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#1
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I am about accept a transfer at work and we're going to have to sell
our home. No biggie, I was ready to move anyway. We live in an area with a fairly hot market, 2 homes near me moved in 3 days. My house is in ok condition, it's not a showpiece. Old, solid, etc. Anyway, here are my questions. No flames, this is more of an informal survey. 1) The attic was painted purple by the previous owners. I've cleaned most of it out (it's about 800sq ft). Should I paint it - or at least prime it - a less obnoxious color? I could finish it in 4 or 5 hours. When we first looked at the house I thought "jeez, that is ugly". 2) Kitchen. It's old, the cabinets are sorta cheap and while they look ok they aren't great. The SO wants to replace them, I'm really not up for a kitchen redo if I have to be out of here in 3 months. I was thinking of just cleaning them as best as I can, repainting the kitchen, etc. The kitchen is semi bright, it's well light. 3) Wallpaper. Gawd I hate this mess (esp when it's old as dirt). I'm now redoing the bathrooms. One of the bathrooms has a wall of wallpaper that isn't responding to any of the removers. Would it be tacky to just paint over it? It's smooth and there are no seams that are peeling, it's just - ugly. That's it, thanks. |
#2
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The problem I see with a lot of the stuff you are doing is that if the
prospective buyer doesn't like yout tastes, they aren't going to pay extra for new stuff that they don't like. However, I'd probably prime the attic and clean the kitchen cabinets real good. #2 is hard to say without a pic. And painting over wallpaper is a poor practice, but common. Actualy wallpaper in a bathroom period is a poor practive. It will peel eventually. |
#3
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I was going to prime the attic with white primer. To me it isn't a
"let's wow 'em" but to remove the "damn, that is one ugly color" thought. ![]() offwhites and the like. I looked at a house last week that had walls that had been painted dark colors then "sponged" with lighter colors. Every room - and they had just done it. I just read about using vinegar and hot water to remove wallpaper, I'll give that a go. I hate wallpaper anyway, whoever put it in these bathrooms should be smacked. Neighbors had theirs done, even with a vent fan it peeled in several years (I questioned the quality of the install, but paint at least holds up a while). |
#4
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On 26 Feb 2006 09:53:06 -0800, "cas" wrote:
1) The attic was painted purple by the previous owners. I've cleaned most of it out (it's about 800sq ft). Should I paint it - or at least prime it - a less obnoxious color? I could finish it in 4 or 5 hours. When we first looked at the house I thought "jeez, that is ugly". If I were you, I'd paint it a lighter color, for sure. If nothing else, it'll make the space look larger. 2) Kitchen. It's old, the cabinets are sorta cheap and while they look ok they aren't great. The SO wants to replace them, I'm really not up for a kitchen redo if I have to be out of here in 3 months. I was thinking of just cleaning them as best as I can, repainting the kitchen, etc. The kitchen is semi bright, it's well light. I agree, just clean them really well. Maybe change out the handles and drawer pulls if new ones would spiff up the cabinets. Just don't overprice the house; make sure the house is value priced so it'll sell. A friend with a similar kind of kitchen has now had to drop her price $50k after 62 people went through the house over the last 6 months and not one offer. 3) Wallpaper. Gawd I hate this mess (esp when it's old as dirt). I'm now redoing the bathrooms. One of the bathrooms has a wall of wallpaper that isn't responding to any of the removers. Would it be tacky to just paint over it? It's smooth and there are no seams that are peeling, it's just - ugly. *DO NOT* paint over the wallpaper. If you do, you will be consigned to Dante's fifth circle of hell or even circle 9.3. Actually, have you really exhausted all removal possibilities? Have you scored the paper itself and rented a steamer? That *ALWAYS* works if the water/vinegar (or DIF) soak isn't speedy enough for you. You may think that just painting over the paper will be the perfect solution, but paint is wet and often will lift up loose areas of the paper underneath, creating a no-longer smooth surface, so best to just remove the wallpaper. |
