintain a lifelong emotional and financial connection to this place. A home football schedule that fills every hotel within 30 miles. Those forces create a floor under ND-adjacent property values that simply doesn't exist in most markets.

The families who pay the premium and hold — whether for four years of college, for a decade of alumni weekends, or as a long-term investment — consistently validate the decision. The families who hesitate waiting for prices to drop usually watch the properties they wanted sell to someone who didn't wait.

The question worth sitting with

"Prices in this market tend to move in one direction. I'm just curious — what's your timeline looking like? Because that answer changes the strategy considerably, and I'd rather help you move at the right pace than the wrong one."

If you want to see what's recently sold near Notre Dame — real prices, real properties, real comps — that data is on my site and it's the most grounding thing you can look at before deciding what tier makes sense for you.

See what's available at your price point right now

Every tier moves differently. Tell me your budget and timeline and I'll show you exactly what you can expect to find — and how fast you'll need to move when the right property comes up.

Call or text Tim: 574-329-9587  ·  Tim@TimVicsik.com  ·  ND-Condos.com

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate

Tim specializes in condos and homes near the University of Notre Dame, helping ND parents, alumni, and relocating buyers navigate one of the Midwest's most unique real estate markets. A South Bend area resident for over 50 years, Tim brings local knowledge that simply can't be Googled — including where to park on game day.

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Notre Dame Parent Real Estate ROI Calculator | Tim Vicsik

ND Parent Buyer Series · Part 3 of 9 · Investment Strategy

4 years of college, one smart real estate move: the ND parent investment calculator

Most parents have never actually run the numbers. Once you do, the question isn't whether buying near Notre Dame makes sense — it's why you'd ever choose not to.

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate · 9 min read

There's a moment in almost every conversation I have with an ND parent buyer. It happens right after I walk them through the four-year math for the first time. There's a pause. Sometimes they ask me to run it again. Then someone usually says: "Why didn't anybody tell us this sooner?"

That moment is what this post is designed to create — for you, right now, before your student's first semester even starts.

I'm Tim Vicsik with Trueblood Real Estate, and the Notre Dame area market is my entire focus. What I've watched, year after year, is that the families who buy near campus instead of renting don't do it because they're wealthier or more financially sophisticated. They do it because someone showed them the actual numbers early enough to act on them.

This post is that conversation. We're going to build the math together — step by step — and then I'm going to hand you a calculator so you can run your own scenario right on this page.

· · ·

How the four-year math actually works — step by step

Let's build this from scratch so every number is visible. No black boxes. No assumptions you can't verify. Here's how a $250,000 condo purchase near Notre Dame pencils out over four years.

1
The purchase — what you're putting in

Working with a $250,000 condo. With a 20% down payment, you're bringing $50,000 to the table and financing $200,000. That's your starting position.

Your monthly mortgage payment at current rates (we'll use 7.0% for a 30-year fixed, conservative for today's market) runs approximately $1,331/month in principal and interest. Add property taxes (~$175/mo), HOA fees (~$250/mo), and insurance (~$65/mo), and your total monthly cost lands around $1,821 per month.

Total monthly PITI + HOA: ~$1,821/mo
2
The roommate income — the number that changes everything

Your student doesn't have to live alone. A well-located 2BR condo near Notre Dame commands $700–$800/month for the second bedroom from a classmate. A 3BR unit can support two roommates, bringing in $1,400–$1,600/month in total rental income.

For our base case, we'll use a 2BR with one roommate at $750/month. That income flows directly against your monthly cost.

$1,821 − $750 rental income = $1,071 effective monthly cost
3
The four-year cash comparison — rent vs. own

Average rent for a comparable 2BR near Notre Dame runs $1,300–$1,500/month. We'll use $1,350. Over 48 months, that's $64,800 — completely gone, with nothing to show for it.

Owning at $1,071 effective cost over 48 months equals $51,408 total out of pocket — plus your $50,000 down payment. That's $101,408 total invested. But here's where it gets interesting: you now own an asset, not a receipt.

Rent total: $64,800 gone · Own total: $51,408 + $50K down (invested)
4
Appreciation — what the market does for you while you sleep

The Notre Dame area has appreciated at a consistent 3–5% annually in recent years, driven by limited inventory, stable university demand, and the area's strong alumni buyer pool. At a conservative 3.5% annual appreciation, your $250,000 condo grows to approximately $287,000 by graduation.

