News and Events
September 15, 2009
8 Tips for Selling Your Home Fast
The Basics: 8 tips for selling your home fast
Putting your house on the market and watching
it sit unsold can be a wrenching experience. Here are some expert suggestions
for ensuring a quick sale.
By Jenny McCune, Bankrate.com
As the home-sales season goes in to high gear, you may
feel extra pressure to sell your house in a hurry. Here are some ways to set a
winning pace in the home-sale race.
· Hire a top-notch
sales agent. "You need a good agent, an agent who knows your
neighborhood" says Julie Greenwood, co-owner of Greenwood King Properties,
a
· Price it right. The
No. 1 thing that will sell a house quickly is price. "That's the name of
the game," says Tom Innes, president of Re/Max Commonwealth in
OK, so just how do you play the home-sale version of
"The Price is Right"? That crackerjack agent you hired should have a
good sense of what price will help sell your home sooner rather than later. As
the owner, your objectivity is diminished, so give your agent free rein, within
reason, to set the price. The broker will look at the average days a home in
your neighborhood is on the market, how your home compares to others in the
area and its condition.
· Create an
adjustable sales plan. Come up with a sales strategy, but make sure it's
flexible. What's your initial asking price? How long will you insist on it
before making a reduction? How much of a cut will you accept? What about after
that? Having a plan in place will help you react quickly, according to
· Clear out the
clutter. "Get the clutter out of it," says Stephen Roulac, author
of the forthcoming "360 Housing Mistakes and How to Avoid Them." It
will make your home more inviting to buyers. "After you thought you got
out the clutter, take out more. Get it spare, open and fresh."
· Offer incentives. Incentives
can help shorten the sales cycle, but be careful. Agents are divided on how
much they help.
"I think it can be a fine line between wanting to
sell a house quickly and having it look like it's a fire sale,"
Roulac, however, believes that adding premiums can help
speed a house sale. A popular incentive offered purchasers is closing-cost
help. You also can encourage your sales agent: Offer a higher commission for a
speedy sale or give your broker show tickets, a meal at a fine restaurant or
some other perk if the property moves quickly.
· Don't get
distracted. What about those "cash for homes" ads you see on
matchbook covers, billboards and late-night TV? Agents say houses sold this way
are heavily discounted. You will sell your property quickly, but it will go
cheap, probably at a price that really won't make you happy. "If it's too
good of an offer to be true, it is too good of an offer," says Re/Max's
Innes.
· Ask for company
help. If you're relocating because of a job change or company transfer, you
may be eligible for home-sale help from your employer or a relocation company
representing your employer. "Generally speaking, these buyouts are
fair," says Todd Thornton, a real estate instructor, consultant and author
of "Home Buying Without the BS."
"An appraiser would appraise the property, and the
buyout would be for the suggested fair market value less a sales fee," he
explains. "The company would then put the home on the market with a local
real estate professional."
While that's a great deal for the home sellers,
· Rent it. If
time runs out and you've got to get out of Dodge without selling your home,
consider renting it. Just be sure to strike a deal with the renters so your
home will be available for showing. For example, if a home such as yours
normally rents for $1,000 a month, offer a discount (say $750) in exchange for
the renters making the house accessible for showings to potential buyers.
The downside of renting a house that you're trying to
sell is that its condition probably won't be as pristine as you or buyers would
like. One way around this problem, says Innes, is to rent with an option to
buy. "Let people move in six months and pay rent and then close," he says.