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How
Much is My Home Worth?
Tips for establishing the value of your home:
- Beware of "front-porch" value estimates
and look for real estate professionals who
bring the data to you and help you understand the
best listing strategy for successfully selling your
home and achieving your goals.
- Don't confuse information with knowledge. A salesperson
who can punch up a list of recent sales for the area
or have the computer select properties by certain
features does not automatically have the depth of
knowledge necessary to interpret this data. The professional's
knowledge should also be based on personal inspection
of comparison properties, research into the circumstances
of each sale and interpretation of buyer profiles
that would be attracted to your property.
- Local real estate professionals can tell you what
is holding your property back, but location, still
a critical factor, will ultimately limit the value
of the property. Be prepared to put pride of ownership
on hold and take an unemotional look at the data.
No estimate of market value is complete without a
comprehensive marketing strategy based on the listing
strategy and designed to attract the greatest number
of qualified buyers within the shortest possible time,
with the minimum number of hassles.
Canadians may know that a house, condominium unit
or any other piece of real estate is worth exactly
what a buyer is willing to pay for it, but when it
comes time to set the list price for their own home,
many seem to forget this important axiom of value.
Some home sellers are frustrated when they have to
interview a number of real estate salespeople to find
one who agrees with their opinion of the home's value.
These sellers blame real estate people if market data
suggests a value lower than that inflated by the owner's
expectations or needs. These are the same homeowners
who are surprised when buyers look but do not buy,
put in what owner considers low-ball offers and eventually
stop coming to see the property. This homeowner is
upset weeks later when the real estate salesperson
returns to get the list price "adjusted,"
often to a price lower than the original list price
suggested by the market data provided by other real
estate salespeople.
Value is not absolute. It is based on availability,
usefulness, need and desirability. Where there are
relatively few buyers and many comparable homes from
which to choose, individual property values may be
lower then sellers imagine. Modern, well-maintained
properties with efficient use of space and attractive
street-faces will sell for higher prices than properties
in similar locations that have none of these features.
Homeowners often confuse cost with value. Buyers are
not interested in what the seller has spent on the
home: the original cost, the cost of the money borrowed
(the mortgage) to buy it and the cost of renovations
and improvements designed to suit the seller's needs.
Buyers look for value, which in turn relates to their
costs of buying, borrowing the financing and modifying
the home to their needs. Canada Mortgage and Housing
Corporation, our federal housing agency, and other
housing researchers have compiled data galore to prove
how savvy Canadian buyers have become too savvy to
pay more for a property when they can get comparable
real estate for less.
According to the Real Estate Encyclopedia, published
by the Ontario Real Estate Association, market value
is "the highest price, in terms of money, that
the property will bring to a willing seller if exposed
for sale on the open market; allowing a reasonable
time to find a willing buyer...and with neither buyer
or seller acting under necessity, compulsion nor peculiar
and special circumstances."
Think of the relationship between property value and
the number of buyers in a specific market as a triangle.
At the peak is the "one-day-my-prince-will-come"
price where there is a theoretical buyer for whom
the property holds extraordinary value. Waiting for
this buyer, particularly if the property has few truly
unique features, may take forever. Usually, buyers
who have the money to spend considerably more than
market value will chose to move up to a more prestigious
neighbourhood instead. At the base of the triangle,
is the price that is attractive to everyone whether
they are currently shopping for a home or not -- the
"fire sale" or "it's-a-steal"
price that no one can pass up (and no informed seller
will offer).
Market value for a property lies between one-third
and one-half of the way up from the base, depending
on market conditions and the seller's circumstances.
When a property is listed at a price which reflects
fair market value, the greatest number of buyers will
see value in the property within a reasonable time.
Figuring out the market value of a property requires
careful analysis of buyer characteristics and goals
as well as previous and current real estate listing
and sales data for the area. A real estate salesperson,
with experience in the area and an understanding of
current buying patterns, can help the owner establish
a list price that will entice buyers, yet net the
seller the greatest possible return.
by PJ Wade
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