Do You Want to Sell Your Home or Not?

Let a REALTOR help you price your home right...As though we haven’t heard this plea enough, it’s for sellers to let go of unrealistic expectations. There are too many people who are testing the market and aren’t serious about selling their homes and many of them forget that they aren’t the only one taking the hit. When we list your home, our job is to market the home.  We will put it on the market for , not for tour, not for show…for . Right now, more than ever, is driving the of the home.

Supply and Supply and Demand Basic Curve

My goal as your is to analyze the market in your area and help you determine what the most realistic for your home should be.  It’s up to you to set the .  It’s up to me to point you in the right direction.

Supply and are the two opposing forces that are intertwined in the process of determining the right .  Typically, when you increase the supply, provided that it is not a response to increased , the of the item falls.  There’s more of it, so the consumers have more choices, and they can afford to shop for a lower .  If you decrease the supply, as long as it’s not in response to changing , the prices tend to go up because there are more buyers than there are items for .  (To read my quick article describing supply and demand, please click here)

Is it possible to artificially affect pricing without affecting the supply?  Yes, but it requires artificially altering consumer by offering incentives or specials, or conveying a sense of urgency for the buyer.

Is it possible to artificially affect by changing the ?  Yes.  How?  Lower the .  If you offered a gallon of gas at 50% of the surrounding competition’s prices, you’d artificially increase for gas in that area.  The problem with this is that the gas station won’t make any money, so lowering the too much is not in their best interest.

Is it possible to increase the of a product by artificially inflating the ?  In other words, if I want to sell my peanut butter for $1.00 more than all of the competition, will that increase for my product?  Will it increase for the product that’s $1.00 cheaper?  No, and no.  Increasing the of a product that is competing against less expensive products is not going to increase for higher prices.

It is our job to get the highest that we can for your home.  We cannot do this by pricing your home higher than the competition, no matter what the condition of the home.  Even if the home has upgrades, the you set may be too high for the area to bear.

In order to sell a product to a consumer, the must be right.  Your neighborhood is like a grocery store filled with products.  Those products are homes.  When you shop in the grocery store, you look for the best products at the lowest .  Sometimes you pay more for a better product because it has 10% more!!!  Sometimes you pay more because of the brand name.  Sometimes you settle for bargain basement prices because name brand aspirin is the same as the local grocery store aspirin, and you just don’t care.  But, if you find a product that is clearly over priced, it is guaranteed that you’ll pass it by with only a glance.

Manufacturers spend millions of dollars every year to market these products to you.  also spend their money on your home to make sure that it is marketed as effectively as possible.  If you, the seller, set a that is too high, you may generate interest in the product simply because it’s on the same block as more realistically priced homes, but nobody will buy it, especially when three other identical products down the street sold at a far lower than yours.

“But our house is upgraded.”

There is a very clear difference between a home that is upgraded and a home that simply has new features that are already expected.  Is it really upgraded, or is it just more sellable?  Just because a fixture is new, or tile has been laid doesn’t mean that you have a home with upgrades.  What it does mean is that you have a clean home.  What makes those items upgrades?  The quality of the items.  New linoleum is still linoleum.  It doesn’t increase the of your home nor will it command a dollar for dollar investment recovery at .  A pool is a great feature to have, but what type of pool is it?  Is it a pool that most people expect, with a diving board and/or decorative rocks surrounding the perimeter, or is it an enlarged spa?  In , in the 200-300K range, a pool adds about $5,000 in .  Sometimes more, sometimes less.  This really depends on how many homes in your sub-division have pools.  In some countries, as you can see in the illustration, pools are in very high .

Paint is not an upgrade.  An air conditioner just like the neighbor’s is not an upgrade, even if it was installed yesterday.  Sure, it’s new, and that may influence whether or not someone will consider your property, but it will not support a higher .  It is a deferred maintenance item.  An air conditioner twice the size of the surrounding neighborhood could be considered an upgrade, unless you’ve upgraded yourself out of the market.

Basically, anything that is expected to be in a standard single family home in the 200K - 300K range will only add to the sellability of the home, not the .

Be careful when you spend money on your home, because some items don’t fit.  A 6-Burner Viking Gas Stove in a 300K Home with Corian counter tops and laminate floors won’t increase the of your home.  It will make it sell faster, true, but you won’t recover your costs.  Nobody expects there to be that high of an upgraded item in your home.  Consider upgrades to be vast improvements over not just the condition of the previous item, but also the quality.  The items you perceive to be upgrades may only be what you believe to be upgrades and the rest of the world may expect more.

The Bottom Line

Your house has an inherent to someone.  Until the home closes escrow, your home’s is basically unknown.  What you do know is:

  • How much others have paid for similar homes, recently.
  • How much you paid for your home.
  • How much money you put into your home.
  • How much you still owe.

The average return on Real Property is around 4% annually.  2005 really screwed up ’s perception of in .  If you purchased your home in 2003 for $150,000.00, and you apply the average rate of return, a realistic for your home in 2008 would be about $185,000.00 give or take.  That’s $7,000 per year in , and it’s realistic.  If your neighborhood comparables show that properties just like yours are selling in the $220,000 range, then your return is HUGE and you need to realize that it’s completely abnormal.  Many homeowners screwed up by tapping into that artificially bloated equity to upgrade their homes or buy other properties or a boat or other luxury item.  Now, they think they can recover it, and they can’t.

Let’s just hope that Sellers will become more realistic about looking at how much they have gained already and consider it a blessing, and to not be greedy.  If you are thinking about selling your property, and you thought it was worth more than it actually is, think again about your reasons for selling.  If you must sell, get realistic about the and sell.  The offers are there and there are plenty of hungry buyers.  If you don’t have to sell, hold the property or rent it out and take a small monthly hit for a while.  You’ll benefit from it in the long run.

If you have no idea whether or not you’re in the right position to sell your home, give me a call at (602) 312-3262 and I’ll be happy to work up a Market of your home so you can make the right decision.  When you’re ready to list your property, know that I will take care of you through the entire process and in the most cutting edge ways.

I hope to hear from you.

About the Author

Jon Griffith

2 Responses to “Do You Want to Sell Your Home or Not?”

  1. Video Comments {seesmic_video:{”url_thumbnail”:{”value”:”http://t.seesmic.com/thumbnail/qnCvPE5jfV_th1.jpg”}”title”:{”value”:”Video Comments ”}”videoUri”:{”value”:”http://www.seesmic.com/video/75TscO8Dbz”}}}

  2. [...] That is not the best way to determine the asking price for your newly listed property.

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