Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Well, we have a contingent contract on another house. Our plan was to give it a couple of weeks more through Labor Day and if no offers at the price we want take it off and lose out on the new house. Would best strategy be to delist and quickly realist at our min price and see if any takers on next 2 weeks?
And he/she likely priced the house where they did due to your circumstance with the new house.
You sound like you don't know what you are doing, OP.
P.S. It's AMAZING how many people thing UPPING the price is a good strategy.![]()
Anonymous wrote:Well, we have a contingent contract on another house. Our plan was to give it a couple of weeks more through Labor Day and if no offers at the price we want take it off and lose out on the new house. Would best strategy be to delist and quickly realist at our min price and see if any takers on next 2 weeks?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it’s not priced correctly? Do you really think you’d get more offers if it was priced higher?
Yes a very similar house same layout a few doors down sold for 75k over our list price last month. That one has a bonus screened in porch so we mentally discounted 25k from what we would expect
A screened porch costs $40k bare bones.
It’s a very small one so we thought 25k was reasonable
I’m pricing a small screened porch now. Starts at $40k.
+1. I don’t think the folks saying $20 live in the DC area or have built anything lately.
Anonymous wrote:If you were to relist at a higher price future buyers will see the lower list price and ask why you increased by so much without adding extra value to the home. I would never offer more than the original list unless up against competition. Even if you are not greedy, your moves will come across as such. Have your realtor give up some commission and take the lower offer.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it’s not priced correctly? Do you really think you’d get more offers if it was priced higher?
Yes a very similar house same layout a few doors down sold for 75k over our list price last month. That one has a bonus screened in porch so we mentally discounted 25k from what we would expect
A screened porch costs $40k bare bones.
It’s a very small one so we thought 25k was reasonable
I’m pricing a small screened porch now. Starts at $40k.
Anonymous wrote:If your house is such a good deal 50k under what it’s worth I feel like you would’ve gotten more than 1 offer. Maybe not a bidding war but at least 2 offers to consider.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it’s not priced correctly? Do you really think you’d get more offers if it was priced higher?
Yes a very similar house same layout a few doors down sold for 75k over our list price last month. That one has a bonus screened in porch so we mentally discounted 25k from what we would expect
A screened porch costs $40k bare bones.
It’s a very small one so we thought 25k was reasonable
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Are you sure it’s not priced correctly? Do you really think you’d get more offers if it was priced higher?
Yes a very similar house same layout a few doors down sold for 75k over our list price last month. That one has a bonus screened in porch so we mentally discounted 25k from what we would expect
A screened porch costs $40k bare bones.
Wut? Not at all. Cut the price in half for a screened porch with lights, fans, and fully stained.
Anonymous wrote:I think underpricing is just supposed to mean underpricing the market but not pricing below what you would accept.