Home Value Experts Warn: Think Before You Improve!
Misunderstanding your home's value could lead you to make wrong or costly
decisions.
Most Americans watching mortgage rates rise are deciding that now is the time to
buy or sell before it's too late. Whether you
want to sell, or just improve your home's
value before you tap into your equity, here are five things experts suggest you consider
before calling your bank or putting the "for sale" sign on your lawn.
Make Only Renovations That Count.
Experts agree that the right renovations, especially bathrooms and kitchens, affect the
marketability of your home. Bathrooms have become a popular remodeling choice, and for good
reason-- they have the highest rate of return of any home addition or home remodel. Real
estate agents agree that a gleaming kitchen with state-of-the-art appliances, cork or
hardwood flooring, stone countertop and lots of cupboard space can sell a house the instant
a prospective buyer sees it. Conversely, a cramped, ill-lit kitchen with outdated linoleum
and harvest gold appliances might actually scare buyers away.
Improve What You Can't Renovate.
If you can't afford to renovate, update and refresh key rooms instead. Replacing an old
countertop, repainting cupboards and walls, and installing new door pulls and lighting make
big improvements to your kitchen for a very modest price. Similar touches increase the appeal
of older bathrooms, too. Fresh paint throughout your home is another low-cost, high-return
project -- it makes everything look cleaner and brighter, and buyers love a house they won't
have to redecorate immediately.
Maintain Where You Can.
Depending on the age of your house, you can expect to spend between one and three percent of
its value every year on maintenance and repair. Your maintenance budget should increase as
your house ages, so remember to include funds to replace major systems as required.
Foundations and roofs are things that are difficult to inspect, but in the long run minor
repairs can save you about ten times the cost of work necessary to replace or rebuild.
Don't Overimprove.
Before you commit to any big project, ask, "Is this three-car garage or pool out of character
for my neighborhood?" If the answer is yes--you may be consigning your house to an oddity
status. If your house is improved beyond the scope of all the neighborhood homes that
surrounds it, it is likely that the value of your home won't be realized when it comes time
to sell.
Do Your Home Value Homework.
Many sites promising to give you the value of your home don't deliver, but at
Domania you can use our
Home Value tools to get an instant valuation from a
real estate professional that includes a value range and neighborhood statistics. If you want
to "value it yourself" at Domania, you can search through their database of 28 million
historical home price records. Searching by price, by location or by address you'll develop a
better understanding of neighborhood trends--and if you look hard enough--what your neighbor
paid for their house.