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THE
SMART WAY TO LOOK AT HOME IMPROVEMENTS
What home improvements really pay off when the time comes
to sell your house?
Thats an important question for any homeowner contemplating
moving or remodeling. And the only possible answer is
a somewhat complicated one.
That answer starts with the fact that really major improvements
- room additions, total replacements of kitchens and baths,
etc., -- rarely pay off fully in the near term. It ends
with the fact that small and relatively inexpensive changes
can pay off in a big way in making your home attractive
to buyers if your decision is to move now.
Its a simple fact, consistently confirmed across
America over a very long period of time, that even the
most appropriate major improvements are unlikely to return
their full cost if a house is sold within two or three
years.
Does that mean that major home improvements are always
a bad idea? Absolutely not. It does mean, though, that
if your present house falls seriously short of meeting
your familys needs you need to think twice - and
think carefully - before deciding to undertake a major
renovation. Viewed strictly in investment terms, major
improvements rarely make as much sense as selling your
present home and buying one thats carefully selected
to provide you with what you want.
Even if you have a special and strong attachment to the
house youre in and feel certain that you could be
happy in it for a long time if only it had more bedrooms
and baths, for example, there are a few basic rules that
you ought to keep in mind.
Probably the most basic rule of all, in this regard, is
the one that says you should never -unless you absolutely
dont care at all about eventual resale value - improve
a house to the point where its desired sales price would
be more than 20 percent higher than the most expensive
of the other houses in the immediate neighborhood.
Try to raise the value of your house too high, that is,
and surrounding properties will pull it down.
Here are some other rules worth remembering:
- Never
rearrange the interior of your house in a way that reduces
the total number of bedrooms to less than three.
- Never
add a third bathroom to a two-bath house unless you
dont care about ever recouping your investment.
- Swimming
pools rarely return what you spend to install them.
- Ditto
for sun rooms - and finished basements.
- If
you decide to do whats usually the smart thing
and move rather than improve, its often the smaller,
relatively inexpensive improvements that turn out to
be most worth doing.
The
cost of replacing a discolored toilet bow, making sure
all the windows work or getting rid of dead trees and
shrubs in trivial compared with adding a bathroom, but
such things can have a big and very positive impact on
prospective buyers. A good broker can help you decide
which expenditures make sense and which dont, and
can save you a lot of money in the process.
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