Home Selling in a Market Dominated by Foreclosures and Short Sales
How to Compete Against Bank-Owned and Short Sales Homes
PattiDuty.com
In a market dominated by foreclosures and short sales, pricing is key to home selling.
© Big Stock PhotoPricing a Home With Equity Against Foreclosures and Short Sales
Pricing a home is at best a mix of facts, science and emotions. It's a combination of wearing a seller's hat and stepping into the buyer's shoes. Bear in mind that it doesn't matter much how much you think your home is worth if a buyer disagrees. Try answering these 3 questions:- What would make a buyer buy your home over a foreclosure or a short sale?
- Why would a buyer's lender appraise your home for more than a foreclosure or short sale?
- How much more is your home worth than a distressed sale?
Examine the Foreclosed and Short Sale Comparable Sales
- Look at every similar home that has sold in the neighborhood over the past three months to determine comparable sales. 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 in the Land Park neighborhood of Sacramento, 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.
- Compare homes with similar ages. One neighborhood might consist of homes built in the 1950s, co-mingled with another ring of construction from the 1980s. Values between the two will differ. Compare apples to apples.
Patti Duty, Texas Realtor (940)577-2733