Factors
Affecting Your Offer Price
How Property Condition
Affects Your Offer
Since you have toured the property
you are interested in, you should know how it compares to
the general neighborhood. All you have to do is put the home
in one of three categories - average, above average, or below
average.
When evaluating a home’s condition, there are a number
of things you should consider. Structural condition is most
important - items such as walls, ceilings, floors, doors and
windows. Then paint, carpets, and floor coverings. Pay special
attention to bathrooms and bedrooms and whether the plumbing
and electricity work efficiently. Look at the fixtures, such
as light switches, doorknobs, and drawer handles. The front
and back yards should be in reasonably good shape.
The missing ingredient will be information on the condition
of the homes from your comparable sales list. Provided you
chose the right agent to represent you, they will have actually
visited most of those homes and be able to provide key insights.
How Home Improvements Affect Your
Offer Price
Even when comparing exact model matches within a tract of
homes, you should note whether the previous owners have made
any substantial improvements. Cosmetic changes should be largely
ignored, but major improvements should be taken into account.
Most important would be room additions, especially bedrooms
and bathrooms. Other items, like expensive floor tile or swimming
pools should be taken into account, too, but should be discounted.
A pool that costs $20,000 to install does not normally add
$20,000 in value to the home. Rely on your agent to give you
guidance in this area.
How Market Conditions Affect Your
Offer Price
A hot market is a "seller’s market." During
a seller’s market, properties can sell within a few
days of being listed and there are often multiple offers.
Sometimes homes even sell above the asking price. Though most
buyer’s want to get a "deal" on a home, reducing
your offer by even a few thousand dollars could mean that
someone else will get the home you desire.
A slow market is a "buyer’s market. During a
buyer’s market properties may languish on the market
for some time and offers may be few and far between. Prices
may even decline temporarily. Such a market would allow you
to be more flexible in offering a lower price for the home.
Even if your offered price is too low, the seller is likely
to make some sort of counter-offer and you can begin negotiations
in earnest.
More often than not, the market is simply "steady,"
or in transition. When a market is steady, no real rules apply
on whether you should make an offer on the high end of your
range or the low end. You could find yourself in a situation
with multiple offers on your desired house, or where no one
has made an offer in weeks.
Transition markets are more difficult to define. If the
economy slows unexpectedly, as it did in the early nineties,
people who buy on the high end of a seller’s market
(like the late eighties) could find their home loses value
for several years. So far, no one has proven reliable in predicting
when markets change or how good or bad the real estate market
will become.
How Seller Motivation Affects Your
Offer Price
Truthfully, it is rather rare that a seller’s motivation
will dramatically affect the price of a home, but it is often
possible to save a few thousand dollars. The most common "motivated
seller" is someone who has already bought his or her
next home or is relocating to a new area. They will be under
the gun to sell the home quickly or face the prospect of
making two mortgage payments at the same time. Since that
can drain a bank account quickly, most sellers want to avoid
such a situation and may be willing to give up a few thousand
dollars to avoid the possibility.
There are also family crises that can motivate a seller
to make a quick deal. However, when you see a real estate
ad that mentions "divorce," "motivated seller,"
"relocation," or something to that affect, beware.
Although the facts may be true, that does not necessarily
mean the seller is motivated to make a quick and costly sale.
Most likely, the ad is more designed to generate phone calls
and leads rather than sell the home.
However, there are times when a seller is truly distressed,
willing to make a quick sale and sacrifice thousands of dollars.
With the seller’s permission, the listing agent will
post this information along with the listing in the Multiple
Listing Service. They may also inform other agents during
office and association marketing sessions or by flyers sent
to other real estate offices. Provided this information has
been made generally available to Realtors, your agent should
know when a seller is truly motivated and when it is just
"puff" designed to elicit interest in a property.
The exception is when an agent is selling a home they have
listed themselves or selling a home that was listed by another
agent from their own company. In such a situation, the agent
may be acting as an agent for the seller, or as a "dual
agent," representing both you and the seller. In such
a situation, they cannot legally provide you with information
that would give you an advantage over the seller (for more
information on agency, click here).
The Final Decision on Your Offer
Price
Comparable sales information helps you to determine a base
price range for a particular home. Adding in the various
factors like property condition, improvements, market conditions,
and seller motivation help determine whether a "fair"
price would be at the upper limit of that range or the lower
limit. Perhaps you will feel a fair price is outside of that
price range.
The "fair" price should be approximately what
you are willing to agree on at the end of negotiations with
the seller. The price you put in your offer to begin negotiations
is totally up to you and depends on your negotiating style.
Most buyers start off somewhat lower than the price they eventually
want to pay.
Although your agent may provide advice and guidance, you
are the one who makes the decision. The price you put in the
offer is totally up to you.
Tips brought to you by
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About Blaine Morris, Marin Properties
As a top-producing licensed REALTOR with
Frank Howard Allen in Greenbrae, California, Blaine Morris
specializes in Central and Southern Marin County. Always just
a phone call or email away, Blaine works seven days a week
for his clients, providing them with the utmost in fast and
efficient service and follow through. Whether you are searching
for the home of your dreams, or thinking of selling it, Blaine
can turn your dreams into reality! Behind Blaine is the strength
and stability of the Central Marin office of Frank Howard
Allen, the #1 office of the #1 Brokerage in Marin County.
Contact him today at 415.925.3279 or
click here.
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