Archive for the ‘Home Selling’ Category

STARBUCKS CARD DRAWING – INNOVATIVE HOME MARKETING

Wednesday, September 1st, 2010
 

DRAWING FOR $10 STARBUCKS CARD

Royden Oaks – Houston, Texas 77027 – $799,000 Listed by Greenwood King Properties

3806 ELLA LEE 

A good listing agent, of which I claim to be one, is always looking for ways to improve their marketing of homes. Please share your comments explaining a particularly effective, innovative marketing idea that you have seen or used. A drawing of those commenting will be held for a $10 Starbucks Card. We really want to hear from Sellers; however, for this one, Licensed Agents and Brokers ARE eligible. 

 Comment until 12:00 midnight CDT Thursday September 2.

WHAT YOU MUST KNOW ABOUT HOME APPRAISALS

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Understanding how appraisals work will help you achieve a quick and profitable refinance or sale.

If you think the appraisal value of your home is too low, you can seek a second opinion. Image: David Sacks/Lifesize/Getty Images

When you refinance or sell your home, the lender will insist that you get an appraisal—an opinion of the value of your home based on what similar homes in your area have sold for in recent months.

Here are five tips about the appraised value of your home. 

1. An appraisal isn’t an exact science

When appraisers evaluate a home’s value, they’re giving their best opinion based on how the home’s features stack up against those of similar homes recently sold nearby. One appraiser may factor in a recent sale, but another may consider that sale too long ago, or the home too different, or too far away to be a fair comparison. The result can be differences in the values two separate appraisers set for your home. 

2. Appraisals have different purposes

If the appraisal is being used by a lender giving a loan on the home, the appraised value will be the lower of market value (what it would sell for on the open market today) and the price you paid for the house if you recently bought it.

An appraisal being used to figure out how much to insure your home for or to determine your property taxes may rely on other factors and arrive at different values. For example, though an appraisal for a home loan evaluates today’s market value, an appraisal for insurance purposes calculates what it would cost to rebuild your home at today’s building material and labor rates, which can result in two different numbers.

Appraisals are also different from CMAs, or competitive market analyses. In a CMA, a real estate agent relies on market expertise to estimate how much your home will sell for in a specific time period. The price your home will sell for in 30 days may be different than the price your home will sell for in 120 days. Because real estate agents don’t follow the rules appraisers do, there can be variations between CMAs and appraisals on the same home. 

3. An appraisal is a snapshot

Home prices shift, and appraised values will shift with those market changes. Your home may be appraised at $150,000 today, but in two months when you refinance or list it for sale, the appraised value could be lower or higher depending on how your market has performed. 

4. Appraisals don’t factor in your personal issues

You may have a reason you must sell immediately, such as a job loss or transfer, which can affect the amount of money you’ll accept to complete the transaction in your time frame. An appraisal doesn’t consider those personal factors. 

5. You can ask for a second opinion

If your home appraisal comes back at a value you believe is too low, you can request that a second appraisal be performed by a different appraiser. You, or potential buyers, if they’ve requested the appraisal, will have to pay for the second appraisal. But it may be worth it to keep the sale from collapsing from a faulty appraisal. On the other hand, the appraisal may be accurate, and it may be a sign that you need to adjust your pricing or the size of the loan you’re refinancing. 

More from HouseLogic

How to use an appraisal to eliminate private mortgage insurance

Understanding the assessed value of your home for tax purposes

Understanding the amount at which to insure your home 

Other web resources

More information on appraisals

How to improve the appraised value of your home

By G.M. Filisko: G.M. Filisko is an attorney and award-winning writer who’s had more than 10 appraisals performed on her properties in the past 20 years. A frequent contributor to many national publications including Bankrate.com, REALTOR® Magazine, and the American Bar Association Journal, she specializes in real estate, business, personal finance, and legal topics.

Reprinted from HouseLogic (www.houselogic.com ) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Copyright 2010.  All rights reserved.

5 TIPS FOR DECIPHERING YOUR HOME LOAN ‘S GOOD FAITH ESTIMATE

Sunday, August 22nd, 2010

Knowing how to read your good-faith estimate can help you save money on your home loan.

A good-faith estimate is an approximation of the fees and interest rate you'll pay on a home loan. Image: Plattform/Getty Images

When you’re shopping for a mortgage loan, it’s sometimes hard to understand the jargon lenders use in the good-faith estimate explaining the costs and fees you’ll pay when taking out a mortgage.

