Buyers pay a premium for a home that is in top-notch,
move-in condition, so once you decided to sell, make sure the home is ready to
be sold.
First, you have to figure out what
needs to be done to your home. A thorough property inspection up front will
help to identify problem areas. Having the property inspection done and all the
corrections taken care of before you get offers also shows the buyers that you
are conscientious homeowners. This will relieve some of their anxiety about
buying a home.
Also, any buyer will have a property
inspection done before closing the sale. Often, this is when they will
re-negotiate the price because of any problems that may turn up in the
inspection. Having your own inspection done and making all necessary repairs
first removes this opportunity for the buyer to try and re-negotiate.
Properties in prime condition are a
pleasure for real estate agents to show, so they get shown more often. The more
exposure a property gets, the better the chance of selling it quicker and for a
higher price.
Use the following checklist as your
guide to preparing your home for sale.
Spruce Up the
Outside
- Paint: Few things you will enhance the salability of your
house quite as much as painting the outside. Before painting, scrape or
water-blast any blistered or peeling paint; repair gutters and down
spouts; and replace wood showing dry rot. Pay special attention to wood,
trim, gutters, and wrought iron.
- Front Entry: Give special care to this area. First impressions do
make a difference! All woodwork should be freshly and neatly painted,
including the door if necessary. Replace badly worn or broken doorbells.
Polish any door brass. Paint or replace an unsightly mailbox. Put out a
new or clean doormat.
- Yard: Mow and trim the lawn. Weed flower beds; remove or
replace dead plants or trees. Water regularly during the growing season.
With desert landscaping, make sure that no underlying plastic is exposed,
that rocks and sand are tidy, and that weeds and unwanted grass are
removed.
- Driveway, garage/carport: Clean up grease or oil spots; remove the soil at
least, if not the stains. See that the garage door opens freely, and if
you have an automatic door opener, make sure it's in good working order.
- Air Conditioners: Paint or replace any rusted exposed metal. Correct
improper draining.
Patio: A nice spread of outdoor furniture looks very appealing. If
necessary, borrow some from a friend to enhance the
"showability" of your property.
- Swimming pool: Adjust chemicals until the pool sparkles. Hose dust and
cobwebs from filtration equipment. Store chemicals and tools neatly. Keep
pool area tidy and secure.
Look at the
Basics
- Windows: Repair or replace torn or bent screens. As a last
resort, remove them entirely; it's better to have no screens than to have
unsightly ones. Replace any cracked or broken panes. Also, notice
unsightly foliage near windows. A window framed in ivy can give a warm,
homey feeling, but cut it back if the foliage is restricting the light
coming into the rooms. Drapery rods should be affixed firmly to walls and
work smoothly; draperies should be clean and hang properly.
- Doors: Check to see that all doors open and close freely,
including closet doors and patio or sliding glass doors. Oil any squeaky
doors. Tighten the hardware, particularly doorknobs. And while you're at
it, tighten hardware on kitchen and bathroom cabinets, too.
- Walls: As with the exterior, painting indoors will pay
dividends out of all proportion to the time and effort spent. Wallpaper
should be clean and adhere smoothly to walls.
- Floors: Repair or replace missing or damaged pieces of tile;
polish if needed. Repair of a loose stair tread plate or loose carpeting
on a stairway is a top priority.
- Carpet: Steam cleaning is the best answer for soiled carpets,
especially when shampooing isn't enough. If pet odors are present, clean
the carpet some time before your home is placed on the market to be sure
the odors have been eliminated.
Check the
Mechanicals
- Lights: Every light socket in and around the house should have
a good bulb of adequate wattage. Don't overlook those outside and in the
garage. Also remember the utility room, halls, closets, over the kitchen
sink, and in the oven and exhaust hood.
- Switches and fixtures: Repair or replace wall switches, outlets, and light
fixtures that don't work. Replace any broken switch plates.
- Appliances: Those that will be sold with the home should be in
good working condition. If specific equipment doesn't work and you don't
intend to repair it, point this out.
- Plumbing: Badly chipped or irreversibly stained sinks and tubs
should be re-enameled, patched, or replaced. Leaky or noisy toilets should
be fixed, as well as any dripping faucets.
- Sprinkler systems: These should be working properly with no defective
heads.
Go
for the Spacious Look
One of the best and least expensive
ways to improve the "showability" of your home is to open up as much
space as possible. Openness stimulates positive feelings in buyers. Overstuffed
rooms or closets give the impression of being smaller than they really are. You
can't change the size of what you have, but you can try to present it in a
pleasing way.
- Closets and storage areas: One of the most frequently voiced requirements of
buyers is for more closet and storage space. Open up your storage areas by removing items you aren't using.
- Counters and cabinets: The same principle used for closets applies here:
overcrowding gives the impression of inadequacy. This applies to bathrooms
and kitchens with the kitchen being most important. Store infrequently
used appliances.
- Garage: Buyers will pay a premium for a garage if they can
visualize it being of value to them, but it's hard to sell when the garage
is filled to overflowing. If your garage has become a two-car attic, move
the excess to a mini-warehouse.
Housekeeping
Hints
- Bathrooms: Few places in the home can get so dirty so fast, and
yet few things will "unsell" a house as fast as dirty bathrooms.
Vanity, sink, faucet hardware, and mirror are the focal points. But don't
forget other potential problems: soap residue in a shower, a moldy shower
curtain, accumulated dirt in the track of a sliding shower door, soiled or
missing grout, soiled toilet bowls, and dirty or battered bath mats.
- Kitchen: Most buyers will inspect the kitchen carefully, so time
invested here is well spent. Clean the stove inside and out. Replace badly
stained or corroded reflector plates under the heating elements on electronic range tops. Don't neglect the kitchen
exhaust hood; buyers frequently check this area as a clue to general
housekeeping.
- Windows: Clean windows are an absolute necessity if a house is
to look its best. Weather permitting, open windows to let in fresh air.
- Water heater and softener: Perhaps because it's so unusual, a sparkling clean
water heater or water softener really impresses buyers: and it takes so little time
and effort.
All this may seem like a lot of
work, and it is, but it means a quicker sale with less hassle and more money in
your pocket. Not to mention the pleasure you and your family will receive from
living in a well-kept home.
Source: www.RealEstateABC.com
Article written by Rick Campbell