Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Except the higher price isn’t a benefit to the seller if you’ve spent more than the gain on renovations. It is a benefit to the realtor who makes a bigger commission.
If the seller spends a high estimate of $10,000 for painting, cleaning and yard clean up and sells the house for $860,000 instead of $800,000, the additional listing commission is $1,000. Add that to the $10,000 costs to the seller, and the seller nets $49,000 more
dp. thanks genius.
in our case the agents are pushing more like 50k of renovations (interior paint, exterior paint, new deck, new cabinets, plus all the actually broken stuff we have to fix.) Very unclear if we would recoup that.
New deck and new cabinets is insane. Exterior paint only should be done if old paint is peeling or some terrible color. You won’t recoup the money spent.
We passed on an otherwise nice house where they redid the kitchen. It was brand new, but the layout was terrible. They should have saved their money and sold it with the old kitchen, priced accordingly. We would have considered it then and planned on doing the kitchen the way we wanted to. I just couldn’t bring myself to buy a house with a brand new kitchen that I hated.
I’m actually on the fence about exterior paint. It’s a bad color and peeling a bit but it literally seems like “lipstick on a pig.”
Peeling paint and bad color I’d actually consider painting. Go with something neutral that most people would be content to live with for a while.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Except the higher price isn’t a benefit to the seller if you’ve spent more than the gain on renovations. It is a benefit to the realtor who makes a bigger commission.
If the seller spends a high estimate of $10,000 for painting, cleaning and yard clean up and sells the house for $860,000 instead of $800,000, the additional listing commission is $1,000. Add that to the $10,000 costs to the seller, and the seller nets $49,000 more
dp. thanks genius.
in our case the agents are pushing more like 50k of renovations (interior paint, exterior paint, new deck, new cabinets, plus all the actually broken stuff we have to fix.) Very unclear if we would recoup that.
New deck and new cabinets is insane. Exterior paint only should be done if old paint is peeling or some terrible color. You won’t recoup the money spent.
We passed on an otherwise nice house where they redid the kitchen. It was brand new, but the layout was terrible. They should have saved their money and sold it with the old kitchen, priced accordingly. We would have considered it then and planned on doing the kitchen the way we wanted to. I just couldn’t bring myself to buy a house with a brand new kitchen that I hated.
I’m actually on the fence about exterior paint. It’s a bad color and peeling a bit but it literally seems like “lipstick on a pig.”
Anonymous wrote:It often is smarter just to price accordingly, rather than than mess about with allowances or to renovate yourself. Be clear in the MLS listing that the house is being sold as-is.
We renovated right after buying our current house. We were glad that the previous owner had not renovated, because it let us choose the cabinets, finishes, and such like.
Anonymous wrote:Houses should be renovated every 10-12 years and buyers expect that. No one under 45 wants to have a project they want HGTV move in ready.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Except the higher price isn’t a benefit to the seller if you’ve spent more than the gain on renovations. It is a benefit to the realtor who makes a bigger commission.
If the seller spends a high estimate of $10,000 for painting, cleaning and yard clean up and sells the house for $860,000 instead of $800,000, the additional listing commission is $1,000. Add that to the $10,000 costs to the seller, and the seller nets $49,000 more
dp. thanks genius.
in our case the agents are pushing more like 50k of renovations (interior paint, exterior paint, new deck, new cabinets, plus all the actually broken stuff we have to fix.) Very unclear if we would recoup that.
New deck and new cabinets is insane. Exterior paint only should be done if old paint is peeling or some terrible color. You won’t recoup the money spent.
We passed on an otherwise nice house where they redid the kitchen. It was brand new, but the layout was terrible. They should have saved their money and sold it with the old kitchen, priced accordingly. We would have considered it then and planned on doing the kitchen the way we wanted to. I just couldn’t bring myself to buy a house with a brand new kitchen that I hated.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Houses should be renovated every 10-12 years and buyers expect that. No one under 45 wants to have a project they want HGTV move in ready.
that’s mentally deranged. I guess this is why millennials complain about being unable to afford homes.
Why should we cleanup your used up houses that you haven't been maintaining.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Except the higher price isn’t a benefit to the seller if you’ve spent more than the gain on renovations. It is a benefit to the realtor who makes a bigger commission.
If the seller spends a high estimate of $10,000 for painting, cleaning and yard clean up and sells the house for $860,000 instead of $800,000, the additional listing commission is $1,000. Add that to the $10,000 costs to the seller, and the seller nets $49,000 more
dp. thanks genius.
in our case the agents are pushing more like 50k of renovations (interior paint, exterior paint, new deck, new cabinets, plus all the actually broken stuff we have to fix.) Very unclear if we would recoup that.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Houses should be renovated every 10-12 years and buyers expect that. No one under 45 wants to have a project they want HGTV move in ready.
that’s mentally deranged. I guess this is why millennials complain about being unable to afford homes.
Anonymous wrote:Houses should be renovated every 10-12 years and buyers expect that. No one under 45 wants to have a project they want HGTV move in ready.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Except the higher price isn’t a benefit to the seller if you’ve spent more than the gain on renovations. It is a benefit to the realtor who makes a bigger commission.
If the seller spends a high estimate of $10,000 for painting, cleaning and yard clean up and sells the house for $860,000 instead of $800,000, the additional listing commission is $1,000. Add that to the $10,000 costs to the seller, and the seller nets $49,000 more
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Not if the time & $$$ spent to renovate is less than or equal to the selling price gained. Are you really this ignorant?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Don't listen to realtors who tell you to renovate. It only benefits them (easier to sell and higher selling price).
Um, easier to sell at a higher price also benefits the seller, genius
Anonymous wrote:I would price it to sell rather than offer allowances. That sounds fussy.
But we (not my doing) went the other route and updated a lot of things and I think we lost a lot of money on things the new owners were going to change anyway.