|
Home
About Us
Contact Us
Search Listings
Search Rentals
View All Listings
Homes
Farms
Commercial
Land
AGENTS
Signup
Here
View Agents
Members
Member Signup
Member Login
DIY Credit
Repair
Mortgage
News
Loan Calculators
|
| Preparing Your Home to Sell: To Fix or Not to Fix |
| by: JK Clevenstine |
|
Once you\'ve made the decision to sell your home, there are a ton
of other decisions that immediately follow: Should we use a
Realtor®? If so, who? What should be our asking price? Should we
have an open house?
But probably one of the most unpleasant decisions is, what do I
have to do to get this place ready to sell? Why unpleasant?
Because it involves TIME and MONEY - two things home sellers
have little of.
There are three schools of thought on this topic. One is to do
nothing, cross your fingers, and see what you get. In areas
where the real estate market is hot, many home sellers opt for
this solution, because they think buyers are so desperate that
they\'ll make an offer anyway. And while you may get an offer,
you\'ll definitely leave a lot of money on the table in the
process.
The second school is to recognize that some items need to be
replaced or repaired, and offer buyers a credit for those items
as part of the deal. You\'ve saved yourself the work, but not the
money. This option can actually be worse than the first one,
because you don\'t know how much you would have gotten without
offering the credit. Again, you\'ll eventually get an offer, but
you\'re missing out on getting the best price for your house.
If getting the best price for your house is important to you,
the only option is to take care of repairs and do the work to
make your house shine (or have it done for you). Here\'s why:
When you sell your home with obvious repairs left undone or a
credit as part of the offer, you\'re sending a message to buyers
that your home has not been well maintained. Now this may or may
not be true, but that\'s the message that\'s sent. And that will
drag down the value of your home to those making an offer.
If you go to the effort to make the fixes yourself, you send the
message that your home is well maintained. And (this is big) you
also upgrade the value of those items you just replaced because
they\'re new...New carpet, New roof, New hot water heater...
\"New\" has a value to buyers--that\'s why new homes cost more than
resale.
Putting your own sweat equity into repairs, taking advantage of
zero percent financing at the big box home improvement stores,
and utilizing a handyman for certain repairs will help keep your
costs in check. Be smart about how you make repairs, and be
careful not to over-improve. Your efforts could result in
getting thousands more for your home. Compare your time against
the reward and you\'ll see it\'s time well spent.
|
|
 |