Estate Agents In York

Friday, March 22, 2019

How to add value without dropping your asking price

A lady called me this week from rural Lincolnshire; she’s been trying to sell her lovely modern home for two years now, but with only a handful of viewings during that time, she was understandably beginning to feel very despondent.

Unwilling to drop her asking price, as it is funding her next purchase and lots more besides, she wondered what else she could do to add value to her home.  As we talked, it transpired that she actually owned a paddock next to the house, which she was thinking of keeping hold of, in the hope of a future increase in its worth.  As it was only a couple of acres, its value separated from a house could be very little, and I explained to her that added to the house, the perceived value to a buyer of the whole “package” would potentially be much higher.

Anyone looking for an equestrian property, or seeking a move for a better quality of life, will appreciate an adjoining paddock much more than say, a farmer who would like a couple more acres for his sheep. I suggested she add it into the sale, without increasing the asking price, to make the proposition for a buyer that much more attractive.  After all, a modern, executive style home with new bathrooms and kitchen, and an adjoining paddock, is pretty rare in the area.

Whilst she ponders this issue, it got me to thinking about the whole idea of adding value without dropping your price.

I’ve come up with a list of possibilities for you to consider, if you’re not getting serious interest in your property, and want to attract a buyer in other ways than your asking price:

  • Updating your kitchen

Kitchens are always a bit tricky, as you’d be risking installing a kitchen that your buyer may not like.  However, so long as it’s neutral, ie white or cream, and in keeping with your property age, for under £10,000 the extra value that it would give your home is far in excess of this. Definitely worth considering.

  • Install a new bathroom

Look at the latest trends, and make sure that you have a power shower, fully tiled walls, and towel rails.  Bathrooms really matter, so make sure yours have the wow factor.  If possible, keep the spend per bathroom around £5,000.

  • New carpets

Carpets can make a house look dated more than any other area, and they can also give a buyer a reason to make a low offer.  A good quality, neutral carpet throughout the house can add several times its cost in the perception that the house has been kept up to date.  Re-carpeting an average-sized house will cost around £4,000 but it’s definitely a very worthwhile investment.

  • New flooring in ‘wet’ rooms

By wet rooms, I mean kitchens, utility rooms, cloakrooms and bathrooms; the general rule of thumb with the flooring in these rooms is that it needs to be ‘moppable’ – in other words, a hard floor.  It doesn’t need to be expensive, in fact there are some fabulous vinyls out there that will only cost a couple of hundred pounds per room.  Again, the difference in how a buyer will see your home is high: a bathroom that is carpeted will look dated to a modern buyer, regardless of whether it is or not.

  • Adding a home office

Most buyers want the ability to work from home these days, or at least, to have a space in which they can keep their computer, paperwork and perhaps books.  If you have a room in the house that can be dressed as an office, it would be a worthwhile investment to add some contemporary office furniture, and smart accessories.

If you don’t have any space in the house, can you add one outside, in the form of a garden office?  These cost from around £10,000, including fitting and adding an electricity supply, but having such an important feature will really help your property stand out to a buyer.

Consider it this way: if you were to do all the above, the investment would be in the region of £40,000, but your home would have all that a buyer is looking for: it would be ready to move into, and give a buyer no excuse to think that it needs work.

If your home is on the market for £400,000 or more, this investment would represent only 10% of its value, and given that asking price to sale ratios are only around 90% at the moment, and much less in some areas, surely it’s better to consider improving your home than dropping the price by say, £50,000.  I’ve seen price drops recently of £100,000 and more on properties previously marketed at under £1 million.

Giving the buyer what they need is not always about price; increasing its value may just get your home sold for more.

If you’d like my help to sell your home more effectively, please answer a few short questions here and if I think I can help you, I’ll be in touch.

The post How to add value without dropping your asking price appeared first on Home Truths.



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Homes for sale in castles – in pictures

Treat yourself like a king with these five properties, from Buckinghamshire to Scotland

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Thursday, March 21, 2019

Top tips for selling your home if you have a pet Nottingham Estate Agents

Not every buyer will feel the same as you do about your beloved pet. OnTheMarket.com agent Aberdein Considine offers top tips on how to ensure potential buyers are not put off by the negatives which sometimes come with owning a pet Minimise the negatives – Remember to repair any damage caused by pets, including carpets, […]

The post Top tips for selling your home if you have a pet appeared first on OnTheMarket.com blog.



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Persimmon's new homebuyers' 'retention' at least shows willing

It’s obviously an attempt at a reputation fix, but it’s still a sound principle for Help to Buy

Persimmon described it as a homebuyer’s “retention”, but could have called it the Jeff Fairburn memorial clause. Buyers of Persimmon houses will be able to withhold 1.5% of the purchase price, or £3,600 on average, until the builder has fixed any faults. It is an eye-catching gesture designed to combat Persimmon’s reputation for corporate greed, as embodied by Fairburn’s infamous £75m bonus.

Even government ministers seem to have noticed that bonanza and decided to take a look at Persimmon. They found a company making £1.1bn of annual profit, thanks in large part to the government’s Help to Buy scheme, but generating a disproportionately high volume of complaints from customers.

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The Guardian view on rewilding Scotland: an immodest proposal | Editorial

If undertaken in the right spirit, the restoration of huge tracts of the Highlands could be a hugely beneficial enterprise

What exactly is meant by rewilding depends on who is talking about it. The term was coined by Dave Foreman, a leading figure in the 1980s wave of environmental direct action in the US, to describe the kind of large-scale wilderness restoration he and others advocated. Their idea was that conservationists should move beyond trying to protect particular beauty spots or species, and focus on rebuilding ecosystems that could sustain themselves with minimal human interference.

Since then, rewilding projects in the US, Europe and South America have seen huge areas given over to efforts – funded by wealthy individuals as well as governments – to support flora and fauna to recover from the damage inflicted over centuries. Large mammals have been reintroduced, or supported to extend their territories where they had become extinct: wolves in the north-western US, elk in Denmark, Iberian lynx in Spain. In its most dramatic versions, rewilding emphasises the role of apex predators and megafauna including elephants, and suggests that such creatures could one day return to swaths of the planet from which they long ago disappeared.

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My neighbour cut down my trees and I've killed everything in my yard | Brigid Delaney

The permanence of choosing plants is frightening. Once you choose to plant something, it could be there forever

Last year I returned from a long overseas trip and flopped down on the couch.

I looked around, something was different. It was like … there was more light.

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My neighbour cut down my trees and I've killed everything in my yard | Brigid Delaney

The permanence of choosing plants is frightening. Once you choose to plant something, it could be there forever

Last year I returned from a long overseas trip and flopped down on the couch.

I looked around, something was different. It was like … there was more light.

Continue reading...

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