When you apply for a mortgage, the lender has three days to give you a good-faith estimate of the fees and interest rate you’ll pay, as well as other loan terms. Here are five tips for using the new three-page form to your advantage. 

When you apply for a mortgage, the lender has three days to give you a good-faith estimate of the fees and interest rate you’ll pay, as well as other loan terms. Here are five tips for using the new three-page form to your advantage. 

1. Know which fees can increase and by how much

In the past, lenders provided an estimate of the costs involved in getting your home loan, and if those costs rose by the time you closed on your home, tough luck. The good-faith estimate shows some fees the lender can’t change, like the loan origination fee that you pay to get a certain interest rate (commonly called points) and transfer costs.

The form also lists the charges that can increase by up to 10%, like some title company fees and local government recording fees. The lender must cover any increase over that amount.

Finally, the good-faith estimate lists the fees that can change without any limit, such as daily interest charges. 

2. Look for answers to basic loan questions

In the summary section, lenders explain your loan’s terms in simple language. Can your interest rate rise? If so, a lender must spell out how much the rate can jump and what your new payment would be if it does. Can the amount you owe the lender increase, even if you make your payments on time? If it can, a lender must show you the potential increase. 

3. Evaluate the “tradeoffs” on a loan

In the new “tradeoff table,” you can ask lenders to provide details on the tradeoffs you can make in choosing among home loans. If you’d like the same loan with lower settlement charges, how will the interest rate change? If you’d like a lower interest rate, how much will your settlement charges increase? 

4. Compare apples to apples with the shopping chart

Included on the good-faith estimate is space for you to list all the terms and fees for four different loans, so you can make side-by-side comparisons. 

5. Know what’s missing from the good-faith estimate

The new form lacks some key information, such as how much you’ll reimburse the sellers for property taxes they’ve already paid on the home. It also doesn’t tell you the amount of money you’ll have to bring to the closing table. Some lenders have created supplemental forms providing that information. If yours hasn’t, ask for it. 

More from HouseLogic

More on the new good-faith estimate form 

Other web resources

The new U.S. Housing and Urban Development good-faith estimate

More on shopping for a loan

By G.M. Filisko: G.M. Filisko is an attorney and award-winning writer who has encountered many settlement statements that bore no resemblance to the lender’s good-faith estimate. A frequent contributor to many national publications including Bankrate.com, REALTOR® Magazine, and the American Bar Association Journal, she specializes in real estate, business, personal finance, and legal topics.

Reprinted from HouseLogic (www.houselogic.com ) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Copyright 2010.  All rights reserved. 

CONTINGENT OFFERS REGAINING POPULARITY

Friday, August 20th, 2010

Offers contingent on buyers’ ability to sell their current residence are increasing in popularity. They were almost unheard of during the go-go early 2000s, but common 20 years before that.

Sellers generally don’t like these kinds of offers because it puts them in limbo. If their buyers’ home doesn’t sell, they can be back at square one. Also, once sellers accept a contingent sale offer, they must disclose this to other potential buyers, and that can discourage a buyer prepared to make a better offer.

Sellers who accept contingent-sale offers can include an escape clause in the contract. This clause allows the sellers to notify the contingent-sale buyers of a competing offer and they must remove the contingency in 72 hours (on average) or lose the home.

Source: Inman News, Dian Hymer (08/16/2010)

IT’S A GREAT TIME FOR HOUSING DEALS

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Paying off an underwater mortgage and buying a better home could be the best tactic in this troubled market.

“If you are trading up, what better time than when interest rates are at record lows and the cost of the trade-up is much less than it used to be?” says Christopher J. Mayer, a Columbia Business School economist.

With 15-year fixed-rate mortgages at about 4.5 percent, it also makes sense to pay off the mortgage and keep the house. “At this point,” says Jay Brinkmann, chief economist of the Mortgage Bankers Association in Washington, D.C., “if they don’t have anything else that is bringing a tremendous return, then they are buying themselves an annuity by paying their house off sooner than they needed to.”