#5
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It has been my experience that you will rarely get your money back. A house
will sell for the going rate in your neighborhood. Imagine if you spent time and money fixing it up and the new owners just scraped everything you did. "cas" wrote in message oups.com... I am about accept a transfer at work and we're going to have to sell our home. No biggie, I was ready to move anyway. We live in an area with a fairly hot market, 2 homes near me moved in 3 days. My house is in ok condition, it's not a showpiece. Old, solid, etc. Anyway, here are my questions. No flames, this is more of an informal survey. 1) The attic was painted purple by the previous owners. I've cleaned most of it out (it's about 800sq ft). Should I paint it - or at least prime it - a less obnoxious color? I could finish it in 4 or 5 hours. When we first looked at the house I thought "jeez, that is ugly". 2) Kitchen. It's old, the cabinets are sorta cheap and while they look ok they aren't great. The SO wants to replace them, I'm really not up for a kitchen redo if I have to be out of here in 3 months. I was thinking of just cleaning them as best as I can, repainting the kitchen, etc. The kitchen is semi bright, it's well light. 3) Wallpaper. Gawd I hate this mess (esp when it's old as dirt). I'm now redoing the bathrooms. One of the bathrooms has a wall of wallpaper that isn't responding to any of the removers. Would it be tacky to just paint over it? It's smooth and there are no seams that are peeling, it's just - ugly. That's it, thanks. |
#6
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Well having sold a home just over a year ago....
People TODAY want move in condition! About 90% want NO WORK AT ALL! Now if you want a fast sale then give them exactly that, a nice pristine turn key home. If on the other hand your willing to wait endlessely for the rare buyer who wants some work, then leave things as is, be prepared for a BIG price hit, and a longer wait for the right buyer ![]() Most max out the monthly mortage wanting more home and wouldnt have money after the sale for remodeling, nor a desire to do it. ![]() FIRST GET A HOME INSPECTION! Sure it will cost you $250 but it will alert you to things buyers will be looking at ![]() cut for repairs, lots of stuff can be fixed DIY, but once the buyers home inspector checks things out they will demand receipts from registered electricians, plumbers, etc. so that flakey light switch or leaking drain can cost you a LOT ![]() repaint the entire home in a nice neutral color like white or off white, fix obvious things that are broke, and declutter the house, make it look spacious even if you have to rent a storage bin somewhere during the sale. I heartily recommend you watch some shows like BUY ME, and HOUSE HUNTERS, and designed to sell! Just a few episodes will give you a idea of what your up against ![]() I think your wife is right, redo the kitchen, thats the first thing buyers look at, bad kitchen not interested ![]() Oh yeah start preparing your disclosure list ![]() been a issue and not exactly perfect, if you leave anything out the buyer can come back and sue you for the cost of repairs. That happened to a old neighbor here. She sold her home and didnt disclose tree roots she knew were in sewer. new owner moved in and had clog ![]() snaked the sewer for the old owner. old owner paid 8 grand for all new sewer line including under basement floor all because she didnt disclose a year earlier it had been snaked. I heard the original owner spent 2 grand on lawers fees too but dont know for certain. Things have changed GREATLY in real estate in the last 10 years, people USED to look at homes and see possibilties ![]() Now they want a PERFECT HOME ![]() If your lucky the buyer will accept your home inspection and not pay for a second one, but even if they do you will know what to expect... |
#7
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Well having sold a home just over a year ago....
