Home Selling Advice

Pricing Your Home to Sell

The single most important factor to consider when selling a house is the price.  How much is your house worth in today's local real estate market?  You don't want to overprice your home because you will lose the freshness of the home's appeal after the first two to three weeks of showings. After three weeks, demand and interest wane. On the other hand, pricing it too low may cause you to get less than your home is really worth.  However, homes priced below the market will often receive multiple offers, which will then drive up the price to market. Pricing is all about supply and demand . . . part art and part science.

 

This is How a Professional Real Estate Agent Prices Your Home

 
1.  Analyzes Comparable Listings and Sales 

Looks at all similar homes listed in the same neighborhood over the past six months.

 The list should contain homes within a 1/4 mile to a 1/2 mile and no further, unless there are only a handful of comps in the general vicinity or the property is rural.

Pays attention to neighborhood dividing lines and physical barriers such as major streets, freeways or railroads, and do not compare inventory from the "other side of the tracks.  Perceptions and desirability have value.

Compares similar square footage, within 10% up or down from the subject property, if possible.

Looks at similar ages. One neighborhood might consist of homes built in the 1950s next door to another one built in 1980s. Values between the two will differ. Compare apples to apples.

2.  Analyzes Sold Comparable Properties 

Pulls history for expired and withdrawn listings to determine whether any were taken off the market and relisted. If so, adds those days of the market to these listing time periods to arrive at an actual number of days on market.

Compares original list price to final sales price to determine listing to selling price ratio.

Adjusts pricing for lot size variances, amenities and upgrades.

3.  Researches Withdrawn & Expired Listings  

Looks for patterns as to why these homes did not sell and the common factors they share.

Which brokerage had the listing: a company that ordinarily sells everything it lists or was it a brokerage that might not have marketed the home properly or has a history of overpricing.Thinks about the steps you can take to prevent your home from becoming an expired listing.

4.  Gathers Information About Pending Sales

Since these are pending sales, the sales prices are unknown until the transactions close.

Makes note of the days on market, which may have a direct bearing on how long it will take before you see an offer.

Examines the history of these listings to determine price reductions.

5.  Looks at Active Listings Competitively 

Your agent approaches other actively listed properties as competitive to your home.  To see what buyers will see, you should tour comparable active listings yourself. Make note of what you like and dislike, the general feeling you get upon entering these homes. If possible, recreate those feelings of reception in your own home.

Current active listings are your competition. Ask yourself why a buyer would prefer your home over any of these and adjust your price accordingly.

6.  Compares Square Foot Costs 

Remember that after you receive an offer, the buyer's lender will order an appraisal, so it is very important to compare homes of similar square footage.

Appraisers don't like to deviate more 25% and prefer to stay within 10% of net square footage computations. If your home is 2000 sq. ft., comparable homes are those sized 1800 to 2200 sq. ft.

Average square foot cost does not mean you can multiple your square footage by that number unless your home is average sized. The price per square foot rises as the size decreases and it decreases as the size increases, meaning larger homes have a smaller square foot cost and smaller homes have a larger square foot cost.

7.  Sets Your Price Based on Market Conditions

After all the data is collected, the next step is to analyze the data based on market conditions. For comparison purposes, let's say the last three comparable sales in your neighborhood were $150,000. In a buyer's market, your sales price might allow some wiggle room for negotiation but be strong enough (near the last comparable sale) to entice a buyer to tour your home. To sell in this market, you might need to price your home at $149,900, settling for $145,000.

In a seller's market, you might want to add 10% more to the last comparable sale. When there is little inventory and many buyers, you can ask more than the last comparable sale and likely get it. So that $150,000 home might sell at $165,000 or more.

In a balanced or neutral market, you may want to initially set your price at the last comparable sale and then adjust for the market trend. For example, if the last sale closed three months ago, but the median price has edged upwards of 1% per month, pricing at $154,500 would make sense.

Request a Comparative Market Analysis prepared by one of CENTURY 21 Lakeside Realty's local real estate experts.  Call us . . . we're ready to help you achieve your goals!

 

Your Listing Expired And Your Home Did Not Sell . . . NOW WHAT?

Did your listing expire without selling? Is everybody else's home selling but yours? If you're serious about selling, then you're probably pretty frustrated. It's time to take a fresh approach.

There are reasons your home has not sold that are unique to your situation. Here are the 8 most common reasons a house remains unsold as well as actions you can take to get it sold.

1. THE PRICE IS WRONG. If your house isn't selling, then it is not priced properly for the current market. There are plenty of buyers that are looking for homes of all sizes, amenities and condition. Your home needs to be priced where a ready, willing and able buyer will see the value. Pricing your home at or near the actual market value is the best strategy for getting your home sold at the best price within a reasonable time frame.

How To Get An Accurate Determination Of What Your Home Is Worth

There are really only two reliable ways to find out what your home is worth today.

If you're reading news publications and consuming social media posts, then you have no doubt been hearing how home prices are increasing by healthy percentages around the U.S.  What does this really mean to you?  If you saw a report that said home prices increased by 5% since this time last year, does that mean that the value of your home increased by 5%?

Well, what it means is that the average or median price of homes that sold increased by 5%. Your home may have not increased in value at all, or it may have increased by more than 5%.  It depends on where your home is located.  It also depends on the condition and appeal of your home as it relates to average homes in your neighborhood.

Don't be mislead by the websites that display the market value of your home based on a computer model . . . they are often grossly inaccurate.  There are only two ways to get an accurate determination of the market value of your home today.

When Should a Seller Update/Revise The Property Disclosure Form?

The Ohio Residential Property Disclosure Form is required by Ohio Revised Code 5302.30 for all residential real property transfers by sale, land installment contract, lease with option to purchase, exchange, or lease.  The purpose of the form is for the seller to disclose to a potential buyer information about the condition of their home.  The information should be as accurate as possible and based on the seller's actual knowledge.  There are some exclusions to this requirement, that you can read about here:  http://codes.ohio.gov/orc/5302.30

So when should a seller revise the Residential Property Disclosure form?

Be Cautious! Don't Let Your Home Purchase Get Hijacked By Cyber Criminals!

cyber crime graphic - don't let your home closing funds get hijackedEmail scams are nothing new, and we've all seen them.  But, would you expect that an email coming from the closing agency, real estate agency, or your real estate agent might really be from cyber criminals trying to trick you into wiring closing funds to an offshore account?

If you are involved in a real estate transaction, or plan to be in the near future, and you are not already aware of the issue, then you should read this.

Reports by The Washington Post, The Chicago Tribune and New York Real Estate News all identify cases where buyers, believing they were in communication with authorized parties, wired large sums of closing funds to accounts linked to parties with criminal motives, and were left with no money to complete their purchase.

Warnings to consumers have been issued by the National Association of REALTORS® as well as the Federal Trade Commission, as the criminal activity continues.

Who is targeted, how are the criminals operating, and what can you do to make sure it doesn't happen to you?