That $37,000 in appreciation happened without you lifting a finger. Your tenant's rent helped pay the mortgage. And your asset quietly grew in value the entire time.

$250,000 → ~$287,000 at 3.5%/yr over 4 years (conservative estimate)
5
Equity at graduation — the number that ends the debate

After 48 months of payments, your mortgage balance has dropped from $200,000 to approximately $187,000 (you've paid down roughly $13,000 in principal). Your property is worth ~$287,000. Subtract the remaining mortgage and you're sitting on approximately $100,000 in equity at graduation day.

Your original down payment of $50,000 has effectively doubled — and you spent less per month than you would have renting.

~$287K value − ~$187K balance = ~$100,000 equity at graduation
· · ·

Run your own numbers — the ND parent ROI calculator

The scenario above uses conservative assumptions. Your situation might look different depending on your budget, how many roommates you're comfortable with, and what the market does. Use the calculator below to build your own projection.

ND Parent 4-Year ROI Calculator
Adjust the inputs to match your situation — results update instantly
Purchase Price
$
Typical ND-area range: $175K–$350K
Down Payment %
%
20% avoids PMI · cash buyers use 100%
Monthly Rental Income
$
1 roommate: ~$750 · 2 roommates: ~$1,400
Annual Appreciation %
%
ND area recent avg: 3–5% · conservative: 3%
Equity at Graduation
Saved vs. Renting
Purchase price
Down payment
Estimated property value at graduation
Remaining mortgage balance
Total rental income collected (4 yrs)
Total out-of-pocket (4 yrs, after rental income)
Net equity position at graduation

Want Tim to run this with real properties currently on the market?

Get a Free Personalized Estimate →
A note on these projections

The calculator uses standard mortgage math and conservative appreciation assumptions based on recent ND-area market trends. Actual results vary by property, rate environment, and market conditions. These numbers are educational illustrations — not a guarantee. For projections tied to specific available properties, reach out to Tim directly and he'll run the real numbers with you.

· · ·

Three real scenarios — conservative, base, and optimistic

Not every family's situation looks the same. Here are three complete scenarios showing how the math plays out across different price points and roommate strategies. Click each tab to explore.

Conservative scenario
$210K condo · 1 roommate · 3% annual appreciation · 7% mortgage rate
Purchase price$210,000
Down payment (20%)$42,000
Monthly mortgage + taxes + HOA + ins.$1,548/mo
Rental income (1 roommate)−$700/mo
Effective monthly cost$848/mo
Total out-of-pocket over 4 years$40,704
Estimated value at graduation (3% appreciation)$236,400
Remaining mortgage balance~$157,200
Net equity at graduation~$79,200
Base case scenario
$250K condo · 1 roommate · 3.5% appreciation · 7% mortgage rate
Purchase price$250,000
Down payment (20%)$50,000
Monthly mortgage + taxes + HOA + ins.$1,821/mo
Rental income (1 roommate)−$750/mo
Effective monthly cost$1,071/mo
Total out-of-pocket over 4 years$51,408
Estimated value at graduation (3.5% appreciation)$287,000
Remaining mortgage balance~$187,000
Net equity at graduation~$100,000
Optimistic scenario
$275K condo (3BR) · 2 roommates · 5% appreciation · 6.5% mortgage rate
Purchase price$275,000
Down payment (20%)$55,000
Monthly mortgage + taxes + HOA + ins.$1,960/mo
Rental income (2 roommates @ $725 each)−$1,450/mo
Effective monthly cost$510/mo
Total out-of-pocket over 4 years$24,480
Estimated value at graduation (5% appreciation)$334,400
Remaining mortgage balance~$203,700
Net equity at graduation~$130,700

Even in the conservative scenario, the family walks away from graduation with nearly $80,000 in equity — nearly double their original $42,000 down payment — while spending far less per month than they would have paid in rent.

