Five Home Improvements That Don't Always Add
Value to Your Home
Not-So-Sure-Fire Improvements
- Adding a pool
- Adding high-end
accessories
- Adding wall-to-wall
carpeting
- Adding elaborate
landscaping
- Adding new windows
Everywhere you look these days, folks are
sprucing up their homes. Although interest rates
are rising, consumers are still enamored with
the home improvement craze î º and with good
reason. They have a lot invested. Balances on
home-equity lines of credit have soared 71
percent to $543.2 billion over the last two
years, according to an analysis by Equifax Inc.
and Moody's Economy.com. Although some of this
money was spent on consolidating high-interest
credit card debt, vacations, and college
tuitions, a large portion was earmarked by
homeowners for improvements to increase the
value of their homes. The problem, however, is
that many of their investments may fail to
recoup even half of their original spend.
You can't contemplate home improvement in a
vacuum. While a media room is one of today's
hottest remodeling projects, if your house is in
dire need of an additional bathroom, then
theater-style seating and soundproof walls will
most likely be a wash at resale. If watching the
latest blockbuster with your family in the
comfort of your own home is worth more to you
than whether you will recoup 60 to 80 percent of
the project's cost at resale, then go for it.
But don't expect potential buyers to get
lathered up about the built-in surround sound
system when the insect-damaged front deck is in
need of serious attention. Below are five home
improvements that don't always increase the
value of your home.
Swimming Pools
You may envision hours of summer leisure and
family fun. Potential homebuyers see
maintenance, expense, and LAWSUITS. If you want
to spend $75,000 on an in-ground pool and are
prepared to get nothing in return for that
investment î º except the pleasure of cooling
off every night after work î º then go right
ahead. Pools are actually one investment that
can actually lower the value of your home. It is
not uncommon today that a contingency of sale is
that the current home seller must dismantle the
above-ground pool or fill in an in-ground pool
before the buyers will sign on the dotted line.
High-end Accessories
Unless your home is of similar quality
throughout, don't over-improve one or two rooms
with high-end accessories to the exclusion of
everything else. You won't recoup even half the
money you spend on a restaurant-quality cook
top, a whisper-quiet dishwasher, and imported
Italian floor tiles if you only have one
bathroom with pitted vinyl flooring, a leaky
faucet, and bedrooms that haven't had a change
of paint since the 1960s. A rule of thumb is to
keep everything in your home of similar style
and quality and keep your home within the top 25
percent of other homes in your neighborhood.
Wall-to-wall carpeting
Beat-up wall-to-wall carpeting may detract
from the value of your home, but ripping it all
out and replacing it with new carpeting isn't
necessarily the solution. First of all,
good-quality carpet is getting more expensive î º
upwards of $15 to $25 a square yard, and that
doesn't include installation. The other problem
is that your choice of carpeting color and style
may not match the decorative vision of any
potential homebuyers. It might be better to
remove the carpeting and take the money you
would have spent on replacing it and spend it on
refinishing your hardwood floors instead. Then
you can add small area or hallway rugs where
they make the most fashion and comfort sense.
These can be either kept in place or removed
during home showings when it comes time to sell.
Elaborate Landscaping
Other than a pleasing-looking lawn and
plantings that complement rather than over-power
your home, landscaping doesn't necessarily add a
whole lot of value to your home. It is mainly
for own enjoyment. Elaborate gardens that will
need extensive care î º possibly of a gardener î º
may not recoup even a quarter of your investment
at resale. Hardscape, such as stone walls and
fences, is attractive, but most buyers won't
even consider them in the value equation.
New Windows
With energy prices on the rise, installing
replacement windows is an improvement many
homeowners are considering. However, double-hung
windows can cost anywhere between $200 and $300
and, unless you're a DIY wizard, you will have
to pay someone to install them. With energy
savings and an estimated resale value that
hovers around 85 percent, according to
Remodeling Magazine, standard replacement
windows make sense in some cases. If your
windows are in poor shape, with cracked and/or
loose panes, sashes that are difficult or
impossible to operate, and glass that just won't
come clean no matter how much you scrub,
replacing windows can provide you with a good
return on your investment. However, if your
windows are in good shape, your return will be
much lower.
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