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KELLEY’S MARKET TRENDS 38 FLOOR SPACE 39 Real Estate
WMake the Most of Your Comps
if you live in an older, less planned com- munity. “It helps in neighborhoods where you can’t nd the exact same oor plan,” he says.
No one has sold a home in your neigh- borhood yet: If you’re the rst to sell in a newly developed neighborhood – or your area is coming out of a housing slump – and you’re the rst seller out of the gate that might be bad news for your comps.
“Some sellers are held hostage because no one [else] has sold their home,” Jarvis says. “It’s a weird stando where the rst one that sells loses but blazes a trail for others.”
So you can at least pat yourself on the back for helping out your neighbors, right?
What if Your Comps Don’t Measure Up?
The information you get should be thorough, but what if the prices seem skewed, or you get the feeling your real- tor isn’t pulling the right comps?
While not all realtors are going to have an “Other” section, they should include information on location and surround- ings, the pricing should make sense, and the realtor should be able to tell you why she included what she did.
But don’t expect her to give you the green light to ask for loads of money just because your neighbors are living in squalor. Remember: Your realtor wants to help you get your house sold, but she also has ethics to consider.
A real estate professional will com- ment that your street warrants a higher value, realtors are under a strict code of ethics that do not allow us to comment on neighborhood demographic.
But if you think that isn’t the problem – and more investigative work should have been done – ask for it. Your realtor can run the comps again.
E’VE ALL HAD THAT CRA- zily obsessive-compulsive neighbor who keeps his prop-
erty in pristine, showroom condition, keeps a stern eye on the whole street, and never hesitates to walk over and scold you about your broken shutters while you’re trying to drag groceries in from the car.
Maybe you’ve wondered what hap- pened to cause your neighbor to get so uptight in the rst place. Our guess: He’s tried to sell a house before. And he got burned by the comps.
When you’re getting ready to put your house up for sale, your realtor will likely run a comparable market analysis (or CMAs, aka “comps”). Comps are usually a good thing—the information can really help you price your house right.
But what happens when good comps go bad?
How Comps Work
First, a little background. To nd a comp, a realtor looks at homes in your area comparable to yours that sold recently. So if you have a three-bedroom, the real- tor will probably come back with the three-bedroom one block over that sold last month. She’ll be armed with the sold price, the list price, and other salient facts.
In theory, all that info can be used to decide a good list price for your house. But the reality is that collecting methods might not be perfect.
When Comps Work – and When They Don’t
If you’re lucky enough to be living in an eerily perfect place that reeks of the 1998 classic “Pleasantville,” you probably won’t run into any trouble. Congrats! But if your hood is unusual or a little rough around the edges – or your home is a one- of-a-kind, and maybe not in a great way –comps might send you traveling down
the wrong road.
Price your home too high due to those
in ated comps, then it simply might not sell. Your realtor can drop the listing price – again and again, if necessary – but then buyers might wonder if something’s wrong with the place. Price it too low, and your home will probably get snapped up right away – but you’ll walk away with less than you could have netted. Either way, it’s a bummer.
So you need to know the di erent comp-skewing dangers and how to deal with them.
So What are the Trouble Areas?
Having the best house on the block is rarely a good thing, and this is especially true in those up-and-coming areas. You just know you have what it takes to turn things around, but you might pay for it with a bad comp.
Most pros will adjust the analysis by pointing out the lower-priced homes and
tax values. But the only real way to tell how a neighborhood works is in person.
What is the neighborhood adjacent to? There can be adverse factors with adjoin- ing properties.
When you’re looking at your comps, make sure they factor in all the nearby things – good and bad.
The comps were based on number of bedrooms, but not square foot- age: When running comps, the number of bedrooms and baths de nitely comes into play. After all, your two-bedroom isn’t the same as the ve-bedroom down the block.
But the number of rooms shouldn’t be the only thing that matters. If your home has two master suites and the compara- ble home has two impossibly tiny rooms that should be taken into consideration.
“Price per square foot is another excellent tool in pricing,” says Joshua Jarvis, founder of Jarvis Team Realty in Duluth, GA.
Square footage is especially important
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MAY 4, 2016 // FLATHEADBEACON.COM