Anonymous wrote:Okay, I see it differently. Using an estate sale company allows you to get the house cleaned out and the stuff they sell partially pays for the getting the house cleared.
We had a borderline hoarder situation with a relative and interviewed a couple of companies to do the job. With the amount they would have given us for the stuff they could sell, the total for what we would pay them to empty the house was pretty reasonable.
Unfortunately, the executor refused to entertain the thought of hiring a company because she wanted to do it all herself to save money. It ended up being a crazy mess because she didn’t know what she was doing and how to go about such a big job. The estate ended up paying much more than it would have cost to bring a professional organization in to do it. Talk about being penny wise and pound foolish.
Takeaway- be careful who you allow to be executor of your estate! If someone is not handling their own life very well, they probably won’t do a good job with tying up the loose ends of someone else’s life either.
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OMG! Totally agree with your takeaway. We had a family situation where the executor themself was at “loose ends.” The mess they created with the estate process reflected their own messed up personal life. SMH.
Awful, just awful. Yes, you can never be too careful in executor selection. A stable, disciplined personality is the right fit to look for.
Anonymous wrote:Now if you have endless time and want to start an ebay business and go from auction house to auction house and really shop around, you might profit more, but your time is valuable too.
Anonymous wrote:OP, we were told that the value of most people's possessions (not including jewelry or known artwork), are on the order of 10-15k. When a collector relative died, the auction house that was brought in to estimate the value came up with a total value of 6k. Prior to her death, she would spend hundreds of dollars a month on various collectibles - ceramic houses, equestrian figurines, you name it. There are others like her out there who would pay similar prices for these items, but honestly, the time and work needed to find these buyers and make the sales, deem the effort not worth it, especially when the estate is getting split several ways.
Anonymous wrote:Gun collections, old tools, mid century furniture, high end furniture, designer handbags, art, books, vinyl collections, minerals, WW2 memorabilia - there are many valuables in estates. What type of things does your dad have that he considers valuable? There are prestigious auction houses for more high end estates.
Anonymous wrote:You may want to compare to a price of a service that figures out what can be donated and what is trash. It's such a common story for people to think they have valuables, even rich people, but they don't. Or the few valuables they have will bring in so little money by the time it sells and the company gets a cut.
Anonymous wrote:You may want to compare to a price of a service that figures out what can be donated and what is trash. It's such a common story for people to think they have valuables, even rich people, but they don't. Or the few valuables they have will bring in so little money by the time it sells and the company gets a cut.