Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Because people want their privacy. The new owners don't care about your comps.
But it takes months for anyones name to be associated with the house via updated tax records so if the pictures remain for let's say 30-60 days after the sale no one knows who bought it yet so they will still have their privacy. After that sure remove it, before that fair game for comps.
The interiors aren’t relevant to comps at all. The only things that matter for comps are square footage, location/lot size, number of bedrooms and bathrooms. How a house is decorated or updated don’t really factor in.
You can't be serious. Do you really think a property with original everything is valued the same as a property with a brand new top of the line kitchen, bathrooms and flooring? Some of this different might be extracted from the description, but not always.
Yes. It is. For one thing, top of the line is subjective. For another, cheap flips are more common. More to the point, no appraiser will consider those things. New systems, yes. Quartz countertops? Naw, bruv.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I don't get it why are the interior pictures of houses which just sold instantly removed off the internet? If you are looking at comps to see the inside this is important. Why do they do this? Is there anyway to see/find the interior pictures for that recently sold? Thank you.
The inside is irrelevant for comps
Not for buyers!
I realize there are a lot of stupid buyers who are swayed by decorating and staging but the interiors truly are not relevant to the establishment of comparable a used to value, price or appraise a house.
Anonymous wrote:I don't get it why are the interior pictures of houses which just sold instantly removed off the internet? If you are looking at comps to see the inside this is important. Why do they do this? Is there anyway to see/find the interior pictures for that recently sold? Thank you.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I had my home’s old photos removed from Zillow. I also requested that Google remove photos from its street view.
If/when I decide to list it I will include my photos.
How did you get them to remove anything? They just blur part of the photo.
Anonymous wrote:I had my home’s old photos removed from Zillow. I also requested that Google remove photos from its street view.
If/when I decide to list it I will include my photos.
Anonymous wrote:I (buyer) asked my agent to take them down and he said he couldn't. How do I do this?
Ours absolutely were relevant to our tax assessment. Maybe they shouldn't have been, but when I called about an appeal it was clear they were a factor.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody owes you pics of their interior space. They go up strictly to sell the home. You can figure your comps knowing the inside of a home isn't always available for your perusal.
This is the answer. Maybe you would like to see the inside of someone else's house, but that does not mean they are obligated to show it to you. This is true whether the house sold yesterday or 20 years ago.
Wrong. The inside is what it looked like to the previous owners not the new owners so the pics shall remain.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Nobody owes you pics of their interior space. They go up strictly to sell the home. You can figure your comps knowing the inside of a home isn't always available for your perusal.
This is the answer. Maybe you would like to see the inside of someone else's house, but that does not mean they are obligated to show it to you. This is true whether the house sold yesterday or 20 years ago.