Tip#3 Do your homework before setting a price Settling opon an offering price shouldn't be taken lightly.
Once you've set you're price, you've told the absolute maximum they have to pay for your home. The trick for the seller is to get a selling price as close to the offering price as possible. If you start out pricing too high, you might not be taken seriously by the prospective buyers and their agents. A price too low can result in selling for much less than you had hoped for.
Setting your home's sale price can be a fairly easy process. If you live in a subdivision comprised of homes with similiar or identical floor plans, built in the same time period, then all you have to do is look at recent sales in the neighborhood to give you a ballpark figure.
But many people live in older neighborhoods that have changed quite a bit over the years. Every home in the neighborhood may be different in minor or substantial ways-the house next door may have added another bedroom, for example, or the one across the street might have been built recently to fill a vacant lot. As a neighborhood evolves over the years, you may find that there aren't any homes that are truly comparable to your own.
If you decide to sell your home on your own, the most common way to set a value is to look at homes that have sold in your neighborhood within the past 12 months, as well as those now on the market. That is certainly how prosepctive buyers will assess the worth of your home.
You can usually learn what homes have sold for in your neighborhood by making a quick trip to City Hall; home sale information is in the public records in most communities (but not all).
If this sounds like alot of work, you may decide to hire a Realtor. Your Realtor will do all of the market research and provide you with comps showing where your home should be priced to best meet your goals-a fast sell, maximum profit, etc.
Labels: comps, neighborhood, price, selling
# posted by
Bryan Vogt @ 9:36 AM