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sale a home by owner is not difficult

Sale Your Home by Owner


Feature Article

by Lois Center-Shabazz
 
 

I have actually sold a couple of homes as a "for sale by owner" seller. It wasn't as easy as I thought it would be. But I made the decision based on the fact that I had not owned the homes long enough to generate substantial equity to pay a real estate commission. These are the things I learned from my actual experience, my research, talking to real estate agents, and talking to others who had sold a home. I spoke with two friends who are ex-real estate agents, and they helped me quite a bit. I also took an appraisal course many years ago in anticipation of starting a real estate appraisal business. I did not start the business, but I learned a lot about appraising homes.

First of all, expect to be bombarded by real agents eager to list your home, when they see your, "For Sale by Owner" sign. They will contact you over and over hoping that you will become frustrated with the whole process, throw up your hands and say, "where is that pesky real estate agent? I'm listing my house with her or him, yesterday!" Unfortunately, sometimes you will feel like that, but don't give up too soon. The following information should be helpful.

1. Fix up your home to make it presentable to sell. That includes electrical and plumbing in tip-top shape, clean carpet, clean walls, clean doors, an attractive front door, and well-groomed landscaping, and maintenance painting, just to name a few.

2. Then you need to decide how much to sell your house for. If your asking price is too high, your home could stay on the market a long time. If your asking price is too low you may lose money you deserve. There are several ways to find out the right sales price. If the homes in your neighborhood are very similar, i.e. square footage, number of bedrooms (bathrooms), and similar size yard, you can use the recent sales from the last two homes similar to yours, in your immediate neighborhood. It gets a bit more complicated when the homes are all different, but appraisers use a similar method. You will have to find homes with your similar square footage, number of bedrooms, number of bathrooms, and if the home is on a lake, gulf course or ocean. You can also pay for a sales appraisal, use your local yellow pages for a listing of real estate appraisers. The next option is to check city or county records. Just call your local city records office and ask them where you can find information on the most recent home sales in your area. Verify which of these homes are similar to yours and use those comparisons to price your home.

3. Then there are the forms, those dreaded forms! They are dreaded but necessary for the legal transfer of your property to another person. You will need legal real estate sales and disclosure documents for your home sale. You can get these documents from a title company or you can pay a real estate lawyer to do the work for you. The real estate lawyer will provide you with the documents and fill them out correctly, for no more than an hourly fee. Verify his/her fee, the time it will take, and agree on a fee before he/she fills out the documents.

4. Let the buyer know that he/she can pay for an independent inspection of your home,
and put it in writing. The new buyer can have an inspection for plumbing, electrical, and structural soundness as well as other things. To be on the safe side, I paid for an independent inspection on one of my homes, I had several things fixed as a result, before I sold the home.

5. Let them know that they need to choose a mortgage company. Both of the buyers in my case had never purchased a home. So, I did some research on the best mortgage companies in the area and gave them several to choose from, this just helped to speed up the process. The mortgage company gave them title companies to choose from or they can search for their own title company. For safety purposes, you could have the person go to your mortgage company of choice and get pre-qualified, before you show your home. This way you will know, who the person is, and that they are serious about purchasing your home.

6. Now let's get back to those pesky real estate agents.
There may be an aggressive real estate agent or two who will actually present you a buyer. If that agent is willing to take 3 or 4%, which very few actually can, and they have a buyer, then you may want to talk. The problem you may experience is trying to negotiate with an experienced real estate agent, they will most likely try to get you to reduce your price for their buyer. Make sure you add up your cost, 4% to the realtor, fixing up the home for sale, your mortgage sellers cost (sellers usually pay around 2%), and your moving cost. Do you have enough equity in your home to pay all of these costs and still have a substantial amount to put down on another home? Most homeowners who sale their own home, do so because they don't have enough equity to pay a real estate agents cost of 6 or 7%. So, don't let an experienced real estate agent come along and talk you into decreasing the price of your home, and giving them 3 or 4% real estate commission, in that case you could have hired a real estate agent to do everything to began with, and the agent could get full price for your home.

 

Lois Center-Shabazz is the founder of MsFinancialSavvy.com and author of the 3-time award-winning personal finance book, Let's Get Financial Savvy! ISBN #0971979502.


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