Advice
How to buy a home in Bellevue, WA: a step-by-step buyer guide.
May 12, 2026 · 15 min read
By Adriano Tori
Founder & Designated Broker, RexMont Real Estate
WA Lic. #27660
Seattle & Eastside Real Estate Market Strategist
★ BusinessRate Best of Bellevue 2025
★★★★★ 1,235 Google reviews · Seattle and the Eastside's most-reviewed brokerage
Bellevue's market is competitive, fast, and unforgiving of unprepared buyers. Here is the exact playbook RexMont uses to help buyers win Bellevue homes — from pre-approval through closing.

Live market snapshot
Bellevue real estate — right now
- Median price
- $2.05M
- Avg days on market
- 38
- Active listings
- 335
- Price / sqft
- $902
30-yr fixed today: 6.53%
Source: RentCast market data · zip 98004 · 30-yr rate: Freddie Mac PMMS via FRED. Educational only — confirm with a licensed agent.
Step 1: Get fully pre-approved for Bellevue price ranges
In Bellevue, an unconditional pre-approval letter is the price of entry. Listing agents routinely discard offers that are merely pre-qualified — the difference is real: pre-qualified means a lender ran your credit. Pre-approved means they reviewed your income, assets, debts, and tax returns and committed to underwrite you up to a stated amount.
Bellevue prices are high enough that most buyers need jumbo loans — amounts above $1,149,825, the 2026 King County conforming limit. Jumbo lenders require stricter qualification: typically 20% down, 12 months of reserves, DTI under 43%, and employer-specific underwriting for RSU income. If you have significant unvested stock compensation, confirm with your lender exactly how they count RSUs toward qualifying income before choosing a purchase price target.
W-2 employees at Microsoft, Amazon, Google, or Meta typically move through underwriting quickly. Self-employed buyers and founders should start the process 60–90 days before their target purchase date — lenders need two years of tax returns and may average net income in ways that reduce your qualifying amount.
Bellevue neighborhood archetypes: match your priorities to your zip code
West Bellevue (98004): The highest-demand submarket in Washington. Walkable to Bellevue Square and Downtown Bellevue offices. $1.8M–$10M+ for single-family homes. Inventory is routinely under 2 weeks on market. Views of Seattle and the Olympics come standard on hillside streets. If you are targeting this area, expect to compete and move within days of a listing going live.
Somerset and Lakemont: Hillside neighborhoods east of I-405 with commanding views, top Bellevue School District elementaries (Spiritridge, Somerset), and a true community feel. $1.4M–$3.5M. Note: sections of Somerset and Lakemont have known slope conditions. Geotech reports are common in due diligence here — do not waive inspection on hillside lots without reviewing prior stability studies.
Crossroads: Bellevue's most diverse neighborhood and one of its best-positioned for growth. East Link light rail (opened 2023) stops here, making it the only Bellevue neighborhood with direct rail access to Seattle. $900K–$1.6M — strong value relative to West Bellevue with the same Bellevue School District assignment.
Bel-Red and Spring District: The highest-growth corridor in Bellevue. Google has a major campus at the Spring District, Amazon and REI are nearby, and light rail serves the neighborhood. $1.1M–$2.5M and appreciating. Buyers here are purchasing into a neighborhood still mid-transformation — with the upside that carries.
Factoria and Eastgate: South Bellevue's value corridor. $900K–$1.7M with newer townhome options and direct I-90 access for Seattle commuters. School assignments split between Bellevue and Issaquah School Districts depending on exact address — always verify before writing an offer.
How buyer agency works in Washington after the 2024 NAR settlement
Since August 2024, Washington buyers must sign a written buyer broker agreement before touring homes. This agreement spells out exactly how your agent is compensated — typically a percentage of the purchase price. You will know the number before you commit to working with any agent.
In most Bellevue transactions, sellers continue to offer buyer agent compensation through the MLS. When they do, your out-of-pocket cost is zero. When they don't, RexMont structures the offer to request the seller cover it — or, rarely, negotiates it separately. Either way, the number is disclosed and agreed to upfront.
The settlement removed the guarantee of seller-paid buyer commission but did not remove the common practice. Bellevue sellers who refuse to offer co-op compensation shrink their buyer pool — most choose not to do that. What changed is transparency: your agent is required to discuss compensation before you tour. If an agent deflects this question, find a different agent.
Step 2: Understand offer dynamics by price tier
Bellevue offer dynamics vary significantly by tier. Under $1.5M is hyper-competitive — median days on market can drop below 5 in spring, with escalation clauses and waived contingencies common. $1.5M–$2.5M moves quickly but allows slightly more deliberate offers. Over $2.5M is selective: buyers can typically negotiate inspection contingencies, but lowball offers on well-priced listings will not land.
Your offer strategy must match the tier and the specific property. Coming in 5% under list on a $1.2M Crossroads home with four other offers is a losing strategy. Coming in 5% under list on a properly priced $3.5M Somerset home that has been sitting for 21 days is sometimes the right opening. Your agent should have offer history on comparable properties — not opinions — before advising you.
