How to price your house to sell quickly
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You've decided it's time to move on. Your house is too small, or the kids have grown and you're going to downsize.
Whatever your reason for selling, the key to selling your house within a reasonable amount of time could very well be the price tag you hang on it -- whether you're in a buyer's market or a seller's market, and whether you use an agent or sell it yourself.
"Setting the correct asking price is the most important step in the process of selling your home," says William Supple, author of "How to Sell Your Own Home" and publisher of "Picket Fences," a monthly magazine for homeowners.
Homes that are overpriced don't sell, says Supple. They scare away potential buyers.
"Home buyers look at houses in ranges," he says. Set a price that's too high and they'll think that your house is too steep for their wallet, and they won't even bother to take a look at it.
"Buyers are immersed in the market. They've seen lots of properties and probably know the reasonable price ranges for properties they are interested in."
So if your selling strategy is to set an unrealistically high price in hopes that someone will bite, rethink your strategy. "Homes that are overpriced will generate no offers, no negotiations, no sale," says Supple.
What they will do, however, is drive potential buyers into the arms of the competition -- other, similar houses that are on the market at more realistic prices, which means that your property could sit unsold for a long time. Homes that are on the market too long become "shopworn," leading agents and buyers to conclude that something must be wrong with the property.
Set your price too low, on the other hand, and you'll leave a pile of money on the table. But price it right and it should sell quickly regardless of market conditions. Who has not seen a TV ad featuring a couple boasting about how they sold their home in three days with the help of some for-sale-by-owner service? That may sound nice, but those are classic cases of homes that were underpriced.
So how can you figure out the right asking price? Fortunately there are resources available to you that will help you determine the fair market value -- the FMV -- for your home, which is what a buyer is willing to pay you -- the seller.
First Published June 11, 2005 12:00 am