Source: The Wall Street Journal, M.P. McQueen (07/24/2010)

CHOOSING AN AGENT TO MARKET YOUR HOME – TOM PLANT WILL DELIVER A BETTER RESULT IN CLOSE-IN NEIGHBORHOODS

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

I recently posted information provided by the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (NAR) advising Sellers how to find the best real estate professional to market their home. NAR provided ten questions for a homeowner to ask. Those questions are shown below along with my answers.

Please take the time to read this information to understand why time and again Sellers choose Tom Plant to market their home because they believe I will deliver a better result.
If I can answer your questions or be of service please email me at tom@tomplant.com.

1. How long have you been selling homes?

I have been a licensed real estate professional in the State of Texas for eight years. During that time I have marketed scores of homes valued from $155,000 to $1.5 million. I focus upon homes in Houston’s close-in neighborhoods but have marketed homes as far away as The Woodlands.

Earlier for ten years I had my own business in which I assisted companies in improving their operating results.

I spent more than 20years in a variety of corporate positions including CEO of an international consumer products company and CIO of a Fortune 200 company. For more on my experience click HERE.

2. What designations do you hold?

I hold designations from Graduate Realtor Institute (GRI) and Quality Service Certified (QSC)

3. How many homes did you sell last year?

In the past 12 months I have sold 21 homes, of which I represented Sellers for 16.

An agent who markets a hundred or more homes is not appropriate for the markets in which I work. There is a balance between proven expertise and the ability to provide customized marketing and attention.

4. How many days on average did it take you to sell homes?

Of the homes I marketed during the past 12 months, the lowest days on market (DOM) was 6, the highest 265 and the median 49. That means half the homes I marketed sold in 49 days or less.

5. How close were the asking and sales prices of the homes you sold?

Of the homes I marketed during the past 12 months, the lowest sales price to list price ratio was 90%, the highest 105% and the median 99%.

6. How will you market my home?

When you choose me to market your home, you will receive my undivided loyalty, complete confidentiality and the confidence that I will be looking out for your best interests. You will also receive the benefit of my extensive marketing experience, analysis and attention to detail combined with the market strength of Greenwood King Properties. When I market your home, I will:

  • Meet with you in your home to fully understand your home and your objectives.
  • Provide a Competitive Market Analysis which explains how homes in your neighborhood which recently have sold compare to your home.
  • Provide a detailed marketing plan with specific dates and media for all advertisements, specific dates for Open Houses and other marketing details. Your marketing plan will include a minimum of six Houston Chronicle photo ads and other appropriate print media.
  • Use a professional photographer to present your home at its best.
  • Engage a professional to draw a floor plan to use in all marketing activities. The floor plan will be available to all who see your home in person as well as to all who view it on the Internet. Go to www.tomplant.com and click “My Listings” to see examples.
  • Expose your home on HAR.com; REALTOR.com; greenwoodking.com; tomplant.com; chron.com; google.com; zillow.com; homes.com; cyberhomes.com; houston.org; houston.craigslist.org; and others that may be identified.
  • Use a professionally printed, four page full color brochure to reflect the quality of your home.
  • Provide an address specific web page: www.youraddress.com
    Use a professionally printed, four page full color brochure to reflect the quality of your home.
  • Mail a professionally printed full color “Just Listed” card to my mailing list of more than 1,000 potential buyers.
  • Report to you weekly on the market activity and interest in your home.
  • Provide a secure website with login and password for you to view marketing activity for your home 24/7. View a sample marketing activity report.
  • Provide a Quality Service Guarantee including third party survey and evaluation with results online.

7. Will you represent me exclusively?

Yes. When I agree to market a home, I commit 100% to the Seller. While I will show the home and try to have Buyers I represent buy it, if they want to make an offer I refer them to another agent in Greenwood King’s office. I will not write offers on properties I market.

8. How will you keep me informed?

In order for you to have confidence in my efforts and for you to make the necessary decisions, it is imperative for you to have full and timely knowledge about all that is being done to market your home. To provide you information, I will:

24/7 – Provide a secure website with login and password for you to access status of marketing activity including any showings and agent feedback for your home.

Weekly – Early each week I will communicate in your preferred manner (telephone, e-mail or fax) with complete report of activity for the past week including showings, advertising, Open Houses and website hits.

As needed – I will be available at all times by telephone to answer any questions or address your concerns. My office direct line is 713.942.6895 and my mobile telephone number is 713.907.7302.

