Tips to Sell Your House
Source: Ontario Real Estate Association
When you are ready to sell your house you'll want to enlist
the help of a REALTOR®. He or she will provide the professional
advice and service you need to make the selling process go
smoothly.
Showing you ways to make your home as marketable as possible
is just one of the many ways your REALTOR® can help. Here
are a few tips from the experts:
Clean everything in and out of sight
With clipboard in hand, take a tour of your home. Take note
of every opportunity to remove clutter and dirt. Rooms, closets
and cupboards will appear larger and more inviting when you
get rid of unnecessary stuff and tidy up what's left. Remove
bulky or unused furniture and rearrange the rest to make the
best use of space.
Most of us are pack rats, so apply the following test to
every questionable item: Have I used this in the past six
months, or will I need to use it soon? If the answer is no,
throw it away, store it elsewhere or sell it in a yard sale.
Be equally aggressive in disposing of dirt. Pay particular
attention to the two most important rooms in a buyer's mind:
bathrooms and kitchens. And once you've removed all the dirt:
keep everything clean, every day. You never know when the
person who will ultimately buy your home will visit.
Repair as much as you can
During your home tour identify the things that are broken,
cracked, stuck or just plain don't work anymore. These can
include: leaky faucets, holes in window screens, stuck or
broken windows, lights that don't work, doors that squeak
or don't close properly, missing or broken cupboard handles,
cracks in the walls and ceilings, and dozens of other "little
things" you've been meaning to do for years. Now is the
time.
Certain items, such as roof or basement leaks, must be repaired,
along with any water damage. Electrical or heating system
problems must be fixed. Some repairs, however, may not be
necessary. Will that hairline crack in the driveway really
make or break the sale? How about a chipped floor tile in
the entryway? Some buyers will have their own ideas about
how to deal with these problems. You may find it easier to
adjust your selling price to reflect the cost of these repairs,
rather than pay for them yourself.
De-personalize your home
Your house reflects you. It is decorated with your taste
and your sense of style. Unfortunately, that heart-shaped
table lamp your grandmother left you may distract potential
buyers from seeing the home itself. Grit your teeth and store
all personal items (framed family photos, trophies, etc.)
out of the way.
If you have brightly coloured accent walls or heavily patterned
wallpaper, consider repainting or wallpapering these areas
with light, neutral colours that enhance a room's size and
make it more flexible to receive any kind of furniture. Remove
area rugs, light fixtures and other items that buyers might
find too difficult to imagine in "their home", even
if you were not intending to include these in the sale.
Beautify the house and yard
Peeling, dry paint is relatively easy to fix or replace and
can make all the difference in your home's appearance. If
your carpet or other floor covering is in really bad shape,
consider replacing it. The same holds true for badly tattered
window coverings such as drapes and blinds.
Outside the house, weed the flower beds, remove dead tree
branches, keep your lawn well-mowed and edged, trim the hedges,
rake the leaves, sweep the sidewalks, fix and paint the deck
or fence, plant a few flowers and do anything else you can
think of to enhance your home's curb appeal.
It may sound like a lot of effort, but these tips, and the
assistance of a REALTOR®, will help you sell your current
home quickly so you can move on to your next dream house.
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