If you are considering selling your home in Maplewood, Millburn/ShortHills, South Orange, Summit, and Montclair, NJ you should keep in mind that there are many challanges.
Robert Northfield, real estate broker/agent in Millburn/ShortHills & Maplewood, NJ area has the right tools, resources and experience to help home sellers in this market http://www.NewJerseyUniqueHomes.com T
he environment for home sales becomes more difficult with each passing month. Some estimates put 11 million mortgages, about 20% of the US total, underwater, meaning that homeowners owe their banks more than the underlying properties are worth. Home repossessions reached more than 100,000 for the first time in September. Rising foreclosures rates continue to further depress housing prices.
The federal government let its tax benefit for homeowners expire in April and has not renewed it since them. The program did boost sales earlier this year. Shoppers must now face a market without the credit in which many home prices continue to fall.
The clamor over flawed foreclosure paperwork and robo-signers could further chill the housing market. People who might buy have bought a home in foreclosure will now worry about obtaining proper documentation and effective transfer of title.
24/7 Wall St. talked spoke with experts at real estate research firms, Zillow.com and RealtyTrac to find the best way to sell a home. We also interviewed management from the National Association of Realtors, a number of real estate brokers, banks managers and elected officials in affluent communities. What emerged from these conversations and our research is the following: successful home sellers often do the same small number of things correctly. Often, these tactics are often the difference between finding a buyer and not.
1. Pick the Best Broker
Many people who decide to sell contact a real estate brokerage with a sterling reputation, or go to one that has the largest number of listings. Frequently, when potential sellers call these firms, they are turned over to the first available broker in the office. That person is often not the best representative. As a matter of fact, what is a successful broker doing in the office anyway? There are a small number of brokers in most markets who have a better track record than their peers. Most of them have been brokers for a long time and did not lose their jobs when the housing bubble collapsed. Robert Northfield has been in real estate sales since 1997 and maintained a top producer level every year. He is the #1 producer with most closed sales in Essex county as of September 30, 2010 YTD http://www.NewJerseyUniqueHomes.com
3. Get the Right “Comp”
Sellers must make sure that foreclosures in their area are included in the “comps” the realtor gives them. Traditionally, a broker will give a seller a list of similar properties in the market and that information is part of what is used to set a price. What brokers do not always do is put the price of any foreclosed properties that are comparable into the calculation. A typical foreclosed home sells for 25% to 30% less than similar inventory in the same area. If sellers don’t take that into consideration, their home will not be priced competitively and they put themselves at a disadvantage. Sellers wind up slashing prices after their overvalued properties are on the market for several months without success.
Robert Northfield has assisted many home owners reduce their real estate taxes in Essex County, NJ prior to listing their homes for sale in Maplewood, NJ, South Orange, NJ, Short Hills,NJ and Millburn,NJ. More at http://www.NewJerseyUniqueHomes.com
5. Conserve Utilities
Turn the lights off! Most buyers ask for utility bills. “Energy wasters” who sell a home will rue the times they forgot to turn off lights, turn down the air conditioner, or left the TV on all day. It would be ill-advised to fake the amount of energy being used by simply living in the dark and cutting utility costs to nearly zero. However, careful and prudent use of energy can cut bills by enough so that a buyer does not have sticker shock about what it costs to maintain electricity, gas, or oil to run a house.
8. Everything is Negotiable
Negotiate the fee with the broker. The fee paid to a realtor for selling a home is traditionally 6%. Sellers often believe that they can get that down to 5% or even 4%. But, in a market where brokers spend much more to market the property and expose the property in many different ways, paying top commission to the listing agent and buyers agent may result in a fast sale. Hey everyone works for a living. More on that at http://www.MaplewoodHouses.com
9. Get an InspectionSellers should do some of the inspection work and testing before their home goes on the market. Inspectors for buyers are often aggressive when they report what is “wrong” with a home to their clients. For as little as $250, an inspector will go though you house and tell you what the inspector is likely to flag such as a roof leak or old, energy-wasting windows. That gives the seller a chance to fix the problem for less than the buyer may want to lower the price by, or at least know the items that a buyer will use to negotiate down the price.
Maplewood, Short Hills, South Orange, Summit, and Millburn real estate and homes for sale in New Jersey - Robert Northfield, Realtor
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