9. Can you provide references?

I will be happy to provide references. You may also go to HAR CLIENT EXPERIENCE RATING or QSC RATING to read previous clients comments.

Here are some of my Selling client’s comments:

“Hooray for Tom Plant!
My husband and I were so delighted with the professional, attentive and caring manner in which Tom handled the sale of our house at 2119 Albans. The three of us were all on the same wave length from beginning to closing. Tom understood the type of buyer who would be interested in a contemporary home. In short, he wanted someone that would love it as we had for 19 years.”

“Tom Plant DELIVERS results and provides exceptional service: professional planning, communication, analysis and thorough follow up. Tom sets the bar for which all professionals strive…Ten stars for Tom Plant!!!”

“Tom Plant is one of the best business men we know. He gave us excellent advice & supurb attention.”

“Tom Plant is the most professional and responsive real estate agent I have ever worked with.”

“It was a pleasure working with him and as the opportunity arises, we will refer friends to him with great confidence.”

“Tom Plant impressed me when he first approached a house that I had for sale. His professionalism and interest in my property led me to list my home with him.”

“He was right on the money with his market value approach and was willing to work with me in getting the market value for the property. In the past I have sold and purchased six houses with various Houston agents. This sale, even though the most difficult, was the best and the most fun to sell thanks to Tom Plant.
If I have any additional real estate needs, I will not hesitate to call Tom Plant”

“Tom sold our house in 3 days at a fair price and expertly handled all of the complications that arose during the closing process – this was an easy transaction with a happy ending.”

“You have been a pleasure to deal with, always responsive and caring. After my experiences with the previous agents, it was even more a relief to work with someone so professional.
I will be happy to recommend you to anyone I know looking to buy or sell in Houston.”

“Working with you was a pleasure…(we) appreciated your expertise, negotiating abilities, and humane approach to what often can be frustrating and nerve-wracking.”

“It is so nice to have complete confidence in the person who is negotiating on one’s behalf. We won’t hesitate to recommend you to any of our friends seeking real estate guidance.”

10. Are you a REALTOR®?

Yes, I am a proud member in good standing of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (NAR).

FIND THE BEST REALTOR® TO SELL YOUR HOME

Sunday, July 11th, 2010

Ask detailed questions about their experience and skills to help you find the right agent for your home sale.

Southgate/Medical Center Areas - 2316 Wordsworth 77030 - List Price $579,000 - MLS 22485766

Working with the right real estate agent can mean the difference between getting prompt, expert representation and feeling like you’re going it alone when selling your home. Here are 10 questions to ask when you’re interviewing agents. 

1. How long have you been selling homes?

Mastering real estate requires on-the-job experience. The more experience agents have, the more likely they’ll be able to handle any curveballs thrown during your home sale. 

2. What designations do you hold?

Designations like GRI (Graduate REALTOR® Institute) and CRS® (Certified Residential Specialist), which require that agents complete additional real estate training, show they’re constantly learning. Ask if agents have designations and, if not, why not? 

3. How many homes did you sell last year?

Agents may tout their company’s success. An equally important question is how many homes they’ve personally sold in the past year; it’s an indicator of how active and aggressive they are. 

4. How many days on average did it take you to sell homes?

Ask agents to show you this data along with stats from their local Multiple Listing Service (MLS) so you can see how many days, on average, their listings were on the market compared to the average for all properties in the MLS. 

5. How close were the asking and sales prices of the homes you sold?

Sometimes sellers choose their agent because the agent’s suggested listing price is higher than those suggested by other agents. A better factor is the difference between listing prices and the amount homes actually sold for. That can help you judge agents’ skill at accurately pricing homes and marketing to the right buyers. It can also help you weed out agents trying to dazzle you with a lofty sales price just to get your listing. 

6. How will you market my home?

The days of agents putting a For Sale sign in the yard and hoping for the best are long gone. Look for an agent who does aggressive and innovative marketing, especially on the Internet. 

7. Will you represent me exclusively?

In most states, agents can represent the seller, the buyer, or both in a home sale. If your agent will also represent buyers, understand and consent to that dual representation. 

8. How will you keep me informed?

If you want weekly updates by email, don’t choose an agent who plans to contact you only if there’s an offer. 

9. Can you provide references?

Ask to talk to the last three customers the agent assisted. Call and ask if they’d work with the agent again and if the agent did anything that didn’t sit well with them. 

