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Price to Sell
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DETERMINE THE PRICE OF YOUR HOME
A few wrong reasons
for over pricing are:
- To gain excessive
negotiating room.
- Attempting to
regain the cost of improvements.
- Seller’s monetary
needs.
- Misreading the
market.
- There are more.
You need to
recognize the symptoms of over pricing which
are:
- Lack of traffic
going through your home.
- Other homes
listed in the area are selling while yours
is not.
- Buyers are asking
why your house has been on the market for
so long.
- You as the seller
are getting anxious and losing patience.
- As the clock runs
and you are ready to sell for less than it
is worth.
These are the items
to examine so that the sale completes during
the listing period:
- Timing
- Pricing
- Exposure
- Condition
- Accessibility
- Market or
external conditions
Price
Your House Right
The single most
important factor to consider when selling a
house is the home price tag: how much your
house is worth. You don't want to overprice
the house because you will lose the
freshness of the home's appeal after the
first two to three weeks of showings. After
21 days, demand and interest wane. On the
other hand, don't worry about pricing it too
low because homes priced below market value
often will receive multiple offers, which
will then drive up the price to market.
Pricing is all about supply and demand. It's
part art and part science, and no two agents
price property the same way.
Pull Comparable Listings and Sales
- Look at every
similar home that was or is listed in the
same neighborhood over the past six
months.
- The list should
contain homes within a 1/4 mile to a 1/2
mile and no further, unless there are only
a handful of comps in the general vicinity
or the property is rural.
- Pay attention to
neighborhood dividing lines and physical
barriers such as major streets, freeways
or railroads, and do not compare inventory
from the "other side of the tracks." Where
I live, for example, identical homes
across the street from each other can vary
by $100,000.
- Perceptions and
desirability have value.
- Compare similar
square footage, within 10% up or down from
the subject property, if possible.
- Similar ages. One
neighborhood might consist of homes built
in the 1950s next door to another ring of
construction from the 1980s. Values
between the two will differ. Compare
apples to apples.
Sold Comps
- Pull history for
expired and withdrawn listings to
determine whether any were taken off the
market and relisted. If so, add those days
on market to these listing time periods to
arrive at an actual number of days on
market.
- Compare original
list price to final sales price to
determine price reductions.
- Compare final
sales price to actual sold price to
determine ratios.
- Adjust pricing
for lot size variances, configuration and
amenities / upgrades.
Withdrawn & Expired Listings
- Look for patterns
as to why these homes did not sell and the
common factors they share.
- Which brokerage
had the listing: a company that ordinarily
sells everything it lists or was it a
discount brokerage that might not have
spent money on advertising?
- Think about the
steps you can take to prevent your home
from becoming an expired listing.
Pending Sales
- Since these are
pending sales, the sales prices are
unknown until the transactions close, but
that doesn't stop anybody from calling the
listing agents and asking them to tell
you. Some will. Some won't.
- Make note of the
days on market, which may have a direct
bearing on how long it will take before
you see an offer.
- Examine the
history of these listings to determine
price reductions.
Active Listings
- These matter only
as they compare to your listing, but bear
in mind that sellers can ask whatever they
want.
- To see what
buyers will see, tour these homes. Make
note of what you like and dislike, the
general feeling you get upon entering
these homes. If possible, recreate those
feelings of reception in your own home.
- These homes are
your competition. Ask yourself why a buyer
would prefer your home over any of these
and adjust your price accordingly.
Square Foot Cost Comparisons
- Remember that
after you receive an offer, the buyer's
lender will order an appraisal, so you
will want to compare homes of similar
square footage.
- Appraisers don't
like to deviate more 25% and prefer to
stay within 10% of net square footage
computations. If your home is 2000 sq.
ft., comparable homes are those sized 1800
to 2200 sq. ft.
- Average square
foot cost does not mean you can multiple
your square footage by that number unless
your home is average sized. The price per
square foot rises as the size decreases
and it decreases as the size increases,
meaning larger homes have a smaller square
foot cost and smaller homes have a larger
square foot cost.
Market Dependent Pricing
- Same house, three
different prices. After you have collected
all your data, the next step is to analyze
the data based on market conditions. For
comparison purposes, let's say the last
three comparable sales in your
neighborhood were $150,000. In a buyer's
market, your sales price might allow some
wiggle room for negotiation but be strong
enough (near the last comparable sale) to
entice a buyer to tour your home. To sell
in this market, you might need to price
your home at $149,900, settling for
$145,000.
- In a seller's
market, you might want to add 10% more to
the last comparable sale. When there is
little inventory and many buyers, you can
ask more than the last comparable sale and
likely get it. So that $150,000 home might
sell at $165,000 or more.
- In a balanced or
neutral market, you may want to initially
set your price at the last comparable sale
and then adjust for the market trend. For
example, if the last sale closed three
months ago, but the median price has edged
upwards of 1% per month, pricing at
$154,500 would make sense.
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