3 mistakes Bellevue buyers make — and how to avoid them
Waiting for rates to drop. When rates drop 0.5%, Bellevue buyer demand spikes almost immediately — often within weeks of a Fed announcement. Buyers who wait face more competition, fewer choices, and higher prices. A $1.8M home purchased today at 6.8% and refinanced in 18 months at 5.5% almost always beats paying $2.1M for the same home when everyone else re-enters the market at once.
Touring broadly and moving slowly. Bellevue median days on market runs 6–9 days in active seasons. Buyers who tour 25 homes over 3 months consistently lose to buyers who toured 10 homes over 3 weeks and moved decisively. Preparation — pre-approval complete, agent relationship in place, target neighborhood locked — is what enables fast action. Speed does not come from rushing; it comes from being ready.
Underestimating total cash required. On a $2M Bellevue purchase: buyer closing costs (~$25,000 for title, escrow, lender fees, and prepaid items), pre-inspection before offer (~$700), professional inspection after acceptance (~$1,000–$1,200), jumbo appraisal (~$1,200–$1,500), and moving costs — plus the 12 months of reserves most jumbo lenders require on top of down payment. Total cash out of pocket on a $2M purchase with 20% down routinely exceeds $430,000. Model it before you choose a purchase price.
Step 3: Tour with intention, not volume
Tour 6–10 carefully selected properties that match your target criteria, then revisit your top one or two before writing. Touring 30 homes over two months creates decision fatigue and rarely improves outcomes — it just delays the purchase.
Drive the commute route during actual peak hours before falling in love with any location. A Somerset home with a 15-minute Saturday drive to Downtown Bellevue can be a 40-minute drive during 8am traffic if you take 112th Ave SE instead of I-405. Test the specific route at the specific time you would make it.
Attend the open house, but also walk the neighborhood on a weekday evening. A block that feels peaceful on a Sunday morning can feel very different on a Tuesday at 6pm. Look for proximity to arterials, school pickup routes, and any commercial development nearby.
Step 4: Build the right offer for this property
Competitive Bellevue offers typically combine: at or above list price, a pre-inspection report shared with the seller, strong earnest money (2–3% of purchase price), closing date flexibility matched to seller needs, and — for well-qualified buyers — removal of the financing contingency after discussing the risk with their agent.
Escalation clauses: in multiple-offer situations, a well-structured escalation beats a flat price because it shows willingness to compete without exposing your ceiling upfront. A proper escalation includes your opening price, the increment above competing offers ($5,000–$25,000 depending on price range), and your maximum. Have your escalation cap pre-approved before writing it — offering $2.1M when you are approved to $1.95M creates a rescission situation.
Never waive contingencies you do not fully understand. Removing the inspection contingency means you cannot exit after finding a structural problem. Removing financing means you must close even if your loan falls through. These are calibrated tools for buyers in strong financial positions — not defaults for a competitive offer.
Geotech, permits, and Bellevue due diligence most buyers skip
Slope and geotech conditions: Somerset, Lakemont, and parts of Eastgate sit on hillside terrain with documented slope movement history. The City of Bellevue maintains critical areas maps showing steep slope overlays. Before waiving inspection on any hillside home, confirm whether prior geotech reports exist and review them. Engineered drainage and retaining wall maintenance on slope properties are real, recurring costs.
Permit history: Bellevue Development Services runs a public permit portal. Search the property address before closing to verify all additions, ADUs, decks, and systems replacements are permitted. Unpermitted square footage or conversions can create financing issues and become your liability at purchase. This search takes 10 minutes — do it on every property.
Spring District and Bel-Red adjacency: both neighborhoods have large parcels still under active development. Before purchasing near an undeveloped lot, check the City of Bellevue's development map at bellevuewa.gov to understand what is entitled for adjacent parcels. A parking lot today can be a 12-story mixed-use building in three years.
Step 5: Inspection, appraisal, and the path to closing
Once your offer is accepted, you typically have 10 business days for inspection. Use all of it. Even on a pre-inspected home, commission specialized inspections where conditions warrant: sewer scope ($250–$400), oil tank scan ($150–$250 in older neighborhoods), structural engineer ($600–$1,000 for hillside homes), or mold testing ($300–$500) if you see staining or moisture signs.
Appraisal on jumbo loans typically returns within 10–14 days. Low appraisals happen in rising Bellevue markets — your agent should have a plan before the number comes back. Options: request seller reduce price, cover the gap in cash, challenge the appraisal with superior comparable sales (your agent should pull 3–5 before calling the lender), or invoke the appraisal contingency if you have one.
Final walk-through happens 1–2 days before closing to verify the property is in agreed condition. Closing is completed via electronic signature, with funds wired the day before. Recording and disbursement happen the following business day.
Step 6: Possession, keys, and your first 48 hours in Bellevue
In Washington, possession transfers when the deed records — which typically happens the business day after signing, usually between 1:00 PM and 5:00 PM. Your keys are released after recording is confirmed, not at the signing table. Do not schedule movers for closing day morning.