10. Are you a REALTOR®?

Ask whether agents are REALTORS®, which means they’re members of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® (NAR). NAR has been an advocate of agent professionalism and a champion of homeownership rights for more than a century. 

Other web resources

More on choosing an agent

Freddie Mac’s tips on finding an agent

More on REALTOR® designations

By G.M. Filisko: G.M. Filisko is an attorney and award-winning writer who’s worked with many real estate agents in the past 20 years. A frequent contributor to many national publications including Bankrate.com, REALTOR® Magazine, and the American Bar Association Journal, she specializes in real estate, business, personal finance, and legal topics.

Reprinted from HouseLogic (www.houselogic.com ) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Copyright 2010.  All rights reserved.

CHOOSING AN EXTERIOR DOOR

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

You should understand the pros and cons of steel, fiberglass, and wood exterior doors before choosing the one that’s right for you.

If you'd like a custom door, the sky's the limit in terms of design and materials. Image: Pinecrest Inc

Replacing your front door can pay for itself or even turn a profit by increasing your home’s value, according to Remodeling Magazine’s annual Cost vs. Value Report.

What’s more, if you choose an energy-efficient exterior door, you may qualify for a tax credit that can offset 30% of the purchase price as well as trim up to 10% off your energy bills. With utility bills averaging $2,200 annually, that’s a savings of as much as $220.

But how do you know which door is right for you? Make your decision by comparing the three main materials available for exterior doors: steel, fiberglass, and wood.

Steel

If you’re looking to save money, a steel door may be a good choice, particularly if you have the skills to hang it yourself. A simple, unadorned steel door can sell for as little as $150 (not including hardware, lock set, paint, or labor) and typically runs as much as $400 at big-box retailers. Steel offers the strongest barrier against intruders, although its advantage over fiberglass and wood in this area is slight.

Even better, replacing your entry door with a steel model actually reaps a profit in added home value. Remodeling Magazine estimates the total project cost of installing a 20-gauge steel door at about $1,200—and the project, on average, returns about 129% of cost or $1,400.

Still, the attractive cost of a steel door comes with an important caveat: Its typical life span under duress is shorter than either fiberglass or wood. A steel door exposed to salt air or heavy rains may last only five to seven years, according to Bob Bossard, general manager of 84 Lumber in Clarksville, Del. Despite steel’s reputation for toughness, it actually didn’t perform well in Consumer Reports testing against wood and fiberglass for normal wear and tear.

With heavy use, it may dent, and the damage can be difficult and expensive to repair. If your door will be heavily exposed to traffic or the elements, you may be better off choosing a different material.

Fiberglass

Fiberglass doors come in an immense variety of styles, many of which accurately mimic the look of real wood. And if limited upkeep is your ideal, fiberglass may be your best bet. “Nothing is maintenance-free,” Bossard says, “but fiberglass is pretty close. And it lasts twice as long as wood or steel.”

Fiberglass doesn’t expand or contract appreciably as the weather changes. Therefore, in a reasonably protected location, a fiberglass entry door can go for years without needing a paint or stain touch-up and can last 15 to 20 years overall. Although it feels light to the touch, fiberglass has a very stout coating that’s difficult for an intruder to breach; and its foam core offers considerable insulation.

Fiberglass generally falls between steel and wood in price; models sold at big-box stores range from about $150 to $600. Remodeling Magazine lists the cost of a fiberglass entry-door replacement project at around $3,500. Although a fiberglass door doesn’t generate as high a return as a steel door, it recoups about 65% in home value.

Wood

Wood is considered the go-to choice for high-end projects; its luxe look and substantial weight can’t be flawlessly duplicated by fiberglass or steel, though high-end fiberglass products are getting close. If your home calls for a stunning entry statement with a handcrafted touch, wood may be the best material for you.

Wood is usually the most expensive choice of the three—roughly $500 to $2,000, excluding custom jobs—and requires the most maintenance, although it’s easier to repair scratches on a wood door than dents in steel or fiberglass. Wood doors should be repainted or refinished every year or two to prevent splitting and warping. (Remodeling Magazine’s 2009-2010 Cost vs. Value Report doesn’t include a wood entry-door replacement project.)

