Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The house isn't vacant. What are you talking about?
OP is under contract on their new house. Presuming they move into their new house, their old house will be vacant. Or a rental. Both which make it slightly harder to sell/insure.
Also, it's cute the OP doesn't care that Zillow shows the stale listing, it's so nostalgic!
I am the OP and I didn't say I didn't care - I said I am not too worried. I have seen Zillow listing where houses are delisted and related. I do not presume to know why the house was delisted and relisted, especially if a chunk of time has gone by. In fact, the house I purchased was delisted and relisted. It went in 5 days with 4 offers this time around. Price is the same and house is now vacant. Seller apparently had a long distance move and decided to delist and get the move over with and relist after. I only know that after the fact, as the buyer.
Again, I realize there are pros and cons. I realize that there is a chance I will not get as much in the Spring (and I will not actually try to raise my price in the Spring). I am just wondering if people have done this and if it was better than letting the house sit over the winter. Considering the house has been on for only 3 days, this may never come to pass. I am a planner and it comforts me to think ahead. Some of you are reading way too much into this.
We're reading to much into this? You've only been on the market for 3 days!
It's the height of rudeness that you are now considering pulling your house off the market after 3 days -- talk about wasting the time and money of an agent.
Well they listed in October, so I'm sure agent knew they didn't have their act together.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The house isn't vacant. What are you talking about?
OP is under contract on their new house. Presuming they move into their new house, their old house will be vacant. Or a rental. Both which make it slightly harder to sell/insure.
Also, it's cute the OP doesn't care that Zillow shows the stale listing, it's so nostalgic!
I am the OP and I didn't say I didn't care - I said I am not too worried. I have seen Zillow listing where houses are delisted and related. I do not presume to know why the house was delisted and relisted, especially if a chunk of time has gone by. In fact, the house I purchased was delisted and relisted. It went in 5 days with 4 offers this time around. Price is the same and house is now vacant. Seller apparently had a long distance move and decided to delist and get the move over with and relist after. I only know that after the fact, as the buyer.
Again, I realize there are pros and cons. I realize that there is a chance I will not get as much in the Spring (and I will not actually try to raise my price in the Spring). I am just wondering if people have done this and if it was better than letting the house sit over the winter. Considering the house has been on for only 3 days, this may never come to pass. I am a planner and it comforts me to think ahead. Some of you are reading way too much into this.
We're reading to much into this? You've only been on the market for 3 days!
It's the height of rudeness that you are now considering pulling your house off the market after 3 days -- talk about wasting the time and money of an agent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The house isn't vacant. What are you talking about?
OP is under contract on their new house. Presuming they move into their new house, their old house will be vacant. Or a rental. Both which make it slightly harder to sell/insure.
Also, it's cute the OP doesn't care that Zillow shows the stale listing, it's so nostalgic!
I am the OP and I didn't say I didn't care - I said I am not too worried. I have seen Zillow listing where houses are delisted and related. I do not presume to know why the house was delisted and relisted, especially if a chunk of time has gone by. In fact, the house I purchased was delisted and relisted. It went in 5 days with 4 offers this time around. Price is the same and house is now vacant. Seller apparently had a long distance move and decided to delist and get the move over with and relist after. I only know that after the fact, as the buyer.
Again, I realize there are pros and cons. I realize that there is a chance I will not get as much in the Spring (and I will not actually try to raise my price in the Spring). I am just wondering if people have done this and if it was better than letting the house sit over the winter. Considering the house has been on for only 3 days, this may never come to pass. I am a planner and it comforts me to think ahead. Some of you are reading way too much into this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The house isn't vacant. What are you talking about?
OP is under contract on their new house. Presuming they move into their new house, their old house will be vacant. Or a rental. Both which make it slightly harder to sell/insure.
Also, it's cute the OP doesn't care that Zillow shows the stale listing, it's so nostalgic!
Anonymous wrote:Op here - sorry for the typos - on my phone. I want to emphasize that it was emphasized to me that the DC metro market is slowing down by friends (multiple) who are realtors. That is why I am asking. One friend (not my realtor) said my house would easily fetch $10k more than asking in the spring. So I want to be prepared to yank it rather than accept a low ball offer if it does not sell during this short active window.
Anonymous wrote:I know you don't want to hear this, but because you have it listed now, it will NOT be fresh in the spring. As a buyer, it wouldn't matter to me if you had it on the market during the winter or not. In both cases, I would assume you would be slightly more desperate because I'd see that you originally tried to sell it 6 months prior.
So to answer your question, I would leave it on now and try to work with whatever offer(s) you get.
Anonymous wrote:The house isn't vacant. What are you talking about?
Anonymous wrote:You'd have to be certain that you're able to sell for ~$10k more in the Spring, AND that it offsets whatever your regular payments are between now and then. It's a pretty risk gamble, but I'd stay in the market for now. Things have slowed down since the peak, but there are still buyers out there.
Anonymous wrote:Op here - sorry for the typos - on my phone. I want to emphasize that it was emphasized to me that the DC metro market is slowing down by friends (multiple) who are realtors. That is why I am asking. One friend (not my realtor) said my house would easily fetch $10k more than asking in the spring. So I want to be prepared to yank it rather than accept a low ball offer if it does not sell during this short active window.
Anonymous wrote:Op here - sorry for the typos - on my phone. I want to emphasize that it was emphasized to me that the DC metro market is slowing down by friends (multiple) who are realtors. That is why I am asking. One friend (not my realtor) said my house would easily fetch $10k more than asking in the spring. So I want to be prepared to yank it rather than accept a low ball offer if it does not sell during this short active window.
Anonymous wrote:Op here - sorry for the typos - on my phone. I want to emphasize that it was emphasized to me that the DC metro market is slowing down by friends (multiple) who are realtors. That is why I am asking. One friend (not my realtor) said my house would easily fetch $10k more than asking in the spring. So I want to be prepared to yank it rather than accept a low ball offer if it does not sell during this short active window.