Seven Tips To Sell Your House
1. Don't sit things out. Hundreds, perhaps millions, of sellers nationwide are sitting on their hands hoping that prices will go up soon. They won't. Maybe not for years. If you're going to sell your house, get on with it now.
2. Fix it up and clean it up. The Wall Street Journal points out that your house has to make a good first impression. They advise you not to spend a lot of money and not to buy any big-ticket items for the house, but do see that everything is in good repair. Give the place a fresh paint job and general spruce up. Declutter the place ... no buyer wants to see a house filled to the brim with your stuff.
3. Price it cheaply. Set a realistic price from day one. Forget what you think the house should be worth three years ago -- it's worth less today and this is the market you have to deal with. Buyers today are only buying bargains, so set your price below comparable nearby properties.
4. Hire a top real estate agent. Hire the best, most aggressive listing agent you can find. Forget about your cousin with the real estate license. Interview several agents and insist that they present a comprehensive marketing plan that goes way beyond the usual internet page, open house and yard sign. Anybody can do that. Now's the time to get aggressive. Offering a bonus for a fast sale or a full price sale might be a good idea.
5. Promote, promote. The agent can't do all the work, you have to help. The agent should take on and pay for the usual marketing stuff, but the seller should be prepared to pony up for extras. If you want the house listed regularly in the classified section of your local newspaper, be prepared to pay for it yourself. Make sure you are in the top internet sites, like Trulia, Zillow, Cyberhomes, Eppraisal and Realtor.com. Advertise in corporate newsletters. Check with relocation firms that help transferring executives find new homes. Use your church bulletin. Get creative, but pay the costs yourself.
6. Play the banker. If you have no mortgage to pay off, your strongest selling feature might be your ability to finance all or part of the buyer's purchase. Hire a real estate lawyer to make sure everything is done to protect your interests, and get a good accountant to structure the payment system. The worst that can happen is that the buyer defaults and you get the house back to sell it again.
7. Take the offer. Once you get anything resembling a reasonable offer, take it. Don't lose a deal by digging in your heals over a few dollars or some silly terms. Negotiate, but recognize that this is a buyer's market and the buyer has way more clout than you.
Hey, pretty darn good advice if you ask me. In fact, I've said these same things before in this blog a number of times. Nice to see the Wall Street Journal summarize it in one easy to read story.
For more information on real estate in the Tampa Bay area, visit my blogsite at http://www.thestpeterealestatesite.com/.
