7 Steps to House-Selling Success (3 of 7)
Step 3: SET THE PRICE
Every reasonable owner wants the best possible price and
terms for his or her home. Several factors, including market conditions and
interest rates, will determine how much you can get for your home. The idea is
to get the maximum price and the best terms during the window of time when your
home is being marketed.
In other words, home selling is part science, part
marketing, part negotiation and part art. Unlike math where 2 + 2 always equals
4, in real estate there is no certain conclusion. All transactions are
different, and because of this, you should do as much as possible to prepare
your home for sale and engage the REALTOR® you feel is best able to sell your
home.
What is your home worth?
All homes have a price, and sometimes more than one. There's the price owners
would like to get, the value buyers would like to offer and a point of
agreement which can result in a sale.
In considering home values, several factors are important:
- The
value of your home relates to local sale prices. The same home, located
elsewhere, would likely have a different value. However, if there are no comparables in a given area,
comparables are obtained from similar homes in adjacent neighborhoods.
- Sale
prices are a product of supply and demand. If you live in a community with
an expanding job base, a growing population and a limited housing supply,
it's likely that prices will rise. Alternatively, it's important to be
realistic. If the local community is losing jobs, the economy is
depressed, and people are moving out, then you'll likely have a buyer's
market.
- Owner
needs can impact sale values. If owner Smith "must" sell
quickly, he will have less leverage in the marketplace. Buyers may think
that Smith is willing to trade a quick closing for a lower price -- and
they may be right. If Smith has no incentive to sell quickly, he may have
more marketplace strength.
- Sale
prices are not based on what owners "need." When an owner says,
"I must sell for $300,000 because I need $100,000 in cash to buy my
next home," buyers will quickly ask if $300,000 is a reasonable price
for the property. If similar homes in the same community are selling for
$250,000, the seller will not be successful.
- Sale
prices are NOT the whole deal. Which would you rather have: A sale price
of $200,000, or a sale price of $205,000 but where you agree to make a
"seller contribution" of $5,000 to offset the buyer's closing
costs, pay a $2,000 allowance for roof repairs, fund two mortgage points,
re-paint the entire house and leave the washer and dryer?
How much is too much?
Because all transactions are unique there is flexibility in the marketplace.
The amount of flexibility depends on local conditions.
For example, suppose you're selling a townhouse. Suppose
also that there have been five recent sales of the model you own and that sale
values have ranged between $200,000 and $210,000. You now have an idea of how
your home might be priced. In a strong market perhaps you can ask for $210,000
or a little more. If the market has slowed, $210,000 may be a reasonable asking
price, but perhaps more than the final sale price.
Here's another scenario. Imagine that you live in a
community of Victorian-style homes, most of which were built in the 1920s. All
the homes are different in terms of size, condition, modernization, style and
features. In such a neighborhood, an average sale price is just a statistic
without much practical meaning. On a single block one home may sell for
$400,000 while another is priced at more than $1 million. The average price may
be outrageously high for one home and staggeringly low for another.
Who can help?
Experienced REALTORS® are active in the local marketplace and can provide
assistance with pricing, marketing, negotiation and closing.
Because experienced REALTORS® have handled many
transactions, they're familiar with the terms and conditions that went into
individual sales, not just published sale prices which may not reflect various
premiums, discounts and adjustments.
Filed under: Real Estate, Puerto Rico, selling, vendiendo, House, extra realty, vendo, warren, sell, condo, apartamento, casa