If you’re concerned about the environmental impact of your door as well as its energy efficiency, you can purchase a solid wood door certified by the Forest Stewardship Council, which assures you that the wood was sustainably grown and harvested.

Tracing the environmental impact of a particular door—from manufacturing process to shipping distance to how much recycled/recyclable content it contains—is quite complicated and probably beyond the ken of the average homeowner, notes LEED-certified green designer Victoria Schomer. But FSC-certified wood and an Energy Star rating are an excellent start.

A final note on choosing a door based on energy efficiency: Because efficiency depends on a number of factors besides the material a door is made of—including its framework and whether it has windows—look for the Energy Star label to help you compare doors. To qualify for the federal tax credit, look for solar heat gain coefficient and U-factor values less than 0.3.

By Karin Beuerlein: Karin Beuerlein has covered home improvement and green living topics extensively for FineLiving.com, FrontDoor.com, and HGTV.com. In more than a decade of freelancing, she’s also written for Better Homes & Gardens and the Chicago Tribune. She and her husband started married life by remodeling the house they were living in. They still have both the marriage and the house, no small feat.

Reprinted from HouseLogic (www.houselogic.com ) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Copyright 2010.  All rights reserved.

8 TIPS FOR ADDING CURB APPEAL AND VALUE TO YOUR HOME

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Appraisers and real estate agents offer advice for curb appeal that preserves value and attracts potential buyers.

Adding architectural numbers to the outside of your house gives it a distinct style. Image: CustomHouseNumbers.com

Curb appeal has always been important for homesellers. With the vast majority of today’s homebuyers starting their search on the Internet, the appearance of your property is more critical than ever. You only have a few seconds to catch their attention as they scroll through listings online to get them to stop and take a closer look.

But the role of curb appeal goes beyond just making a good first impression. The way your house looks from the street can impact its value. It can also shorten the time it takes to sell your house.

We asked real estate agents, appraisers, home stagers, landscape designers, and home inspectors which curb appeal projects offer the most value when your house is on the market, both in terms of its marketability and dollars. Here is what they told us:

1. Paint the house.

Hands down, the most commonly offered curb appeal advice from our real estate pros and appraisers is to give the exterior of your home a good paint job. Buyers will instantly notice it and appraisers will note it on the valuation.

“Paint is probably the number one thing inside and out,” says Frank Lucco, managing partner of Houston-based IRR-Residential Appraisers and Consultants. “I’d give additional value for that. If you’re under two years remaining life (on the paint job), paint the exterior because it tends to show wear badly.” 

Just make sure you stay within the range of accepted colors for your market. A house that’s painted a wildly different color from its competition will be marked down in value by appraisers.

2. Have the house washed.

Before you make the investment in a paint job, though, take a good look at the house. If it’s got mildew or general grunge, just washing the house could make a world of difference, says Valerie Torelli, a California real estate agent with a background in accounting.

Before she puts a house on the market, Torelli often does exterior makeovers on her clients’ homes, a service she pays for herself to get higher selling prices. Overall, she says her goal is to spend less than $5,000, with a goal of generating an extra $10,000 to $15,000 on the sale price.

Torelli specifies pressure-washing—a job that should be left to professionals. Pressure washing makes the house look “bright and clean in addition to getting rid of unsightly things like cobwebs, which may not be seen from the yard but will detract from the home’s cleanliness when seen up close,” she says.

The cost to have a professional cleaning should be a few hundred dollars—a fraction of the cost of having the house painted.

3. Trim the shrubs and green up the yard.

California real estate agent Valerie Torelli says she puts a lot of emphasis on landscaping, such as cutting down overgrown bushes and replacing them with leafy plants and annuals mulched with beautiful reddish-brown bark. “It runs me $30 to $50,” says Torelli. “Do you get a return on your money? Absolutely. It sucks people in.”

You also don’t want bare spots. Take the time to fertilize the yard, throw out some grass seed, and if need be, add some sod.

4. Add a splash of color.

It could be a flower bed of annuals by the mailbox, a paint job for the front door, or a brightly colored bench or an Adirondack chair. “You can get a cute little bench at Home Depot for $99,“ Torelli notes. “Spray paint it bright red or blue and set it in the yard or on the front porch.”