People TODAY want move in condition! About 90% want NO WORK AT ALL! Now if you want a fast sale then give them exactly that, a nice pristine turn key home. If on the other hand your willing to wait endlessely for the rare buyer who wants some work, then leave things as is, be prepared for a BIG price hit, and a longer wait for the right buyer ![]() Most max out the monthly mortage wanting more home and wouldnt have money after the sale for remodeling, nor a desire to do it. ![]() FIRST GET A HOME INSPECTION! Sure it will cost you $250 but it will alert you to things buyers will be looking at ![]() cut for repairs, lots of stuff can be fixed DIY, but once the buyers home inspector checks things out they will demand receipts from registered electricians, plumbers, etc. so that flakey light switch or leaking drain can cost you a LOT ![]() repaint the entire home in a nice neutral color like white or off white, fix obvious things that are broke, and declutter the house, make it look spacious even if you have to rent a storage bin somewhere during the sale. I heartily recommend you watch some shows like BUY ME, and HOUSE HUNTERS, and designed to sell! Just a few episodes will give you a idea of what your up against ![]() I think your wife is right, redo the kitchen, thats the first thing buyers look at, bad kitchen not interested ![]() Oh yeah start preparing your disclosure list ![]() been a issue and not exactly perfect, if you leave anything out the buyer can come back and sue you for the cost of repairs. That happened to a old neighbor here. She sold her home and didnt disclose tree roots she knew were in sewer. new owner moved in and had clog ![]() snaked the sewer for the old owner. old owner paid 8 grand for all new sewer line including under basement floor all because she didnt disclose a year earlier it had been snaked. I heard the original owner spent 2 grand on lawers fees too but dont know for certain. Things have changed GREATLY in real estate in the last 10 years, people USED to look at homes and see possibilties ![]() Now they want a PERFECT HOME ![]() If your lucky the buyer will accept your home inspection and not pay for a second one, but even if they do you will know what to expect... |
#8
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![]() "Ed" wrote in message ... It has been my experience that you will rarely get your money back. A house will sell for the going rate in your neighborhood. Imagine if you spent time and money fixing it up and the new owners just scraped everything you did. Ever watch the TV show "Sell This House"? Amazing how much return there is on a couple of hundred properly spent dollars. Who cares if the new owners re-paint the day they move in, as long as they liked the house and paid top dollar for it. I'd pain the attic, spruce up the kitchen. I'd not replace cabinets, but I'd paint, maybe add a shelf or planter if needed, maybe a new light fixture or under cabinet light on the counter if you have none. Light, bright, colors everywhere in the house. Remove any clutter you may have lurking in the garage or basement, even some furniture if crowded, to give the illusion of being a large house. As for the going rate for the neighborhood, you want to be on top of it or even exceed it if possible. |
#9
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Lowes sells very nice low cost kitchen cabinets, that along with new
countertops and sink can pay back more than they cost. a couple more great tv shows Flip THIS house Flip THAT house the names similiar and both explain what sells and why flip this house often says new kitchen 6 grand payback 13 grand in added home value |
#10
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![]() "Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message . com... "Ed" wrote in message ... It has been my experience that you will rarely get your money back. A house will sell for the going rate in your neighborhood. Imagine if you spent time and money fixing it up and the new owners just scraped everything you did. Ever watch the TV show "Sell This House"? Amazing how much return there is on a couple of hundred properly spent dollars. True, but you aren't going to re-d9o a kitchen, cabinets and all, for a couple of hundred. |
#11
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I agree with ED. My neighbors keep their houses pretty nice and anytime
anyone moves just before the new owner comes in you find all the carpet and flooring out on the curb with perfectly good appliances and sometimes even cabinets. It seems like with cheap mortgage rates people have no problem adding another 10 - 50 thousand on to get exactly what they want. All the ROI for remodels is hype in my opinion propagated by those that can profit from such. I have a perfectly fine kitchen with oak cabinets but everything is not the latest or greatest. If I spent 40 thousand on a kitchen remodel it "might" add 10 thousand to the value of my house. Where you can get great ROI is when you can do the labor mostly yourself for areas of the house that really need it such as an outdated master bath. One of our neighbors bought every conceivable upgrade/option to their house when the neighborhood just started believing the salesperson that they would recover all the costs at resale and to their living experience. They took a huge beating when they sold a few years later getting just a little more than the same model without all the upgrades. Of course when you sell a house it should be neat, clean, and uncluttered and most everything in good working order. I am not saying that you should not put any money into getting a house ready for sale. Light fixtures are one way to really spruce things up for not much. Fresh paint is well worth while if you can do it yourself if any rooms need it as are some plants/flowers. If you have too much stuff [like me] consider renting some storage space to get the junk out before putting it on the market. Good luck. --- Steve "Ed" wrote in message ... It has been my experience that you will rarely get your money back. A house will sell for the going rate in your neighborhood. Imagine if you spent time and money fixing it up and the new owners just scraped everything you did. "cas" wrote in message oups.com... I am about accept a transfer at work and we're going to have to sell our home. No biggie, I was ready to move anyway. We live in an area with a fairly hot market, 2 homes near me moved in 3 days. My house is in ok condition, it's not a showpiece. Old, solid, etc. Anyway, here are my questions. No flames, this is more of an informal survey. 