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![]() ![]() Selling? What You Should Know About Setting Your Price If you're selling your house, one of the first steps you'll take is setting an asking price, a maneuver that requires the ability to find the perfect balance between attracting solid offers and ultimately receiving top dollar. If you're working with a Realtor or other industry professional, you'll probably hear talk of fair market value, which typically means the highest value an educated buyer will pay. Fair market value is usually not the asking price. Many agents will begin by conducting a competitive market analysis of your house and give you an estimate of the fair market value of your home, which is a range that will fluctuate depending on the housing market in your area and how much similar homes in your neighborhood are selling for. If you're in a hot seller's market, like many communities throughout California and much of the West, you'll have the advantage. "The market has been gaining steam, and the seller is taking control," said Nashat Benyamein, a broker in Long Beach, Calif. "Our average number of days on the market went from 30 days to 7 days or less." While overpricing to some degree can be beneficial, you'll still want to be careful and avoid pricing your home too high, which almost always is nonproductive. As you work with your agent and set your price, you'll want to recognize the factors that may prompt you to raise your asking price too much when it isn't warranted. Some of those factors include:
Generally, the asking price - the price advertised when it goes on the market - is set slightly higher than market value, usually 1 to 3 percent above market value. You should assume that negotiation will be necessary to reach an agreement with the buyer. If you price your home too much above market value, you'll get fewer showings and offers in which the potential buyer is fishing to determine how low you'll go. You'll want to establish your priority list: Are you more concerned with selling quickly or getting the most money possible? You'll also want to contemplate whether you think the agent's suggested price is reasonable and whether you'd pay that amount if you were a buyer. Your agent, as well as friends, relatives, and neighbors, will help you point out your house's advantages and disadvantages that you may not have thought about because you're too close to the house and not as objective as others. A third party will help you think of your house as a commodity - something with positive and negative selling points. At that point you can decide on a price that you deem competitive and in line what other houses in your area have sold for. Written by Michele Dawson August 19, 2002 Feel free to contact us if we can be of any service! | ||||
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