Anonymous wrote:When I think of home staging I always remember the old episodes on HGTV of flip or flop where after Christine and Tarek finish flipping a house they always staged it prior to holding an open house.
The show would say that they spent thousands on staging depending on area as well as how large a house was.
At the end though the staging made the houses look so beautiful, stunning even.
Like the houses you see in Architectural Digest.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It helps to sell your home quicker imo.
Because having it furnished by a professional stager (or real estate agent) defines all the important spaces in the home which is the first thing buyers consider when looking at a prospective property.
What does "defines all the important spaces in the home" even mean? For 99% of homes, it's already obvious where "important spaces" like the kitchen, living room, bedrooms, and basement are, what their function is, and what these "important spaces" are contributing to family life. If the problem is that a living room is so messy that it distracts from the fact that it's a living room, well then, the realtor just needs to tell the seller to declutter and hire one of those portable pink storage units. If "define important spaces" is some sort of stager-speak for "pay for something that has a vague purpose," that's not really an overall vibe or design goal I'd trust to sell my home anyway.
I watch a lot of real estate programs on HGTV and when someone will refer to a staged home and what benefit the staging achieves, this is usually how the staging reasoning is spoken.
Like that old show, Flip Or Flop…..Tarek and Christina always staged their homes for sale (and according to their show paid between $1,500-$5,000 for it!) and commented that they noticed it defined the space(s) in the home.
Was it ever clear what “define the spaces” means?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here… we have an offer. Working on contingencies…very grateful because of the niche market our home caters to.
We accepted an offer lower than list price, so glad we saved $ on staging.
Realtor’s feedback was that everyone who saw it loved the home and thought it looked staged. Very clean.
Not that anyone else has asked, but I would get the free staging consult if your realtor offers one. Paint your house neutral colors. If you can spend a few hundred bucks, white fluffy bedding, white fluffy towels (make baths spa-like), a few fake plants if you need. Declutter and clean - nothing on counter tops except towels (bath) and fruit bowl or such in kitchen.
This is all great advice. But it's also something all realtors used to do for free just 20 years ago. We were told to buy new towels and bathmats, remove family photos, declutter, paint, maybe put really ugly furniture in your friend's basement, and replace a few light fixtures. It's not exactly rocket science, it's just common sense, and nobody gave it a special name like "staging."
I'm not criticizing you, pp, for passing on this advice. In fact, sellers who read your post will now know what they need to do without paying a realtor extra.
I'm asking, why is this basic info now considered a premium service that's available for extra $$$? Especially in this world where I can find open houses on my own just by looking at redfin or realtor.com.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:OP here… we have an offer. Working on contingencies…very grateful because of the niche market our home caters to.
We accepted an offer lower than list price, so glad we saved $ on staging.
Realtor’s feedback was that everyone who saw it loved the home and thought it looked staged. Very clean.
Not that anyone else has asked, but I would get the free staging consult if your realtor offers one. Paint your house neutral colors. If you can spend a few hundred bucks, white fluffy bedding, white fluffy towels (make baths spa-like), a few fake plants if you need. Declutter and clean - nothing on counter tops except towels (bath) and fruit bowl or such in kitchen.
Anonymous wrote:OP here… we have an offer. Working on contingencies…very grateful because of the niche market our home caters to.