1) The attic was painted purple by the previous owners. I've cleaned most of it out (it's about 800sq ft). Should I paint it - or at least prime it - a less obnoxious color? I could finish it in 4 or 5 hours. When we first looked at the house I thought "jeez, that is ugly". 2) Kitchen. It's old, the cabinets are sorta cheap and while they look ok they aren't great. The SO wants to replace them, I'm really not up for a kitchen redo if I have to be out of here in 3 months. I was thinking of just cleaning them as best as I can, repainting the kitchen, etc. The kitchen is semi bright, it's well light. 3) Wallpaper. Gawd I hate this mess (esp when it's old as dirt). I'm now redoing the bathrooms. One of the bathrooms has a wall of wallpaper that isn't responding to any of the removers. Would it be tacky to just paint over it? It's smooth and there are no seams that are peeling, it's just - ugly. That's it, thanks. |
#13
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![]() "Steven L Umbach" wrote in message All the ROI for remodels is hype in my opinion propagated by those that can profit from such. I have a perfectly fine kitchen with oak cabinets but everything is not the latest or greatest. If I spent 40 thousand on a kitchen remodel it "might" add 10 thousand to the value of my house. Sure, an expensive kitchen is a poor upgrade, but a few hundred bucks to freshen a house is a sure winner. That has been proven many times. |
#14
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On 26 Feb 2006 10:02:24 -0800, wrote:
The problem I see with a lot of the stuff you are doing is that if the prospective buyer doesn't like yout tastes, they aren't going to pay extra for new stuff that they don't like. However, I'd probably prime the attic and clean the kitchen cabinets real good. #2 is hard to say without a pic. And painting over wallpaper is a poor practice, but common. Actualy wallpaper in a bathroom period is a poor practive. It will peel eventually. The house I bought had wallpaper in the bathroom. Most of it peeled off and there was more wallpaper under that. There was also the stinky carpet... -- Mark Lloyd http://notstupid.laughingsquid.com "Democracy is two wolves and a lamb voting on what to have for lunch. Liberty is a well armed lamb contesting the vote." - Benjamin Franklin |
#16
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On 26 Feb 2006 18:17:07 -0800, "
wrote: For whatever its worth I watched flip this house tonight, as part of the flip renovations they installed a entire new kitchen cost 10 grand. said it would return 20 grand in added value. flip this house always installs new kitchens because they say they get back more than they spend. Master baths are next.... IMHO. Oren "My doctor says I have a malformed public-duty gland and a natural deficiency in moral fiber, and that I am therefore excused from saving Universes." |
#17
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If it's on television, it must be true. And universally applicable.
Ken Theres also flip that house, househunters and a bunch of other shows, ALL indicate you get back more than you spend for a kitchen makeover. so do realtors and friends that have sold homes. Heck I sold one and redid the kitchen with lowes cabinets and new appliances. Nice but not expensive ![]() I had a couple realtors look at the home before i remodeled it. then after I was done.Did most of the work myself and some friends. The realtors had ZIP profit potential for whatever advice they offered. What I mean is their buddies werent getting the remodeling job and they knew that from the get go! It was a LOT of work, spent $12,000 grossed about $30,000 more total. So my 12 grand netted me a 18 grand profit. |
#18
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#19
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We live in an area with a fairly hot market, 2 homes near me moved in 3
days. IMHO, having just bought a house in a hot market a couple years ago (DC), this could work for or against you depending on the part of the market you're in. In DC, as another poster pointed out, people who can pay, say, above the median home price in the market are usually looking for a turn-key house -- everything upgraded and ready to go. OTOH, a market like that has a lot of bottom feeders, like myself, who are desperate to get a house that fits their budget. I was specifically looking for a house with good bones, but old everything, because I wanted my money to go toward paying for the neighborhood. The renovations will come later. The house I bought has the original 1958 everything. So, I guess I would recommend, as others have, cleaning and painting, stripping the wallpaper, and leaving the structure of the kitchen as is. If you're going to redo the kitchen, you'll have to redo it so it suits the standards of the neighborhood, not do it on the cheap, or the buyer won't value it much. Completely redoing a kitchen for $10K, as seen on TV, in a hot market sounds like a pipe dream. You'd be lucky to buy the *cabinets alone* that an upmarket buyer would expect for that amount. One other random thought: when shopping for a house, if I saw evidence the homeowner had tried to do repairs or renovations that were beyond his abilities, I generally turned around and walked out. You never know what's hidden behind the walls that the owner tried to do himself and screwed up. If you're going to do anything really serious, hire a professional. |
#20
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Everyone is looking for low prices, actually...
