When shopping for a new home, I've heard many a buyer say, shaking their
heads, "What were these people thinking?" Unless the agent has previewed the
house and eliminated the "dogs," a buyer can spend a whole day looking at such a
wide range of homes that it becomes impossible to see all the inventory in their
price range.
Pricing property can be more art than science in today's market. New home
builders probably have the easiest time of it -- at least without shocking the
buyers -- because everything is new. There are no bare areas in the carpet,
fingerprints on the appliances, nicotine stained ceiling tiles in the rec room
-- and definitely no cat and dog odors that are promised to be dealt with by
installing new carpet after the buyer moves in.
With resale homes, the first weapon to use in the battle to sell the home is
to price it correctly. The challenge for sellers is that they want as much as
the last sale, however, in today's market that's not as guaranteed as it was a
year ago. The seller can still walk away with hundreds of thousands of dollars
in gain, but maybe not the absolute highest amount of gain ever in the
community.
Thus, pricing is the key. There are only a few ways to price a home for sale
and sellers who don't want to putts around on the sale of their home need to
adapt to the accepted modes of pricing and get over the fact that their house
may not be worth as much as it was 12 months ago.
The first model is probably the most popular -- the comparable. By pulling up
only the sales of your particular model, the Realtor can determine a trend price
for your home. The challenge in a slowing market is that your particular model
may only have three sales in the last year. Such a low number of houses selling
does not really create a trend line, especially if the last sale was 6 months
previous. Thus, you turn to the second pricing model.
Your home is then dissected to create comparables across a few neighborhoods
or even a whole zip code that match your local community. Several aspects of
your home will be plugged into the comparable model: style of home (split level,
colonial, etc.); number of levels; number of bedrooms and baths; extra rooms;
year built; square footage; and more. Then the averages on these parameters are
tabulated and you'll have a target price. Keep in mind to remove the highs and
lows.
Finally, another way to price your home is to come up with a tax assessment
model. This one takes a little bit more homework and data mining. It's tedious,
but it can present one of the most accurate pictures of home values in your
community. The first step is to pull up all the sales in the community in the
last 6 to 12 months. Tabulate the sales price total (let's say it comes up to
$10 million) and then tabulate the tax assessment total (our model will use $8
million). Divide the tax assessment into the sales price and you come up with a
tax assessment-sales price ratio. In this case, the community ratio is 1.25.
Multiply your tax assessment by the ratio figure, and it will determine your
target asking price. For example, if your tax assessment is $250,000, multiply
it by 1.25 and you'll arrive at $312,500 as a target asking price. Again, be
careful to pull out the anomalies that represent overbuilt properties. The
largest, biggest house in the community could affect your price, as well as the
pre-foreclosure sale.
You're looking for average prices with average situations for average
results.
If you're having to use all three models to arrive at a price, then your real
estate professional should weigh in with all three models to determine the
price.
The biggest challenge in pricing the home is a seller's greed level. Sorry to
be so blunt, but sellers always want more than the last sale, regardless of the
market condition. My blunt advice is to "get over it." Waiting around for the
"right" buyer is just plain foolishness in the world of real estate. If you're
putting your home on the market, don't putts around and waste your time, the
buyers' time and the agents' time with an unrealistic asking price.
If your Realtor provides feedback from colleagues that your house is
overpriced, move on it. Move from denial into acceptance and price the house
right. Remember, the goal here is not to price the property as high as possible,
but to sell the house. Good luck.
Published: March 17, 2006