Working with Thomas
The right home isn’t found. It’s recognized.
How I work with buyers
Conversation first. Then the showings.
Conversation first — I want to know the life you’re building, not just the checklist. Every showing has someone from our team alongside you, reading the property and flagging what the photos didn’t. After the keys, you keep hearing from me — vendors, referrals, honest answers when you need them.
What working together looks like
A conversation. The showings. The quieter part.
Three phases. Thomas and his team beside you through all of them.
01
A conversation
Thirty minutes. No pitch. I want to understand where you are, what you’re looking for, and whether I can genuinely help. If I can’t, I’ll tell you who can.
02
The showings
Thomas, Laura, or a teammate trained and coached by Thomas is alongside you at every showing — never proxied. Reading the property in real time, answering as we walk, flagging what the photos didn’t show. When we find it, Thomas structures the offer — he knows how sellers think, how listing agents respond, and where deals quietly die.
03
The quieter part
Inspection, appraisal, contingencies — nothing quietly dies in the back half of a deal. After the keys, I stay in touch. Vendors, referrals, honest answers. The closing is the beginning.
First a conversation. Then the showings — Thomas or the team beside you for all of them. Then the quieter part that most agents skip.
Common questions
Buyer FAQ.
I’m buying with cash or existing equity. Does that change the process?
Not fundamentally. You skip the financing contingency, which can be an advantage — but finding the right property, structuring the offer, and managing due diligence is the same work. In some ways, a cash buyer has the freedom to be more patient and more precise. We start with the conversation either way.
How is buying in North Georgia different from other markets?
Mountain properties come with considerations that coastal buyers don’t always expect: well water, septic systems, seasonal road access, STR regulations that vary by county, and building restrictions on ridgeline or watershed properties. I walk every buyer through these before the first showing — not because they’re obstacles, but because a good mountain property is only as good as its infrastructure.
More on timelines, handling two markets at once, and what to expect over a six-month search — in the Journal →
Buyer voices
In their own words.
Buyers who made the move — and came back to tell us about it.
[Pending consent]
[Buyer name]
North Georgia · [Context]
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[Buyer name]
Fort Lauderdale → Blue Ridge · [Context]
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[Buyer name]
South Florida · [Context]
“The house doesn’t make its own first impression. I do.”
Thomas Echea
Ready when you are.
No pitch. Just the market, honestly.