The point I was hoping to make is that hot markets are not just populated with upscale buyers who will turn their noses up at an old kitchen. There are plenty of bottom-feeders who will gladly buy a house without a new kitchen. The question is not what price you want to sell your house for. The question is what will be the *net* gain from upgrading the house before selling. My amateur assessment is the OP should either upgrade as suits a turn-key buyer or leave it alone. |
#21
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In article .com, ccsikyr
says... Everyone is looking for low prices, actually... The point I was hoping to make is that hot markets are not just populated with upscale buyers who will turn their noses up at an old kitchen. There are plenty of bottom-feeders who will gladly buy a house without a new kitchen. There are also people who plan to remodel to get exactly what they want, and don't want to pay for someone else's upgrade first. The question is not what price you want to sell your house for. The question is what will be the *net* gain from upgrading the house before selling. My amateur assessment is the OP should either upgrade as suits a turn-key buyer or leave it alone. Yep. Depends on the market and neighborhood. But there is probably no reason to do a real fancy upgrade beyond what makes a fairly pretty and servicable kitchen. Leave alone, or do a few refurbishments. No remod. Banty |
#22
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cas wrote:
I am about accept a transfer at work and we're going to have to sell our home. No biggie, I was ready to move anyway. We live in an area with a fairly hot market, 2 homes near me moved in 3 days. My house is in ok condition, it's not a showpiece. Old, solid, etc. Anyway, here are my questions. No flames, this is more of an informal survey. 1) The attic was painted purple by the previous owners. I've cleaned most of it out (it's about 800sq ft). Should I paint it - or at least prime it - a less obnoxious color? I could finish it in 4 or 5 hours. When we first looked at the house I thought "jeez, that is ugly". I like purple, but would change that to reduce the "ugh" factor. 2) Kitchen. It's old, the cabinets are sorta cheap and while they look ok they aren't great. The SO wants to replace them, I'm really not up I would never do that to sell a house, as it is an expense for esthetics not likely to be recovered on selling. for a kitchen redo if I have to be out of here in 3 months. I was thinking of just cleaning them as best as I can, repainting the kitchen, etc. The kitchen is semi bright, it's well light. Clean. Reduce clutter. Paint if you love painting or the old paint is damaged. 3) Wallpaper. Gawd I hate this mess (esp when it's old as dirt). I'm now redoing the bathrooms. One of the bathrooms has a wall of wallpaper that isn't responding to any of the removers. Would it be tacky to just Vinyl? What have you used? If the surface won't peel off, use coarse sandpaper to score it horizontally. Spray with warm water, let it soak in, spray again, soak again, and start peeling/scraping GENTLY. Wallpaper paste will not soften unless moisture reaches it - that is the secret. paint over it? It's smooth and there are no seams that are peeling, it's just - ugly. Unless it is horrible, leave it alone. The new wallpaper may rate as "just as ugly". That's it, thanks. I would make sure that systems are secure, like no leaks or holes. When I last sold a house, it needed paint in the kitchen - faded and worn paint around wall switches, a small stain here and there. Needed reroof. Home was 10 years old, solid and well built. Those qualities are essential and usually very obvious. Realtor said not to worry about cleaning carpet or painting or reroof, and we got a good price. Some folks will be shopping for a house which requires nothing immediate, and some will be shopping for a home that is the right size, style, location and amenities even if it needs new wallpaper. |
#23
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![]() Banty wrote: There are also people who plan to remodel to get exactly what they want, and don't want to pay for someone else's upgrade first. Yep. I'm one of those. With my last house, the kitchen had been remodeled within the last five years, but I hated everything about it... pinky-tan oak cabinets, white appliances, a strange little range and hood, ornate brass lighting fixtures... I spent two years in that house thinking, "I really hate this kitchen, but it would be such a waste to remodel when it's all practically brand new". That kitchen is one of the reasons I was so happy when we got the opportunity to move ![]() When DH and I were shopping for our new house, we deliberately looked for places with older kitchens that we could upgrade/update without feeling completely wasteful. We actually wound up finding a home that had been recently updated by people with our same taste, so we got really lucky there. Both of our runners-up had old kitchens with good layouts that just needed updating (new countertops and appliances, mostly). I agree with most of the responses here, by the way... double prime the attic, clean clean clean, leave the kitchen cabinets alone except for cleaning and maybe a change of hardware, and either remove the wallpaper or leave it alone. If you really have the time to devote to it, sanding and painting the kitchen cabinets might help, but that's a LOT of work and you run the risk of people like my husband coming through and saying "ugh, I hate painted cabinets". You can't please everybody, but you only really need to please one ![]() -- Jennifer |
