Comparable Sales in Pricing Your Home
How to Use
Comparable Sales to Price Your Home
Article
From BuyAndSell.HouseLogic.com
By:
Carl Vogel
Published: August 05, 2010
Before
you put your home up for sale, use the right comparable sales to find the
perfect price.
How much can you sell your home for? Probably about as
much as the neighbors got, as long as the neighbors sold their house in recent
memory and their home was just like your home.
Knowing how much homes similar to yours, called comparable
sales (or in real estate lingo, comps), sold for gives you the best idea of the
current estimated value of your home. The trick is finding sales that closely
match yours.
What makes a
good comparable sale?
Your best comparable sale is the same model as your house
in the same subdivision-and it closed escrow last week. If you can't find that,
here are other factors that count:
Location: The closer to your house the better, but don't just use any
comparable sale within a mile radius. A good comparable sale is a house in your
neighborhood, your subdivision, on the same type of street as your house, and
in your school district.
Home type: Try to find comparable sales that are like your home in
style, construction material, square footage, number of bedrooms and baths,
basement (having one and whether it's finished), finishes, and yard size.
Amenities and upgrades: Is the kitchen new? Does the comparable sale
house have full A/C? Is there crown molding, a deck, or a pool? Does your
community have the same amenities (pool, workout room, walking trails, etc.)
and homeowners association fees?
Date of sale: You may want to use a comparable sale from two years ago
when the market was high, but that won't fly. Most buyers use
government-guaranteed mortgages, and those lending programs say comparable
sales can be no older than 90 days.
Sales sweeteners: Did the comparable-sale sellers give the buyers
downpayment assistance, closing costs, or a free television? You have to reduce
the value of any comparable sale to account for any deal sweeteners.
Agents can
help adjust price based on insider insights
Even if you live in a subdivision, your home will always
be different from your neighbors'. Evaluating those differences-like the fact
that your home has one more bedroom than the comparables or a basement
office-is one of the ways real estate agents add value.
An active agent has been inside a lot of homes in your neighborhood and knows
all sorts of details about comparable sales. She has read the comments the selling
agent put into the MLS, seen the ugly wallpaper, and heard what other
REALTORS®, lenders, closing agents, and appraisers said about the
comparable sale.
More ways to
pick a home listing price
If you're still having trouble picking out a listing price
for your home, look at the current competition. Ask your real estate agent to
be honest about your home and the other homes on the market (and then listen to
her without taking the criticism personally).
Next, put your comparable sales into two piles: more expensive and less
expensive. What makes your home more valuable than the cheaper comparable sales
and less valuable than the pricier comparable sales?
Are
foreclosures and short sales comparables?
If one or more of your comparable sales was a foreclosed
home or a short sale (a home that sold for less money than the owners owed on
the mortgage), ask your real estate agent how to treat those comps.
A foreclosed home is usually in poor condition because
owners who can't pay their mortgage can't afford to pay for upkeep. Your home
is in great shape, so the foreclosure should be priced lower than your home.
Short sales are typically in good condition, although they are still distressed
sales. The owners usually have to sell because they're divorcing, or their
employer is moving them to Kansas.
How much short sales are discounted from their market
value varies among local markets. The average short-sale home in Omaha in
recent years was discounted by 8.5%, according to a University of Nebraska at
Omaha study. In suburban Washington, D.C., sellers typically discount
short-sale homes by 3% to 5% to get them quickly sold, real estate agents
report. In other markets, sellers price short sales the same as other homes in
the neighborhood.
So you have to rely on your REALTOR's® knowledge of the local market to
use a short sale as a comparable sale.
More from
HouseLogic
What You Must Know About Home Appraisals
(http://buyandsell.houselogic.com/articles/what-you-must-know-home-appraisals/)
6 Reasons to Reduce Your Home Price
(http://buyandsell.houselogic.com/articles/6-Reasons-To-Reduce-Your-Home-Price/)
Other web resources
What's the Value of a View? Research from Texas Christian
University (http://www.sbuweb.tcu.edu/mrodriguez/research/viewppr.pdf)
Carl Vogel, a
freelance writer and former editor of The Neighborhood Works magazine, lives in
a home in Chicago that is not typical of those nearby, so he appreciates a
savvy comp.