First steps after possession: change the locks immediately, set up utility transfers (Puget Sound Energy for gas and electric, Bellevue Utilities for water and sewer), and register for Bellevue School District enrollment if applicable. BSD does not use automatic enrollment — you must register your children for their school directly, and registration windows have specific deadlines.
RexMont stays connected after closing: property tax questions, contractor referrals, and eventual listing strategy. The relationship does not end at recording.
Offer Analyzer
Bellevue strategic offer analyzer
Enter your offer details to see your total cash to close and how competitive your offer looks in the current Bellevue market.
Your offer
The most you will pay in a bidding war. Set equal to purchase price if no escalation.
Your numbers
Viable when competition is limited. Review the suggestions below before submitting in a hot market.
Estimated cash to close
$383,400
Down payment + buyer closing costs
Cash breakdown
Earnest money is credited toward your down payment at closing — it is not additional cash. Jumbo loans may require 6–12 months of reserves on top of cash to close.
Strengthen your offer
- →Consider a pre-inspection before offer — costs $600–$800 but adds significant strength in competitive situations.
Closing costs vary by lender and transaction. Estimates are illustrative — verify with your lender before submitting an offer.
Want a RexMont agent to review your offer strategy?
Tell us the address, your budget, and your timeline. We will pull offer history on that property, identify who else is likely competing, and advise on the exact structure that gives you the best chance to win.
Estimates for educational purposes only. Not financial, tax, legal, or lending advice. Offer-strength score and cash-to-close figures are illustrative and depend on inputs you provide; lender approval, seller preferences, and market conditions will vary. Verify with your loan officer and a RexMont agent before submitting any offer.
Frequently asked questions
- How much money do I need to buy a home in Bellevue, WA in 2026?
- At Bellevue's median single-family price (~$1.5M), plan for: down payment (20% = $300K), closing costs ($35,000–$50,000 including lender fees, title, escrow, and prepaid items), inspection fees ($2,500–$4,000 including sewer scope), and an appraisal gap reserve ($20,000–$80,000 depending on competition level). Most Bellevue purchases require jumbo loans (above King County's ~$1.089M conforming limit), which carry higher reserve requirements — typically 6–12 months of mortgage payments in post-closing liquid assets.
- What are the best neighborhoods in Bellevue for families?
- For Bellevue School District (BSD) schools: West Bellevue (98004), Somerset, Crossroads, and Lake Hills. For Lake Washington School District (LWSD) with more value: Newport Hills, Factoria, and parts of East Bellevue. West Bellevue (98004) offers the strongest BSD schools and deepest amenity base, but at $1.8M–$3M+ for single-family. Somerset offers BSD schools at $1.3M–$2M with a quieter, hill-community character. Verify current school boundaries with the BSD Parcel Viewer before making an offer — boundaries change and impact values significantly.
- How competitive is the Bellevue real estate market in 2026?
- Bellevue's market has rebalanced from the extreme competition of 2021–2022. Well-priced homes in top BSD school neighborhoods still attract multiple offers within 7–14 days. Correctly priced homes in LWSD and East Bellevue corridors see 1–2 offers. The buyers winning in 2026 are pre-underwritten (full credit/income verified, not just pre-approved), have a clear escalation strategy, and work with agents who know which contingencies protect buyers vs. which create unnecessary friction with sellers.
- What is a Bellevue jumbo loan and what are the income requirements?
- A jumbo loan is any mortgage above the FHFA conforming limit — approximately $1.089M in King County for 2026. Most Bellevue single-family purchases require jumbo financing. Jumbo loans carry stricter requirements than conforming loans: typically 20% down, 12-month PITI reserves, debt-to-income under 43%, and more documentation of income stability. For tech employees with RSU income, lenders require 2-year RSU vesting history and may average the past 2 years of vested RSU value as supplemental income — not projected future grants.
- Do I need a buyer's agent to buy a home in Bellevue?
- After the August 2024 NAR settlement, every buyer must sign a written buyer-agency agreement before touring any home — spelling out exactly how the buyer's agent is compensated, by whom, and on what terms. Buyer-side commission (typically 2–2.5% in Bellevue) is negotiated per transaction and may come from the seller as part of the accepted offer or be paid directly by the buyer. Working with a buyer's agent is strongly advisable in Bellevue's market — the due diligence process (inspections, JMA review, school verification, appraisal gap strategy) is complex enough that unrepresented buyers routinely miss issues that cost five figures or more.
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RexMont is Seattle and the Eastside's most-reviewed brokerage — 1,235 five-star Google reviews, $1B+ closed. Our agents pair live market data with honest pricing, offer strategy, and negotiation guidance built for Seattle, Bellevue, and the Eastside.
Sources & references: Northwest Multiple Listing Service (NWMLS), Federal Reserve Economic Data (FRED), Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA), National Association of Realtors (NAR), Washington State Department of Revenue (REET schedules), King County Assessor, Bellevue / Kirkland / Redmond / Seattle municipal permit and zoning portals, Washington State Housing Finance Commission (WSHFC), and RexMont Real Estate in-house transaction data. Statistics, rates, and figures referenced are accurate as of publication and may change. Information is provided for educational purposes and is not legal, tax, financial, or investment advice.