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Real Estate Q&A
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Value
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How can I find
out how much my house is worth? There are no comparable homes in
my area. |
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| This may be a bad sign
for you, especially if you think your house is worth more than other
houses in your neighborhood. Homes maintain their value better if the
neighboring properties are fairly similar.
In your situation, you may actually have to talk to several
Realtors, get their opinions, and come up with some sort of consensus.
Without knowing why there are no comparable properties in your area it
is difficult to give another suggestion. If your lot or home is
over-improved for the area, that means the value will most not likely
be what you think it is. If your home is much larger, you might not
get the same cost per square foot as other homes in the area.
So I would talk to a bunch of Realtors and get their opinions. I
would not recommend hiring an appraiser, however, even though a lot of
books recommend this. Appraisers are better at "justifying" a price
than in determining market value. |
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Where can I get information
about the asking prices of properties that have sold during the
last six months? I have found information on the selling prices, and
would like to compare them to the asking prices. |
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| The only place I can
think of where you can obtain that information is the Multiple Listing
Service. For that, you need to be a member, but you could ask an agent
to obtain the information for you. I cannot think of any reason why an
agent would not be willing to give you that information, so just ask
one.
There really is not a concrete value in knowing the asking prices.
There are different strategies in developing an asking price, plus a
lot of properties start out over-priced to begin with. Comparing
properly priced houses to over-priced houses, then lumping them
together in some sort of analysis would skew your figures.
I can see how you could intend to use such knowledge for the
purposes of negotiation, but with an informed listing agent, it should
be a fairly ineffective strategy.
For example, recently I saw a web site where the agent was hawking
his ability as a listing agent. He said the average home in his area
sold for 93% of asking price, but his average listing sold for 97% of
asking price. The implication was that he got more money for his
sellers.
The truth is probably just that he priced his homes correctly to
begin with. |
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| How
do you know whether the
price of a home per square foot is reasonable or if you are about
to make a bad decision? |
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| Though this seems like an
easy question, it is not as simple as it sounds.
Keep in mind that much more goes into the market value of a house
than it’s square footage. For example, two houses next door to each
other can have the same square footage, but if one has two bathrooms
and the other has only one, guess which one will probably be worth
more? It will also cost more per square foot.
However, if you compare recent sales of similar homes, the cost per
square foot should be similar to those properties. You can ask your
agent to provide you with comparable sales data. |
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