#24
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I've never seen these disclosures everyone talks about here. In my
area, every house sells with a disclaimer. The last place I sold had zero problems and I knew it's history from day one. The realtor still insisted that I list the place with a disclaimer instead of disclosure because "It's just how they do it". Then there's "As-Is", which basically means the well or septic is bad or it's a termite farm. -rev |
#25
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And do those sources of information have any interests involved in the
question? Who advertises on those shows? And if it was generally believed that renovation didn't pay off, how many people would watch them? Do the realtors who advise owners to renovate before selling get commissions based only on the pre-renovation value of the house? Amazing the divergence of opinions on thisa subject. my situation invested 12 grand made a extra 18 grand and the house sold faster. I suggest anyone considering selling check their local library. its free and see what the sell house books say. I have a question for the dis believers.... Why is house flipping became so popular today if upgrading doesnt result in more profit ![]() Go right ahead sell your house cheap if you want, a hard worker will buy it, fix it up and make a nice profit.... by selling it to someone else for a lot more |
#26
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On 27 Feb 2006 08:13:50 -0800, "The Reverend Natural Light"
wrote: I've never seen these disclosures everyone talks about here. In my area, every house sells with a disclaimer. The last place I sold had zero problems and I knew it's history from day one. The realtor still insisted that I list the place with a disclaimer instead of disclosure because "It's just how they do it". Here we use "disclosures", the seller must disclose any previously known problems, problems fixed, etc. It's legal to bury a body on my property in Las Vegas, but I MUST disclose this information to the buyer. They can back out of the deal if they don't like the information disclosed. I don't know about disclaimers, but I imagine they both provide similar information. I won't mention every nail hole I patch, but I will say "yes the AC compressor was replaced under warranty"... Then there's "As-Is", which basically means the well or septic is bad or it's a termite farm. Zackly...... I have a house listed with an above ground spa and it is clearly stated "as-is" for the spa. I didn't want to move it. Oren "My doctor says I have a malformed public-duty gland and a natural deficiency in moral fiber, and that I am therefore excused from saving Universes." |
#27
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On Sun, 26 Feb 2006 18:46:57 GMT, KLS wrote:
.. *DO NOT* paint over the wallpaper. If you do, you will be consigned to Dante's fifth circle of hell or even circle 9.3. Actually, have you really exhausted all removal possibilities? Have you scored the paper itself and rented a steamer? That *ALWAYS* works if the water/vinegar (or DIF) soak isn't speedy enough for you. You may think that just painting over the paper will be the perfect solution, but paint is wet and often will lift up loose areas of the paper underneath, creating a no-longer smooth surface, so best to just remove the wallpaper. I just went through this decision process (wall paper, paint or remove) In my kitchen I removed it. What a nightmare. Used solution, with the tool that scores or makes holes so that the solution can get through. No dice. Went to the rent center and got a steamer. got the wallpaper off and a good portion of the drywall surface paper. Spent a week fairing out and repairing the drywall and then had to prime with a shellac based stain blocker because the adhesive residue after multiple cleanings would not let the paint stick. Came out OK after a lot of work. After that nightmare I decided to paint over the dining room wall paper. Put on a coat of oil based stain blocker. Then used a lightweight vinyl spackling compound at the seams and silconized acrilic caulk at the chair rail and crown molding border with the walpaper. Then another coat of stain blocker. Then normal, high quality latex wall paint. The finished dining room is outstanding, much better than the kitchen. With far less work. |
