Anonymous wrote:People, the majority of your new neighbors went thru your house when it was put up for sale. They know what the inside looks like from the open house.
Anonymous wrote:I requested my house get taken off the second we purchased it. Nobody’s business what it looks like inside.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:How do people do it? I'm not able to scrub our pictures and it's annoying. They're owned by mls apparently
you'll just have to email all websites that have these photos and ask for them to be removed.
Anonymous wrote:How do people do it? I'm not able to scrub our pictures and it's annoying. They're owned by mls apparently
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
What’s the reason? As the buyer, it not your furniture etc. in the listing pictures.
I don't care about the furniture. I care about my privacy and safety. It's the interior and floorplan of the house I live in and I don't want it to be public.
You think Ocean's 14 is targeting your home and needs to know whether you have an open or closed dining room?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
What’s the reason? As the buyer, it not your furniture etc. in the listing pictures.
I don't care about the furniture. I care about my privacy and safety. It's the interior and floorplan of the house I live in and I don't want it to be public.
You think Ocean's 14 is targeting your home and needs to know whether you have an open or closed dining room?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
What’s the reason? As the buyer, it not your furniture etc. in the listing pictures.
I don't care about the furniture. I care about my privacy and safety. It's the interior and floorplan of the house I live in and I don't want it to be public.
This is exactly why we had everything possible taken down. The floorplans were included in listing materials. I don’t want anyone knowing the floorplan of our house. It’s simply isn’t needed. I don’t care about furnishings, updates or anything like that. I just don’t want anyone to have easy access to knowing where, they master bedroom is, where the exits are behind the gate and the like. Our house was on a home tour in Virginia years ago and we had an issue with people taking photos. We initially thought it was just rude people being invasive, but the tour administrators quickly realized people were taking photos mainly of entrances, exits and alarm systems. Not good.
You think Ocean's 14 is targeting your home and needs to know whether you have an open or closed dining room?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote: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.
What’s the reason? As the buyer, it not your furniture etc. in the listing pictures.
I don't care about the furniture. I care about my privacy and safety. It's the interior and floorplan of the house I live in and I don't want it to be public.
Anonymous wrote: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.
What’s the reason? As the buyer, it not your furniture etc. in the listing pictures.
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.