Selling Your Home Do You Improve It or
Leave It?
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Easy do-it-yourself paint jobs are among the
thing sellers may consider doing in
preparation for listing their home. |
Should you make home improvements when you
plan to move anyway? Generating curb appeal and
using model home staging techniques are better
ways to spend your money than loading up on
major home improvements when it's time to sell
your home in any market. Curb appeal and staging
won't work, however, if your home is a wreck.
Both market conditions and your home's
condition dictate what additional projects you
should complete before you open your home to
prospective buyers.
Seller's Market
Leave most improvements for the
buyer: In a seller's market, the rule
of thumb is to leave most home improvements to
the buyer. You probably wont increase your
sales price enough to cover the cost of the work
and time, and second-guessing what the buyer
will want in appliances, decor and finishes
could cost you the sale.
Reduce your asking price so it reflects your
older kitchen or bathroom instead of squandering
time and money on a major remodeling job that
people might hate.
Disclose any work done without a
required permit: One exception to the
above rule of thumb, however, is righting a
wrong. That is, if you or a previous owner
completed work on your home without a required
permit, make it right before you attempt to
sell: either
- disclose that you did
not obtain a permit,
- or obtain a permit and
either complete the work yourself,
- or leave it up to the
buyer to complete the work in the way they
desire.
First, in many states, you and your agent are
required to disclose known conditions that could
affect the value or salability of your home. If
you don't and a home inspector or appraiser
uncovers unpermitted work, you could be liable
for nondisclosure and the lender could stall the
deal.
Ultimately, you could be required to have the
local building officials inspect the work in
order to obtain a permit. Before you get a
permit you also may have to complete any
unfinished work. In any case, if the work isn't
to code, you could be forced to tear it out,
especially if it's a safety hazard.
But that's not the worst of it. If, after
close of escrow, the buyer discovers work
completed without a permit and the local
building department decides not to approve the
work, a chunk of the home's value could become a
legal issue. Any difference in value based on
what was not permitted at the time of sale,
becomes a point of litigation.
What to improve: All sellers
should perform deferred maintenance repairs to
fix or replace broken items and systems. Put the
home and its components in good working order by
replacing missing roof shingles and broken or
cracked windows. Repair driveway cracks and
straighten listing fences. Make sure doors,
gates, lights, plumbing fixtures and other items
are all working properly.
Buyer's Market
Make sufficient improvements to get a
market edge: In a buyer's market, along
with making certain your home and its components
are all up to code, the idea is to give your
home a marketing edge without over doing it.
The improvements you should make aren't
necessarily those that give you a return on your
money. Instead, they should be largely generic,
cosmetic improvements that enhance your home's
functionality, efficiency and aesthetics all
to give it a contemporary feel.
What to improve: Often that
simply means cleaning up and removing clutter. A
new coat of paint, new carpeting, freshly
manicured landscaping, updated fixtures,
windows, doors and other touches will put your
home in the best light.
Let the buyer take care of major
fixes: If an inspection or appraisal
turns up the need for major corrective work, say
due to termite or moisture damage, leave money
in escrow with instructions for the escrow
officers to pay the contractors once they
complete the work.
Let the buyer select the contractors based on
several fair bids and have the work done after
the close of escrow to avoid a construction zone
in your home while you are trying to sell it.
If the buyer supervises the work, you won't
incur liability for it and the lender knows the
property will be restored to its proper
condition, which enhances its loan value.
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