Lisa Curlett October 5, 2018
Do Be Objective and Realistic. This is probably one of the most important and yet hardest things to do. If possible, be as objective as you can be about your home. See it through the eyes of a potential buyer and not yours as the owner, who has raised three children there. All homes have strengths and weaknesses – yours included – even though you love it so much and have built many happy memories there. Being objective about your house – and its plusses and minuses – will help you be realistic about the price. And on a related note, don’t let the selling price of your neighbor’s house influence you. Unfortunately your home is not the exact same as your neighbor’s home in every single way – square footage, lot utility, condition, timing of the listing, motivation of the seller – and so you can’t just use that price for your house. How often do you hear that your next door neighbor’s house, which is similar to yours, sold 9 months ago for $1,000,000, and so your house should sell for the same? I wish it were that easy.
Don’t Just Use a Calculation. Two points on this. First, the correct listing/selling price is not based upon a set formula or calculation. As I mentioned above, it’s a mixture of factors that are ever changing and can be difficult to interpret. Even more than this, the approach that … the price you paid for the house + what you put into the house since that time = the price you “need” to get, has no bearing on the selling price of your home. You as the seller will determine the listing price of your home, but the market determines its selling price.
Do Factor in Condition. You have a leg up if your home is new or recently renovated. Buyers today pay a premium for homes in which the condition is move-right-in. If the property is dated and hasn’t been updated in 20 years, especially the kitchen and baths, the buyers will significantly discount your home. It means that they will have to do the renovations to your home, and they end up inflating the renovation costs and add an aggravation factor to the equation. Note that you can do things to remedy the dated aspects – fresh, neutral paint colors, staging some of the rooms – but more on that in another post.
Don’t Overanalyze. You could spend months analyzing past sales and relating these to your home, and you could get opinions from 10 different real estate agents about what is the right listing price for your home. You could do these things until you’re blue in the face. But the reality is that you won’t know the market reaction to the price until your house is listed on the market. Only then can you gauge the reaction of the buyers to the price. We all have our estimates, opinions and predictions, but we don’t know for certain until it’s live on MLS.
Do “Right Price” Your House. Above we described how buyers respond when you “right price” your house. But some sellers end up overpricing their homes because they want to leave negotiating room for themselves or because they have a tough time being objective about the pricing and value of their homes. What I will say is that if you do end up overpricing your property, buyers will focus on its negatives instead of its positives. Using the example before, their reaction will be, “Bummer, at this price, I have to deal with having no garage, a small yard and only one full bath. Thanks, but No Thanks.” They lose sight of the positives and focus on the negatives because the price is too high, and they don’t see the value. And then what happens? The property sits and accrues days on the market, which results in buyers discounting the price. It may sound counter-intuitive, but if you overprice your home, you will likely get a lower selling price than if you had “right priced” it from the onset. I have seen it happen time and time again.
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