#28
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I think the reason most here dont believe upgrading is a good idea is
very apparent!! This board is universally populated by the DIY group, and for that reason isnt a good base to ask. Myself I would rather buy a fixer upper. My wife on the other hand has NO INTEREST in remodeling. This became very apparent in orlando florida where we used the last day of our vacation for some home shopping. She wanted a turn key special preferably brand new. My favorite house was a older one near a dead end street with old stately trees and large lots. My wife didnt like this home, since it had a odor problem and needed work. I told the realtor pull up and toss the carpets, scrub the entire place, seal all walls and floors, and put in a new kitchen. realtor responded obviously you have done this beforee, this house will sell slow since only 10% of the market is looking for a fixer upper, and the sales price will be at least 20% under normal value. For board members here WE ARE THAT 10%, hope the original poster finds his ![]() |
#29
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On 27 Feb 2006 13:16:14 -0800, "
wrote: This board is universally populated by the DIY group, and for that reason isnt a good base to ask. Don't rule out common sense of the DIYer (I'm not a tradesman). I read this thread and see plenty want to save money, time and effort. Maybe from experience they think the local market won't recover the dollars and effort invested. I've made extra efforts to ensure a selling home is "move-in" condition...and it paid well.... Myself I would rather buy a fixer upper. A first time buyer may option for a fixer upper. An investor/speculator wants it ready - no hassle. My wife on the other hand has NO INTEREST in remodeling. Good for your wallet, I can't say the same. Oren "My doctor says I have a malformed public-duty gland and a natural deficiency in moral fiber, and that I am therefore excused from saving Universes." |
#30
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There are 2 issues:
Making a profit Making a quick sale: A home needing work is more likely to remain on the market longer, sadly many see their neighbor sell for $X and figure their home is worth that much Meanwhile the first home is turnkey perfect Their home needs tons of work. Then they wonder why its not selling and price cutting begins |
#31
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wrote in message
oups.com... And do those sources of information have any interests involved in the question? Who advertises on those shows? And if it was generally believed that renovation didn't pay off, how many people would watch them? Do the realtors who advise owners to renovate before selling get commissions based only on the pre-renovation value of the house? Amazing the divergence of opinions on thisa subject. my situation invested 12 grand made a extra 18 grand and the house sold faster. [snip] Made an extra 18 compared to what? For you to know that you made an extra 18 you would have to have your house on the market and get several solid offers and use those to assess the highest amount you would get without renovating the kitchen, turn all of those offers down, do the renovation, and then receive an offer from one of those same buyers for 18,000 dollars more AND have that buyer tell you that the reason he offered the extra 18 was because of the renovation. My theory is that you have absolutely no idea whether the renovation returned one cent more than if you had not done it. The above scenario being so implausible that there would be no way to know one way or the other. |
#32
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![]() Made an extra 18 compared to what? For you to know that you made an extra 18 you would have to have your house on the market and get several solid offers and use those to assess the highest amount you would get without renovating the kitchen, turn all of those offers down, do the renovation, and then receive an offer from one of those same buyers for 18,000 dollars more AND have that buyer tell you that the reason he offered the extra 18 was because of the renovation. My theory is that you have absolutely no idea whether the renovation returned one cent more than if you had not done it. The above scenario being so implausible that there would be no way to know one way or the other. --------------------------------------------- Got estimates of sales price from realtor selling as it was. Took their suggestions, general fix up paint new kitchen W/appliances and carpeting small 2 bedroom home, added GFCIs and other minor buyers issues Had realtors return and put on market at 32 grand more than initial estimate, final sale price 30 grand more than initial estimate. With my cost of 12 grand my profit was 18 grand ![]() Pittsburgh is a slow market that hasnt seen the housing bubble of most of the country, many nice homes sell foir 150 grand, the home I sold was less, so percentage of sales price remodeling really effected the final profit. It really doesnt matter what anyone makes on their home but I hate to see people lose potential big profit to save a few bucks ![]() |