It’s not a bad idea, but don’t plan on getting extra points from an appraiser for a red bench, says John Bredemeyer, president of Realcorp in Omaha. “It’s difficult to quantify, but it does make a home sell more quickly,” Bredemeyer says. “Maybe yours sold a couple weeks faster than the house down the street. That’s the best way to look at these things.”

5. Add a fancy mailbox and house numbers.

An upscale mail box and architectural house numbers or an address plaque can give your house a distinctive look that stands out from everyone else on the block. Torelli makes them a part of her exterior makeovers “I’ve gotten those hand-painted mailboxes,” she says. “A nice one runs you $40 to $50.” Architectural house numbers may run as high as a few hundred dollars.

6. Repair or clean the roof.

Springfield, Va.-based home inspector and former builder Reggie Marston says the roof is one of the first things he looks at in assessing the condition of a home. He’ll look at other houses in the neighborhood to see if there are a lot of replaced roofs and see if the subject house has one as well. If not, he’ll look for curls in the shingles or missing shingles. “I’m looking at the roof for end-of-life expectancy,” he says.

You can pay for roof repairs now, or pay for them later in a lower appraisal; appraisers will mark down the value by the cost of the repair. That could knock thousands of dollars off your appraisal. According to Remodeling Magazine’s 2009-2010 Cost vs. Value Report, the average cost of a new asphalt shingle roof is more than $19,000.

“Roofs are issues,” Lucco says. “You won’t throw money away on that job. You gotta have a decent roof.”

Stains and plant matter, such as moss, can be handled with cleaning. It’s a job that can often be done in a day for a few hundred dollars, and makes the roof look like new. It’s not a DIY project; call a professional with the right tools to clean it without damaging it.

7. Put up a fence.

A picket fence with a garden gate to frame the yard is an asset. A fence has more impact in a family-oriented neighborhood than an upscale retirement community, Bredemeyer says, but in most instances, appraisers will give extra value for one, as long as it’s in good condition. “Day in a day out, a fence is a plus,“ Bredemeyer says. Expect to pay $2,000 to $3,500 for a professionally installed gated picket fence 3 feet high and 100 feet long.

8. Perform routine maintenance and cleaning.

Nothing sets off subconscious alarms like hanging gutters, missing bricks from the front steps, or lawn tools rusting in the bushes. It makes even the professionals question what else hasn’t been taken care of.

“A house is worth less if the maintenance isn’t done,” Lucco says. “Those little things can add up and be a very big detractor. When people say, ‘I’d buy it if it weren’t for all the deferred maintenance,’ what they’re really saying is, ‘I’d still buy it if you reduce the price.’” 

By Pat Curry: Georgia-based freelance writer Pat Curry has covered housing and real estate for consumer and trade publications for more than a decade, including covering new home sales and marketing for BUILDER, the magazine of the National Association of Home Builders.

Reprinted from HouseLogic (www.houselogic.com ) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Copyright 2010.  All rights reserved

OUTDOOR LIGHTING FOR CURB APPEAL AND SAFETY

Wednesday, June 30th, 2010

Well-planned outdoor lighting improves curb appeal, safety, and security for your home.

Uplighting adds drama to a landscape. Use it in moderation to highlight different features of your home. Image: Kichler Lighting

Think about it: Most of your guests (and if your home is on the market, many would-be buyers) see your home only in the evening, when its best features may be lost in the shadows. Well-executed outdoor lighting enhances architectural detail and plays up landscape features, casting your home in the best possible light and adding an abundance of curb appeal.

Outdoor lighting also adds value. Judith Patriski, an appraiser and owner of Quad Realty Co. near Cleveland, estimates that for upper-bracket homes, an investment in outdoor lighting can yield a 50% return. “When you pull into a driveway and see a gorgeous home, you’re going to pay more for it,” says Patriski.

And she emphasizes that it’s not only about aesthetics: “In all price ranges, lighting for security is important”—both to protect against intruders and falls. Here are the elements of successful outdoor lighting.

Mimicking moonlight

Much of the success of exterior lighting hinges on its design. Hang around lighting designers long enough and you’ll hear a lot of talk about “moonlight effect.” That’s a naturalistic look that features light no more intense than that of a full moon, but still strong enough to make beautiful shadows and intense highlights.

