Getting
the House Ready to Sell
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Disconnect
Your Emotions
When conversing with real
estate agents, you will often find that when they talk to you about
buying real estate, they will refer to your purchase as a "home."
Yet if you are selling property, they will often refer to it as
a "house." There is a reason for this. Buying real estate
is often an emotional decision, but when selling real estate you
need to remove emotion from the equation.
You need to think of your
house as a marketable commodity. Property. Real estate. Your goal
is to get others to see it as their potential home,
not yours. If you do not consciously make this decision,
you can inadvertently create a situation where it takes longer to
sell your property.
The first step in getting
your home ready to sell is to "de-personalize" it.
Make
Your Home "Anonymous"
If there is a new home
sales tract near your home, go visit. It doesn't matter what
size the homes are. What you will find are some wonderfully
(but sparsely) furnished homes that anyone could live in -- with
the emphasis on "anyone." They are anonymous.
There may be a baseball glove in the boy's room, but no family photos
on the walls.
There may be "personality"
- but no person.
The reason you want to
make your home "anonymous" is because you want buyers
to view it as their potential home. When a potential
homebuyer sees your family photos hanging on the wall, it puts your
own brand on the home and momentarily shatters their illusions about
living in the house themselves.
Put away family photos,
sports trophies, collectible items, knick-knacks, and souvenirs.
Put them in a box. Rent a storage area for a few months and put
the box in the storage unit.
Do not just put the box
in the attic, basement, garage or a closet. Part of preparing a
house for sale is to remove "clutter," and that is the
next step in preparing your house for sale.
Uncluttering the House
This is the hardest thing
for most people to do because they are emotionally attached to everything
in the house. After years of living in the same home, clutter collects
in such a way that may not be evident to the homeowner. However,
it does affect the way buyers see the home, even if you do not realize
it.
Clutter collects on shelves,
counter tops, drawers, closets, garages, attics, and basements.
You want as much open clear space as possible, so every extra little
thing needs to be cleared away.
Take a step back and pretend
you are a buyer. Let a friend help point out areas of clutter, as
long as you can accept their views without getting defensive. Let
your agent help you, too.
Kitchen
Clutter
The kitchen is a good
place to start removing clutter, because it is an easy place to
start.
First, get everything
off the counters. Everything. Even the toaster. Put the toaster
in a cabinet and take it out when you use it. Find a place where
you can store everything in cabinets and drawers. Of course, you
may notice that you do not have cabinet space to put everything.
Clean them out. The dishes, pots and pans that rarely get used?
Put them in a box and put that box in storage.
You see, homebuyers will
open all your cabinets and drawers, especially in the kitchen. They
want to be sure there is enough room for their "stuff."
If your kitchen cabinets, pantries, and drawers look jammed full,
it sends a negative message to the buyer and does not promote an
image of plentiful storage space. The best way to do that is to
have as much "empty space" as possible.
For that reason, if you
have a "junk drawer," get rid of the junk. If you have
a rarely used crock pot, put it in storage. Do this with every cabinet
and drawer. Create open space.
If you have a large amount
of foodstuffs crammed into the shelves or pantry, begin using them
– especially canned goods. Canned goods are heavy and you don’t
want to be lugging them to a new house, anyway – or paying a mover
to do so. Let what you have on the shelves determine your menus
and use up as much as you can.
Beneath the sink is very
critical, too. Make sure the area beneath the sink is as empty as
possible, removing all extra cleaning supplies. You should scrub
the area down as well, and determine if there are any tell-tale
signs of water leaks that may cause a homebuyer to hesitate in buying
your home.
Closet
Clutter
Closets are great for
accumulating clutter, though you may not think of it as clutter.
We are talking about extra clothes and shoes – things you rarely
wear but cannot bear to be without. Do without these items for a
couple of months by putting them in a box, because these items can
make your closets look "crammed full." Sometimes there
are shoeboxes full of "stuff" or other accumulated personal
items, too.
Furniture
Clutter
Many people have too much
furniture in certain rooms – not too much for your own personal
living needs – but too much to give the illusion of space that a
homebuyer would like to see. You may want to tour some builders’
models to see how they place furniture in the model homes. Observe
how they place furniture in the models so you get some ideas on
what to remove and what to leave in your house.
Storage
Area Clutter
Basements, garages, attics,
and sheds accumulate not only clutter, but junk. These areas should
be as empty as possible so that buyers can imagine what they would
do with the space. Remove anything that is not essential and take
it to the storage area.
Or have a garage sale.
copyright
2000 by Terry Light and RealEstate ABC, revised 2000 |