· · ·

The four-year timeline — what this actually looks like year by year

Y0
Before move-in day
Buy with intention
Identify the right neighborhood and property type for your goals. Get pre-approved, run the roommate math, review the HOA docs. The earlier in this process you start, the more options you have. The best properties near campus do not wait. Browse current ND condos and homes and villas to get a feel for what's available before your student's first semester.
Y1
Freshman year
Set up the roommate income stream
Your student moves in. Their classmate(s) move in as paying roommates. The rental income starts flowing against the mortgage. Your effective monthly cost is already lower than it would have been renting. Consider a simple written lease agreement for the roommate — it protects everyone and sets clear expectations from the start. Notre Dame's off-campus housing demand is strong from the moment school starts.
Y2
Sophomore year
Refinance watch + tax advantages kick in
If rates have moved in your favor, evaluate a refinance. You're also now in full swing on the rental income strategy — and depending on your tax situation, the mortgage interest deduction and rental income treatment can create meaningful additional benefits. Talk to your CPA about how the property flows through your return. Also: if your student is taking on a different roommate this year, the lease renewal is a good time to revisit the rental rate.
Y3
Junior year
Start thinking about your exit — or your hold
By junior year, you have enough market data to make a smarter decision about what happens at graduation. Get a current market valuation. Look at comparable sales. If you're considering selling at graduation, this is when to start preparing the property. If you're holding, start thinking about what kind of tenant you want after your student leaves — student rentals near ND maintain strong demand year over year.
Y4
Senior year → Graduation
Execute your exit strategy — or set up long-term income
Diploma in hand, equity in the bank. Now you choose from three options — sell, rent, or hold for personal use. Each one is a win. The family that rented for four years writes their last check and walks away with nothing. You walk away with a decision and a six-figure asset position.
· · ·

What happens at graduation — your three exits

Option 01
Sell and walk away with your equity

List the property at graduation, collect the proceeds, and move on. This is the cleanest exit and the most common choice for parents who bought primarily for the college years.

After agent fees and closing costs (~8–9%), you're netting your equity minus those costs. Still a strong return on your original down payment.

Base case net proceeds after costs
~$85,000–$92,000
Option 02
Hold and rent it out long-term

ND-area rental demand doesn't end when your student graduates. New students, faculty, university staff, and young professionals create consistent year-round demand for well-located units.

At a $1,400–$1,600/month market rent and a ~$1,071 effective mortgage cost, you're looking at positive monthly cash flow. And the property keeps appreciating.

Estimated monthly cash flow (base case)
+$330–$530/mo
Option 03
Keep it for game weekends & personal use

Notre Dame draws over 80,000 fans to campus on seven home Saturdays per year. Alumni who own near the stadium never pay $600+/night in hotel rates again.

Rent it out on away weekends, block it for home games, and treat it as your permanent South Bend base. The property pays for itself and you keep the upside.

Avg. game-day rental rate per weekend
$1,200–$2,400/wknd

The renters walk away from graduation with four years of receipts. The owners walk away with three options and six figures in equity.

— Tim Vicsik, Trueblood Real Estate
· · ·

The one question I ask every ND parent

After going through all of this, there's one question I find myself asking in almost every parent conversation — not to pressure anyone, but because the answer genuinely tells me a lot about where someone is in their thinking.

The question worth sitting with

"I'm just curious — have you ever actually run the numbers on what your out-of-pocket cost would be after rental income? Most parents I work with hadn't — and the answer surprised them. What would it take for this to feel realistic for your situation?"

The answer to that question shapes everything — which neighborhood makes sense, what price range to focus on, whether a condo or a house fits better. If you've run the calculator above and want to take the next step, the most useful thing I can do is show you what's actually on the market right now and run the real numbers against specific properties.

That's a 15-minute conversation, and it costs nothing. You can browse what's currently available at ND-Condos.com and reach out whenever you're ready.

Get a free personalized ROI estimate

Tell me your budget and what you're trying to accomplish. I'll run the numbers against real current listings and show you exactly what the math looks like for your specific situation.

Call or text Tim: 574-329-9587  ·  Tim@TimVicsik.com

TV
Tim Vicsik
Notre Dame Area Specialist · Trueblood Real Estate

Tim specializes in condos and homes near the University of Notre Dame, helping ND parents, alumni, and relocating buyers navigate one of the Midwest's most unique real estate markets. If you're thinking about buying near campus — for your student, for football weekends, or as a long-term investment — Tim knows this market better than anyone.

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