Other techniques outdoor lighting designers use:  

  • Highlight trees: Whether illumined from below or given presence by a light mounted in the tree itself, trees make stunning features.
  • Use uplights: Uplighting is dramatic because we expect light to shine downward. Used in moderation, it’s a great way to highlight architectural and landscaping features.
  • Have a focus: The entryway is often center stage, a way of saying, “Welcome, this way in.”
  • Combine beauty and function: For example, adding lighting to plantings along a pathway breaks up the “runway” look of too many lights strung alongside a walk.
  • Vary the fixtures: While the workhorses are spots and floods, designers turn to a wide range of fixtures, area lights, step lights, and bollards or post lights.
  • Stick to warm light: A rainbow of colors are possible, but most designers avoid anything but warm white light, preferring to showcase the house and its landscape rather than create a light show.
  • Orchestrate: A timer, with confirmation from a photocell, brings the display to life as the sun sets. At midnight it shuts shut down everything but security lighting. Some homeowners even set the timer to light things up an hour or so before dawn.

Adding safety and security

Falls are the foremost cause of home injury, according to the Home Safety Council. Outdoors, stair and pathway lighting help eliminate such hazards.

Often safety and security can be combined. For example, motion-detecting security lighting mounted near the garage provides illumination when you get out of your car at night; the same function deters intruders. Motion detecting switches can also be applied to landscape lighting to illumine shadowy areas should anyone walk nearby.

Even the moonlight effect has a security function: Soft, overall landscape lighting eliminates dark areas that might hide an intruder, exposing any movement on your property. Overly bright lights actually have a negative effect, creating undesirable pockets of deep shadow.

Switching to LEDs

Once disparaged for their high cost and cold bluish glow, LEDs are now the light source of choice for lighting designers. “They’ve come down in price and now have that warm light people love in incandescent bulbs,” says Paul Gosselin, owner of Night Scenes Landscape Lighting Professionals in Kingsland, Texas. “We haven’t installed anything but LEDs for the last year.”

Although LED fixtures remain twice as expensive as incandescents, installation is simpler because they use low-voltage wiring. “All in all, LEDs cost only about 25% more to install,” Gosselin says. “And they’ll save about 75% on your electricity bill.”

Another advantage is long life. LEDs last at least 40,000 hours, or about 18 years of nighttime service. With that kind of longevity, “why should a fixture have only a two-year warranty?” asks Gosselin. He advises buying only fixtures with a 15-year warranty, proof that the fixture’s housing is designed to live as long as the LED bulbs inside.

Innovations

The growing popularity of exterior lighting has led to innovative fixtures. Here are some bright new ideas:  

  • Solar lighting: When first introduced, solar pathway lights produced a dull glow that rarely made it through the night. They do much better now that they are equipped with electricity-sipping LEDs, more efficient photovoltaic cells, and better batteries. Still, they have yet to measure up to hard-wired systems.
  • Hybrids: Porch lights now come equipped with LED lighting for all night use, and a motion sensor that clicks on an incandescent bulb to provide extra illumination as you approach the front door. Hybrids use about 5% of the power a solely incandescent fixture requires.
  • Barbecue light: Tired of grilling steaks by flash light? Now you can buy a gooseneck outdoor light, ideal for an outdoor kitchen.

Estimating the cost

Total outdoor lighting costs will vary according to the size of your home and the complexity of your lighting scheme. Expect to pay about $325 for each installed LED fixture. LEDs also require a transformer to step the power down from 120 volts to 12 volts, running about $400 installed.

A motion detector security light costs about $150 installed. Porch lights and sconces range from $100 to $250 installed, depending the fixture and whether running new cable is necessary.

Contractor-installed outdoor lighting for an average, two-story, 2,200 sq. ft. house might add up as follows:

  • 7 fixtures to cover 100 feet of LED pathway lighting: $2,275
  • Transformer: $400
  • 4 LED uplights to dramatize the front of the house: $1,300
  • 2 LED area lights for plantings: $650
  • 2 motion detector security lights: $300

Total cost: $4,925

By Dave Toht: Dave Toht has written or edited more than 60 books on home repair and remodeling, including titles for The Home Depot, Lowe’s, Better Homes & Gardens, Sunset, and Reader’s Digest. A former contractor, Dave was editor of Remodeling Ideas magazine and continues to contribute to numerous how-to publications.

Reprinted from HouseLogic (www.houselogic.com ) with permission of the NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS®
Copyright 2010.  All rights reserved

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