You've listed your home....Now what?
![Keep your home showing ready in five simple steps - Realtor Sarah Lampe gives you the how to Selling your home, keeping your home ready for showings, appeal to more buyers](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEg0xwH-4U_v-cb-ZzDUeQrWm1sZ_ARApCpcoYZcbIr1lldqfwKL72bJoaGCZndpcMaF1yLvwU3G6ECdNFV2B-HDKeWwxvpOSNA1l8Rx2KbspbS7Gb2FTU4V04KQOo8Xvt2U9_Jz0u9cpRU/s1600/messy+house.jpg) |
Keeping your home showing ready in 5 simple steps |
You did it! You finally took that step you've been talking about.....you listed your home for sale. The pressure is off.....or is it? Selling your home even under the best circumstances is a long and somewhat stressful process. There is the decision that you want to sell your home, then the little repairs to get your home ready, interviewing Realtors, settling on a price, and don't forget about the pictures to post your home online.
Well here's the good news, when you de-cluttered so your agent could come in and take pictures of your home, you primed your house to be appealing to buyers during showings and open houses. But now you've got the upkeep, and who knows when somebody it going to request a showing! As somebody who has been through this in the past year here are a few tricks I picked up that help.
#1 - The Swiffer is your friend!
I don't think I realized how convenient and effective the Swiffer is until we sold our home. We kept a stash of Swiffer dusters on both floors of the house and one of the mops for the bathroom tile and hardwood floors. Talk about quick clean up!
#2 - Pets are NOT your friend!
Ok, now don't get me wrong, I love pets! I have three dogs myself, BUT when you are selling your home (especially if they are indoor pets) this can become an issue, mainly the smell. So here's what I did with my 3 wonderful dogs. We were selling our home in Wisconsin in the middle of winter (well winter in WI is basically from October-March) but the point is it was much too cold for the dogs to be outside during that time. This meant they were inside stinking up the house...such a turnoff to potential buyers especially if they don't have pets and can't relate.
So the rule became the dogs were allowed in the basement ( I know something that isn't common here either) and they each had their own rug square to lay on if they were allowed in any other room of the house. This pleased both the dogs and myself. Clean-up became picking up the three carpet squares, throwing them in the garage and that was it.....the dog smell was in the cold garage where nobody smelled it.
#3 - Personal items
This is a hard one, I know. The idea is you don't want a lot of personal items (photos, kids school work on your fridge,name plates, really anything that is going to remind somebody of you and your family) out on display. This applies when pictures are being taken AND during showings and open houses. You want the buyers to be able to picture themselves in the house and these items tend to distract from that objective and put a stamp on the house as being YOURS!
But you still have to live there while you are selling it and until you find your new home, so where is the balance? My advice, keep your mementos and pictures limited to certain rooms of the house and when it comes time for showings, have a place that you store all of them.
#4 - Items of Value (This is not meant to scare.....just a reality)
DO NOT leave jewelry boxes, cash, or any easily movable or easily hidden items of value laying around the house (especially during open houses). Although during showings potential buyers will be accompanied by a real estate agent, you have to remember an agent can't be in two places at once and if there are two buyers, which often times there are, and one checks out bedroom one while the other checks out bedroom two that agent can't be with both of them.
Best case scenario is to either store your valuables during this process somewhere out of your home, such as a safe deposit box, or a family member's home, OR you could invest in an in home safe that you keep those items in during showings and open houses. Either way protect your valuables and don't forget to add your prescriptions to the list of things you keep out of sight during showings.
#5 - The Catch All
This is my all time favorite. Life gets busy and as long as it takes you to de-clutter your life, it can take less than a day for half of that clutter to return! You won't always have fair warning when somebody wants to view your home and sometimes you may have only 20-30 minutes to get yourself ready and get out of the house for a showing (doesn't leave much time to pick up, right?).
The Catch All is your solution to that. Go out and buy yourself a big plastic storage bin with a lid that can easily be "hidden in plain sight" or thrown in a closet someplace. Then when you have unexpected showings you can throw all the clutter you've accumulated into that bin so your home looks spic and span, and you can sort through it later. Just put the cover on the bin and you are all set!
Now I know all this may sound overwhelming, but here's the silver lining. You will get so good at doing this that eventually it should only take about 15-20 minutes to get this done. The other major plus.....that 15-20 minutes of your time just made your home more appealing to the buyer walking through the door.