Monday, January 26, 2015

Learn 8 Great Tips & Fun Facts Related To Your Real Estate


Looking to buy a home? It’s better to be on a “Way” than a “Street,” pick a female real-estate agent and try to be close to a Starbucks.

Are you a Northern Virginia homeowner or looking to buy a home in the next few months?  Of course many of these fun facts might not pertain to you but there are a few that stuck out for me and something that we have noticed in the local housing market.

Best return on your investment (#2 below) is a bathroom remodel which have quite a strong return, especially when compared to kitchen and basement remodels.

Here are the items to consider that I read this morning:

H/T New York Post


That’s the advice of Spencer Rascoff, CEO of Zillow.com, who collected statistics from his site’s database of 110 million homes to find trends in real-estate pricing. Along with Zillow economist Stan Humphries, he has written “The New Rules of Real Estate” (Grand Central), out Tuesday. Some of his findings:


    Luxury Northern Virginia Homes
  1. The Starbucks effect. Take two identical homes sold in 1997. One near Starbucks would have sold for an average of $137,000, while the same home without a Starbucks would have sold for $102,000. Fast-forward 15 years: the average US home appreciated 65 percent to $168,000, but the property next to Starbucks skyrockets 96 percent to $269,000.
  2. All renovations are not created equal. The greatest return for your investment is a mid-range bathroom remodel, a $3,000 job that returns $1.71 for every dollar spent. The worst home improvements for value are kitchen remodeling and finishing a basement. A top-of-the-line kitchen reno will cost you $22,000, and you’ll only get about $0.51 back for every $1 you spend.
  3. Use the right words in a listing. Avoid “unique,” “TLC,” “investment” and “potential” — these could lower sale prices by as much as 7 percent. But words like “luxurious” for bottom-tier homes and “captivating” for top-tier homes could add 8.2 percent to your home’s value. Longer, more-detailed listings often sell for more.
  4. “When” is as important as “how much.” The worst time to sell is the second week of December (listings sold for 2.8 percent less than average). The best time is March, when homes sold faster and for 2 percent more.
  5. Seven is an unlucky number. Homes with “777” as their address sell for 2.1 percent less than Luxury Northern Virginia Homestheir estimated value; house numbers that just include 777 (such as 17779 Main St.), sell for 1.8 percent less. Oddly, houses with just 7 as their number sell for 1.8 percent more than the estimated sale price.
  6. Psychological pricing works. Listings with a nine in the thousand digit ($450,000 vs. $449,000) sell anywhere from four days to a full week faster.
  7. Female agents tend to sell homes faster and for higher prices.
  8. What’s in a name? A lot of cash, according to Zillow’s data. Homes on named streets tend to be 2 percent more valuable ­nationwide than numbered ones.  But Main Street homes garner 4 percent less than America’s median home value. 

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