16 answers

What Did You Learn from Selling Your House?

Has anyone had their house on the market recently? If so, how did it go? What did you learn from the experience?

I'm getting ready to sell my house. My realtor says that everyone is looking for a deal so don't spend alot of money trying to make the house look perfect. I'm doing some basics like cleaning and painting but what else can I do to make my house more marketable? If you did alot of work before putting your house on the market, do you think it was worth the time and expense? Also, how do you keep the house looking presentable when you are living in it?

I'd also like to hear from those who sold their home but stayed in the same town. Did you buy a new house right away and move just once, or did you rent after selling and take time to find a new home?

1 mom found this helpful

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Featured Answers

People will pay TOP DOLLAR for new carpet and new paint. Seriously, my former neighbors are still trying to sell their home 2 years later.
Also, you need a realtor(a good one). People get less when they sell themselves and it is too expensive and peronal to be dealing one on one with the buyer.
And I HATE most realtors.

1 mom found this helpful

More Answers

Clean it, top to bottom.
Paint neutral colors, not bright white but a cream in an eggshell or satin finish.
Fix anything broken.
Power wash.
Clean up the yard
Rent a storage unit and take out one piece of furniture from each room.
Declutter,
put away family pictures
clean carpets
wax hardwood
Make sure you have all the same type light bulbs in every light. And make sure they are all working.
Use Febreze room deodarizers or Air Wicks Plug ins, change them to keep them fresh.

Before a showing:
turn on all lights
Flush toilets
Spray with Lysol
A bowl fresh fruit on the table or kitchen counter
Put the pets in a kennel for a while to really get it cleaned.

What you do when you move is tax deductible, like a storage unit and cleaning costs, that is if this is a move for a new job or company move, or military.

4 moms found this helpful

Everyone IS looking for a deal, which is why I think you need your house to stand out. But you don't have to spend a lot of money to make this happen. Make sure your house is spotless (pay to have the house cleaned if you can afford to) and find the money to have someone clean your windows inside and out, you'll be surprised by how much cleaner your house will look. And remove any obstacles like wallpaper or bold paint colors, that are specific to your decor. I don't think complete depersonalization is necessary, but you do need to declutter. If your kids toys don't already have a home in the living room, find a lidded basket or a storage bench to tuck away the toys on a moments notice. This is the same for random stuff on your kitchen counters, coffee table, nightstands and bathroom counters. Essentially, make sure you've got a home for everything.

We sold our house this time last year, in under a week. Now, I will say our house was in a very desirable suburb, in a very desirable neighborhood with a contemporary design. The contemporary design is in short supply, so for someone looking for this style, there are very few options. We were moving across the country and couldn't afford to drag out the process, so we priced fairly, but aggressively and we did a lot of clean up and minor repairs so the house was spotless. We repaired and repainted any obvious drywall issues (nail pops, scuffs and gouges, etc.), updated the faucets in two outdated bathrooms, which made them look more current, replaced carpet in our basement to match the new carpet we had replaced in the rest our our house the year prior (so essentially, all carpet was new). We had the entire house cleaned, including the windows, and we spruced up the garden with fresh mulch and put some potted plants on the porch, since spring hadn't really sprung yet. We also replaced the roof since we knew it would be flagged on the inspection. Oh, and we replaced the front door handle lock set and put on a new kick plate, which really made the house pop. We left the house spotless and went away for a week's vacation, putting the house on the MLS the day we left and had an open house the following day. We had three offers by the third day and closed less than a month later. All told, we spent just over $10K in repairs, but still made a profit on the sale.

Do all your math, and make sure you know what profit you might realize from the sale before you decide how much money to invest. You'll need to estimate the sale price minus what you owe, as well as any commissions, taxes and titles, title company fee, realtor holding fee, a home warranty and resale package fee (if you have them) and any cash you expect to pay at closing. This will really give you your bottom line.

Good luck! I hope this helps.

3 moms found this helpful

We just sold our house, it was on the market for about 3 months which is pretty good here. We painted everything in neutral colors, cleaned carpets and had it staged. We bought a home and moved before listing so we wouldn't have the headaches of trying to always be "show ready" with two small children and a dog. I will say after looking at tons of homes you should put a LOT of your stuff in storage (like TURBO de-cluttering), people will be looking in closets and the more stuff the smaller the home will feel.

Good luck.

2 moms found this helpful

I heard this idea on a DYI type show and think it is awesome! Put together a binder that contains everything from the paperwork including warranty on your water heater and/or A/C unit, instruction booklets for the fridge, dishwasher, garbage disposal,etc, and any other hints or how-to's for things like that sticky back gate that needs to be lightly tapped just so to open instead of kicking it.

I thought it was a great idea because personally I have all of that info floating around my house and to have it all in one place would be a god send!

2 moms found this helpful

I don't know if this applies to you or not, but IF you have pets.. if you can, remove all traces of them during a showing.

I had a friend who's MIL was a real estate agent (not who we listed with). And she made an appt to show the house to a client. This friend knew we had a dog, and we took her with us when there was a showing--the only evidence of her presence was her crate in our bedroom--all the toys, etc were picked up/removed when we left for showings. Well, my friend told me that afterwards her MIL had told her, that she never would have noticed the "dog smell" if she hadn't seen the crate in our bedroom. I'm not an idiot, I know dogs cause odors. But we had pulled out the carpet and installed tile recently and the house was very fresh. We bath our dog frequently and she was fixed... so there really wasn't an overpowering odor. I know that all homes will have a different "odor" than what you are accustomed to in your own home. Pets or not. But if people can tag that odor/scent to a pet, they can be turned off to your home, making assumptions about lingering odors and what they may need to do to get rid of them.

So if you do have a pet, remove all signs of it before showings if you can. It simply eliminates the possibility that someone will be turned off from your home (justifiably so or not) simply because you have a pet.

2 moms found this helpful

People will pay TOP DOLLAR for new carpet and new paint. Seriously, my former neighbors are still trying to sell their home 2 years later.
Also, you need a realtor(a good one). People get less when they sell themselves and it is too expensive and peronal to be dealing one on one with the buyer.
And I HATE most realtors.

1 mom found this helpful

Wow Margie's got it going on!! Listen to what she says, plus, wash your windows and put out fresh flowers on the porch and deck if you have one!!! I always lit a candle before our showings, but blew it out before I left. We sold our house in 5 days.

1 mom found this helpful

Interesting fact I learned: Buyers can expect anything that is 'attached' to the house to 'be included in the sale'...so you might want to take down any flat screens TV's you've got mounted to your walls if you plan on taking them with you.

I agree with the storage unit or POD idea...always got to de-clutter and be VERY diligent about making sure everything is tidy before you leave the house...EVERY TIME...you just never know when someone wants to come take a look...the de-cluttering and taking everything personal out that isn't absolutely necessary to live really will help with the ability to keep everything looking sparkling clean!

1 mom found this helpful

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