And your experience is not anecdotal because? Quartz just isn't that attractive, it's trendy to maybe 10 percent of buyers. |
I don't think you are going to fool today's savvy buyers with a half-assed cheap upgrade. First of all, if your cabinets are a dated style like arched doors, and/or low quality, it doesn't really matter that you covered them up with paint and added some new hardware from Home Depot. I think speckled, swirly granite will soon be as dated as floral wallpaper, but more understated stone counters are timeless. But still, don't bother putting it on your old cabinets. I would not pay a premium for that. Also. don't replace functional black or white appliances with stainless just to get stainless. Even low-end appliances come in stainless or stainless-look these days. Similarly, don't put new high end appliances in your otherwise dated kitchen because a new owner will probably gut the space and will not necessarily want to work their new design around your new appliances. |
+1 I am in the process of buying a house - - with a granite countertop I can barely look at (the yellow/black/brown/cream dotted stuff). I HATE it. The sellers put it in last year and sell it as an "update". The first thing I will do is take it out. With that said, I am switching out a bathroom vanity before we put our place on the market because it is a cheap fix and ours is very old, stained and falling apart. OP, unless your stuff is "stained and falling apart" don't do it. |
OP, just have a good realtor (emphasis on good) come by and suggest updates. They should be familiar with what is important to buyers at your price point and area.
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Some shitty black galaxy granite isn't going to bring a house up that much. Plus the comps 100k over were classy redos. Not lipstick on a pig. |
I'm sure there are some buyers who buy with a look to upgrade to their tastes. However, many don't have the time or interest. We didn't consider any houses that needed a complete renovation of a bath or kitchen. Rather pay for the upgrades through the mortgage than out of pocket. We were looking in the $1.5 million category. |
We have toyed with selling but our kitchen is not updated. I think our goal in doing some work for resale would be to have a kitchen a buyer could live with for a couple of years before they have the money, fortitude for a complete redo. Maybe that is lipstick on a pig, but I prefer to think of it as making it easily livable so a prospective buyer doesn't think, "That kitchen has to go immediately." |
It's likely also that this particular forum has a selection bias for people who would prefer to update on their own terms. |
OP, here. Thanks for all the comments. I'm really torn. I agree with what many have said, I'm house hunting too and detest it when people throw on a new countertop, call it renovated and jack up the price. Yes, the idea of doing updates is coming in part from the realtor we talked too. As someone mentioned, the kitchen sets the tone, especially when it's the first rm you see, like our home. Our counters are a most hideous light nondescript beigeiish formica and the floor tiles have cracked. We aren't trying to hide anything, we spent the money else where in the house but we want it too look nice. We have a neighbor on the market whose house is nearly identical and they didn't do the kitchen - same ugly countertops. It's been sitting over a month. We're thinking maybe some updates to the ugliest things in our house will help. We are not planning on raising the price based on the kitchen, just want to get it sold. Based on our neighbor's house, I'm getting the impression that many buyers lack the imagination, $, time, and/or desire to do. As someone said, they have kids and not time to do updates. (Although we are planning on buying a house that needs updated so we can make it our own.) Please keep ideas coming - be specific as possible. |
You could do a new formica counter very inexpensively. |
And, if you have replacement tiles, you can swap out that cracked tile and maybe have the grout professionally cleaned. |
Hey, I would prefer buying home having neat and clean kitchen with some granite counter tops as Granite is more in trend these days and are also durable compared to other stones . If you are planning to sell then your home then apply granite counter top and attractive backslash with dark coloured cabinets which will give stylish look to your kitchen .Talking about cost ,It depends on which type of material you are choosing for designing your home . |
Op if you are in the DC area, prices are so high that many buyers want the renovation rolled into the price. You can also do some updating that is appreciated by buyers with the idea that they can replace the whole kitchen later -- but that could take years. So a nice counter top and floor in the meantime is a selling point. I would go standard -- mid color granite and tile or wood flooring. Wood style tiles sounds very trendy to me -- I would avoid. You can also ask your realtor, who has looked at many homes and sold many. |
OP we have looked at many new houses. Granite seems to be still going strong in new homes. Not black, gray or neutral. |
Another fan of granite here. I've never heard anyone say it's a turn off for many. I just don't think that's true. I.m looking for a house in a highish price point and would be perfectly happy with granite. My kitchen turnoffs are dark cabinets and tile floors. Strong preference for white cabinets and hardwood floor that matches the rest of the house. And I'd also really prefer not to redo the kitchen |