Anonymous wrote:Update the baths. A typical full bath update costs $10k and a half bath $5k. Making these updates will significantly increase the appeal of the house.
Anonymous wrote:I personally hate seeing a cheaply renovated house. It’s a deal breaker for me if it doesn’t look good AND I’m having to pay extra for it and I’ll need to pay again to redo it. It needs to be 100% a “before” or very well done.
Otherwise just clean up glaring issues, stage the place and put it on the market
Anonymous wrote:I personally hate seeing a cheaply renovated house. It’s a deal breaker for me if it doesn’t look good AND I’m having to pay extra for it and I’ll need to pay again to redo it. It needs to be 100% a “before” or very well done.
Otherwise just clean up glaring issues, stage the place and put it on the market
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think you either do very little (clean, easy repairs, paint, mulch) or you renovate the whole thing. The middle ground is expensive with poor returns. But you need to ask a few agents in your neighborhood with good track records.
I very much disagree with this. Depending on the specifics it may involve painting, certain flooring options. My elderly relatives' estate house was in good shape and some updates, but had 1950's green tub and tile - it got re-glazed white and you would never know.
This was right in the DC area, though not super-hot for teardowns in the immediate vicinity. The house itself was good and in solid shape.
I had been thinking I would like this type of update to my house myself several years into living here - though I have no intention of moving. It was an eye toward the "low hanging fruit" of a low budget and getting bang for your buck on widely-appealing renovations.
You can definitely tell if a bathroom has been “reglazed.” If I’m looking at a house, it means I’m budgeting to redo that bathroom.
Anonymous wrote:I personally hate seeing a cheaply renovated house. It’s a deal breaker for me if it doesn’t look good AND I’m having to pay extra for it and I’ll need to pay again to redo it. It needs to be 100% a “before” or very well done.
Otherwise just clean up glaring issues, stage the place and put it on the market
Anonymous wrote:I personally hate seeing a cheaply renovated house. It’s a deal breaker for me if it doesn’t look good AND I’m having to pay extra for it and I’ll need to pay again to redo it. It needs to be 100% a “before” or very well done.
Otherwise just clean up glaring issues, stage the place and put it on the market
Anonymous wrote:Update the baths. A typical full bath update costs $10k and a half bath $5k. Making these updates will significantly increase the appeal of the house.