#33
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Now I see why you put in a 12K kitchen -- seems about right for a 150K
house. It sounds like you're leaving some costs out. You can correct these assumptions, of course, but let's say one were interested in "flipping" a house like the one you describe. Costs you didn't mention are settlement costs -- agent fees to begin with average about 5%, and that's when you buy it and when you sell it; if we adopt the convention that you bear half these costs, that's $7500; add other fees and taxes and you're at least up to $10K between the two transactions. Now let's assume it took you three months to "flip" the house. You're paying the mortgage for three months -- that's another $3000, say. So now we've hit $13,000. What else is missing? What about all the time you put into the house? You probably put a couple hours a week in, between shopping for the kitchen, talking to agents, cleaning, painting, and doing other odd jobs around the house. What about the value of your time? How much do you make an hour? $20? $30? 13 weeks x 2 hours x $25 = $650. Prorated property taxes, utilities for three months, etc. What are we up to? $14K? Sounds like you made $4K. Not bad, but not the slam-dunk you're portraying. It's probably true that there are some arbitrage between the turn-key crowd and the bottom feeder crowd in general. (From the buyer's side, you can exploit this by buying a fixer-upper.) Congratulations on your success, but I don't think it's as obvious as you say that the OP should follow your example. |
#34
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Now I see why you put in a 12K kitchen -- seems about right for a 150K
house. It sounds like you're leaving some costs out. You can correct these assumptions, of course, but let's say one were interested in "flipping" a house like the one you describe. Costs you didn't mention are settlement costs -- agent fees to begin with average about 5%, and that's when you buy it and when you sell it; if we adopt the convention that you bear half these costs, that's $7500; add other fees and taxes and you're at least up to $10K between the two transactions. Now let's assume it took you three months to "flip" the house. You're paying the mortgage for three months -- that's another $3000, say. So now we've hit $13,000. What else is missing? What about all the time you put into the house? You probably put a couple hours a week in, between shopping for the kitchen, talking to agents, cleaning, painting, and doing other odd jobs around the house. What about the value of your time? How much do you make an hour? $20? $30? 13 weeks x 2 hours x $25 = $650. Prorated property taxes, utilities for three months, etc. What are we up to? $14K? Sounds like you made $4K. Not bad, but not the slam-dunk you're portraying. It's probably true that there are some arbitrage between the turn-key crowd and the bottom feeder crowd in general. (From the buyer's side, you can exploit this by buying a fixer-upper.) Congratulations on your success, but I don't think it's as obvious as you say that the OP should follow your example. --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- It wasnt a flip, it was my moms who had died. Completely paid for solid home, but needed work. I put a LOT of hours in, but got them all out at the time of sale. I think its closer to what a regular homeowner goes thru. buy house, live in house, use house, abuse house. now when the time to sell comes what to do? On another thing the $150K house here would be FAR more in other parts of the country.The pittsburgh areas lost about 1/3 of its population in the last 25 years, so theres little demand for housing, the entire area is depressed. very sad. nice friendly people though, with affordable housing. My in laws are trying to sell a home in fredrick MD. house just 6 years old, pristine condition, brother in law got job with navy NCIS, like the tv show. Its been on the market since october, price dropped 3 times. housing market has collapsed there, open houses have zero shoppers. they will end up giving away house just to moive on ![]() Nearly EVERYONE HERE is a DIY person! So we probably enjoy remodeling and putting our mark on homes. But 90% of house shoppers want a turnkey home! By avoiding fixing up a house you are cutting the percentage of shoppers by 90% ![]() Hey if you want less $$$ go right ahead, its yours to waste and doesnt effect me in the least! |
#35
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The disclaimer basically says that you don't have to tell the buyer
anything. As a buyer, it's a damn scary document to see attached to the contract, but it's "the way they do it" around here and you have to. -rev |
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