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SELLING A HOME
Kara's Commitment to Her Sellers
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Why Use a Realtor to Sell your
Home
Avoidable Turnoffs for Potential
Buyers
| FAQ's for Sellers
Avoidable Turnoffs for Potential Buyers
Most of the turnoffs for buyers are home selling issues you can
correct without spending a lot of money. Please read through these
avoidable turnoffs below to see if you need to correct any of these
issues.
Home buyers are all looking for something different, the majority of
them will turn around and walk back out of your door if they notice
one or more of these Top problems.
1. Odors
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House odors are number one on the home
selling uh-oh list. And narrowing it down, odors from cigarette
smoke and pets take top billing, with mildew not far behind.
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If you smoke indoors--the house smells
like cigarettes. If you have pets, the house might smell
bad--even if you don't notice it. Ask someone who doesn't live
there to take a sniff, and don't get angry when they tell you
the truth.
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Eradicate the odors so that you can
present potential buyers with a clean, fresh atmosphere--not a
house that's full of perfumes to cover up the odors.
2. Dogs that Meet You at the Door or
in the Driveway
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Dogs frighten some people and irritate
others. You'll have a much better response from showings if you
control your pets--dogs, cats, whatever.
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You say you plan to put them in a bedroom
or garage and then ask people not to open the door to that area?
Bad idea. Would you buy a house you can't inspect? Of course
not.
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Remove pets during showings if possible.
If you can't, contain them in crates for their own safety and to
show respect for the feelings of potential buyers.
3. Dirty Bathrooms
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Grimy bathrooms are an instant turnoff.
Scrub them, paint them, buy a new shower curtain, rugs and
towels--do what it takes to make them shine. If you're serious
about selling the home, the extra work is a must.
4. Dimly Lit Rooms
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Dark homes are a turnoff to most home
buyers, so try to brighten them up:
1. Replace dim light fixtures
2. Install additional light fixtures
3. Install (quality) sun tunnels or skylights
4. Remove heavy drapes to let the light stream through
windows
5. Repaint some rooms with colors that reflect light
6. Trim tree limbs that shadow the house
7. Dirty and fogged windows are another buyer turnoff.
Clean them inside and out to bring
in more light. If possible,
replace any double-pane windows with broken seals. You can
find them by looking for a
foggy residue that cannot be removed.
5. A House Full of Busy Wallpaper
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Busy wallpaper in every room turns off
most buyers, and even people who love wallpaper rarely like what
you've chosen. It's a personal decorative touch that they want
to select themselves.
It's the masses you must appeal to when you're selling a home,
so take a hard look at your wallpaper and decide if it should be
removed and replaced with paint. Don't paint over it, because it
will be obvious that you did--and buyers know that makes
removing it even more difficult.
6. Damp Basements
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Dampness or damp smells in the basement
throw up a red flag to buyers that the foundation leaks!
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Most problems we see are not caused by
faulty foundations. They occur because rainwater is being
diverted towards the foundation instead of away from it.
1. Clogged underground drains
2. No rain gutters along roofline
3. Downspouts aimed the wrong way
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Go outside the next time it rains and
determine where runoff water is going.
7. Bugs
8. Poor Curb Appeal
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You must grab a buyer's interest from the
curb if you want to sell the home for top dollar. Home buyers
often refuse to go into a house with an unkempt yard, sagging
doors or peeling paint. You say you can't afford to paint? Okay,
but get that yard in tip-top shape and grab a screwdriver to fix
those doors.
9. Gutters with Plants Growing in Them
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I'm serious. Some people never clean their
gutters, and it always makes buyers wonder what else hasn't been
maintained.
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Remember the drainage issue in #6?
Cleaning packed gutters might help.
10. Sellers Who Hang Around for Showings
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Yes, you... leave the house during
showings. Home buyers feel awkward about opening closet doors
and lingering for a really good look at the house if the seller
is home.
If you're selling by owner, give them some space, don't hover.
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