Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Sold a house with a nice above ground pool that you could enter from the deck on the back of the house. Buyer's loved it but ended up taking it out a few years later. This was in a very nice neighborhood of expensive houses. No big deal. Above ground pools are easy to remove as any halfwit buyer would know.
My old house has had above ground pools in yard since 1960s.
The 1960s/1970s pool I found out was famous as owners had no fence and let whole neighborhood use it. We had a big back slider where mom loved to give out fresh chocolate chip cookies and lemonade all summer. So many neighbors in their 50s used to tell happy stories. Sometimes 20-40 kids in yard.
That mom from 1960s was Mrs. Breakstone. Yes the real one you see her butter in the supermarkets. She sold off Breakstone for one billion a very long time ago. So yes a billionaire owned by old house and had an above ground pool.
But guess at DCUM we are too good for it
Anonymous wrote:I sold my house above ground pool. I went and got a quote of $500 to have it removed in writing. I told first buyer who did not want it I have the quote and at closing will hand you a check for $500 made out to pool company to remove it.
He bailed on something else. Second buyer really wanted pool as he had a two year old and four year old and being above ground and with safety ladder can’t fall in. So sold it as selling point.
My current house has an “above ground pool” in. I say it cost $20,000. It is semi inground meaning sunk four feet deep, had beautiful stone work around pool and a trex deck with steps and is salt water.
It adds zero to my property taxes. I maintain it myself super easy. If new owned does not want it I guess we don’t want them.
If we did remove it I would fill in dirt use pavers and put fire pit or gazebo in middle. Or maybe Jaquezzi by steps I have.
I am not selling so not worried resale.
And I think first buyer old house was bluffing. I found out later he wanted cash directly and I know my pump and ladder equipment he could sell for $1,000 bucks. I think he was looking to use pool and pocket $500. I figured it out when we mentioned I would take equipment with me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm just one data point - but I wouldn't want the pool and if it was there I'd possibly not even look at the house. However there may be some buyers who would want it.
No offense you are stupid. Unless it is inground a Craig’s list ad for free pool or be gone. Or it is $500 to remove sell equipment or ask credit at selling.
Ones that are above ground are easily removable.
not everyone knows how much it costs to remove a pool - why would they?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I'm just one data point - but I wouldn't want the pool and if it was there I'd possibly not even look at the house. However there may be some buyers who would want it.
No offense you are stupid. Unless it is inground a Craig’s list ad for free pool or be gone. Or it is $500 to remove sell equipment or ask credit at selling.
Ones that are above ground are easily removable.
Anonymous wrote:Sold a house with a nice above ground pool that you could enter from the deck on the back of the house. Buyer's loved it but ended up taking it out a few years later. This was in a very nice neighborhood of expensive houses. No big deal. Above ground pools are easy to remove as any halfwit buyer would know.
Anonymous wrote:I'm just one data point - but I wouldn't want the pool and if it was there I'd possibly not even look at the house. However there may be some buyers who would want it.
Anonymous wrote:Keep it and offer to remove it if the buyer doesn't want it. I'd want it.