Before You Buy
Common Buyer
Mistakes.
The Myrtle Beach market has coastal-specific risks that catch buyers off guard. Our agents research all of this on your behalf so you never discover these mistakes after closing.
Most Common Mistakes
Skipping the insurance quote until after the inspection period
Most buyers get a general home inspection and fall in love with the property before ever asking what it costs to insure. In Myrtle Beach, you need three separate policies: homeowners (HO-3), wind and hail, and NFIP flood insurance. Together these can add $400 to $700 per month to your total housing cost.
Get all three insurance quotes during the due diligence period, before you waive your right to walk away. A property that looks affordable on paper can become a budget problem once coastal insurance is factored in.
Assuming an Airbnb listing means the property is legally rentable
Short-term rentals are banned in virtually all residential zones inside Myrtle Beach city limits. Fewer than 30 homes citywide are grandfathered. If you see a property listed on Airbnb, that does not mean it is operating legally. Many listings violate current ordinances.
If you intend to short-term rent a property, have your agent verify the specific address against current zoning maps before you make an offer. The investor chapter of this site has detailed STR zoning information by submarket.
Not reviewing the condo HOA documents before going under contract
Condo buyers who skip the HOA document review are taking on unknown liability. Before contracting, you need to see: the HOA budget, the reserve study and funding percentage, meeting minutes from the last two years, any pending or recently levied special assessments, and whether there is active litigation against the association.
A building with a low monthly HOA fee and an underfunded reserve is a future special assessment waiting to happen. Assessments of $5,000 to $50,000 per unit have been levied in aging oceanfront buildings on the Grand Strand.
Ignoring the flood zone designation until the lender requires it
About 20% of Myrtle Beach properties fall in a FEMA-designated flood zone. Properties in Zone AE or VE require lender-mandated flood insurance, which can cost significantly more than the NFIP average. An Elevation Certificate showing the property above Base Flood Elevation can reduce premiums dramatically.
Check the flood zone on any property at msc.fema.gov before you get emotionally invested. Reclassification through a LOMA can sometimes move a property out of a required-insurance zone, but that process takes time and money.
Using the seller's agent without their own buyer representation
The listing agent works for the seller. Their fiduciary duty is to the seller's best interest, not yours. Since August 2024, South Carolina requires a written buyer representation agreement before an agent can show you homes, but buyers still sometimes tour with the listing agent assuming they are being represented.
Your agent costs you nothing in most transactions. Seller compensation covers the buyer agent fee in the majority of Myrtle Beach closings. Get your own representation.
Overestimating rental income and underestimating operating costs
Out-of-state investors often project gross Airbnb revenue without accounting for: property management fees (20 to 30% of gross), HOA regime fees ($300 to $900 per month in oceanfront buildings), the annual hurricane deductible reserve (2 to 5% of dwelling value), maintenance, and vacancy. A unit projecting $30,000 gross per year can easily net under $10,000 after real operating expenses.
Run a complete cost model before you make an offer. The DSCR calculator on this site models the full expense picture including SC county property taxes.
Not getting pre-approved with an SC-licensed coastal lender
A standard pre-approval from a national or online lender does not account for the unique underwriting requirements of coastal South Carolina. HOA regime fees affect your debt-to-income ratio. Condotel financing is different from standard condo financing. DSCR loans for investment properties have specific reserve requirements. Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac have specific condo eligibility rules that disqualify some buildings entirely.
Get pre-approved with a lender who specializes in coastal SC transactions before you start touring. It will save you from making offers on properties your financing cannot support.
Closing without understanding SC deed stamps and closing costs
South Carolina charges deed stamps of $3.70 per $1,000 of purchase price, split between state and Horry County. On a $350,000 purchase that is $1,295 in deed stamps alone, in addition to attorney fees (SC requires attorney-led closings), title insurance, recording fees, and for condos an HOA transfer fee of $150 to $500+.
Budget 2 to 4% of purchase price for total closing costs, not including the down payment. Ask your lender for a detailed Loan Estimate within three business days of application.
Our agents catch all of this before you close.
One conversation is enough to protect you from the most costly mistakes.
Common Questions
Frequently asked questions
What is the most common mistake Myrtle Beach buyers make?
Skipping condo and HOA document review. Many Grand Strand buildings carry special assessments, rental restrictions, or insurance issues that only show up in the documents, and missed details become the buyer's problem after closing.
Do out-of-state buyers make different mistakes?
Yes. The most frequent are underestimating insurance costs in flood zones, assuming property taxes work like their home state, and writing an offer on a condotel before confirming it can be financed.