Special offer

Define "Perfect"

By
Real Estate Agent with RE/MAX Realty South WA State: 75600

not quite perfectBuyers, what is "perfect?"

Believe me, I understand that this is a buyer's market ... and in a buyer's market, buyers can really really be choosy, but let's talk about this for just a minute.

Here's a scenario:

Suppose you walk into a house and right away the wallpaper in the entry is just a turn off for you. Do you walk further? Or do you leave?

Let me throw a couple of ideas out to you:

Suppose, just suppose, that should you walk through that wallpapered entry, you find that the rest of the house is, to your taste, poorly decorated or poorly painted, or the colors just don't appeal, or the carpet is worn, or it has cooking smells, or wet doggy smells, or whatever. The layout is perfect. Big rooms, big yard, great bones! But OH, it just needs sooo much paint, new carpet, etc.

What do you do?

Do you pass on the house because it just needs too much work?

Do you attempt to see past the decorating and into the house?

Is it your taste that's different, or is it the seller's?

What if that weird house is priced considerably below the rest of the market? But at the top of your number? Will that make a difference?

So ... let me ask this question another way: How long do you anticipate you'll stay in your new home? Long enough to make it yours? Would "any" house be absolutely/exactly to your taste on first look?

I believe that, for the most part, homeownership is long term. Granted there are investment properties, but I'm not talking about those here. Making a house your own is part of the charm and, for some, one of the biggest reasons a home is bought. So the walls can be painted florescent pink with purple stripes if they want. (just don't do that on the outside if there's a Homeowner's Association!)

Granted, as an agent I attempt to counsel my seller clients that staging works wonders and minimizing the "uh oh" factor is critical. Sometimes, however, a seller absolutely loves their decorating, or even more commonly now, just can't afford to make any neutralizing changes. Perhaps the Distressed Property thing is going on. Sometimes there's just extreme push back from a seller when encouraged to allow changes and modifications to be made.

I also attempt to counsel my buyer clients to look beyond the surface of a home. To look at the layout, the potential lifestyle the home, yard, and neighborhood provides.

Perfect!

So ... back to my original question: Do you walk further and look for the hidden beauty in a house that's in your price range ... or do you leave?

Posted by

Your Dedicated Realtor(r), ActiveRain Blogger, Seller, Buyer, and Short Sale agent working the Auburn, Kent, Renton, Maple Valley, Federal Way, Covington, Puyallup, Sumner, Bonney Lake, Lake Tapps, and north/northeast Tacoma areas. Visit my Web site too!

 

2011-2014 Five Star Professional's Best in Client Service and Client Satisfaction, as published in Seattle Magazine

Gary Woltal
Keller Williams Realty - Flower Mound, TX
Assoc. Broker Realtor SFR Dallas Ft. Worth

Gay, a builder once told me and I remind all clients of this, "There is no such thing as a perfect house." Quit trying to turn one you are selling into it or searching for it. Great thoughts.

Jan 13, 2009 11:59 AM
Troy Erickson AZ Realtor (602) 295-6807
HomeSmart - Chandler, AZ
Your Chandler, Ahwatukee, and East Valley Realtor

I am amazed at how many times I have buyers turn down a home that sounds exactly like what they told me they wanted, because they didn't like the paint color on the walls or like you said didn't like the wallpaper, the light fixtures, or the home looked dirty.  Those are things that can easily be corrected, and really have no impact on how the buyer will be able to make the home theirs.  For a few hundred bucks, it could be their perfect home.  Now, if a buyer wants a split floorplan, and the home I show them is not a split floorplan, I can see why they might pass on it.

Jan 13, 2009 05:59 PM
Gabrielle Nemes
RE/MAX Realty South - Tumwater, WA
206.300.8421, S King & Pierce County RE Advocate

HI Gary: Thanks for popping in. I'm often flabbergasted (like Troy) with the reaction I get from Buyers when touring a house. I agree, Troy, but sometimes trying to help the Buyer understand that over time the carpet can be changed, the walls can be painted, the color and shape of the toilet can be changed too ... well, okay, the toilet can be changed! I've even been known to buy a 5-gallon bucket of paint for both Sellers and Buyers! ARGH. This market is so screwy.

Jan 15, 2009 10:48 AM
Colleen Fischesser Northwest Property Shop
NextHome Experience - Chelan, WA
A Tradition of Trust in the Pacific NW since 1990!

Gay, I think many buyers today are completely missing the forest for the trees. Hopefully with more sales, they will begin to gain confidence and not pick apart everything with every house....you know, find a reason not to buy it.

Jan 15, 2009 02:31 PM
Nancy Conner
Olympia, WA
Olympia/Thurston County WA

How true!  I have often told buyers holding out for perfection that although I live in a house we had custom built and that I just love, it is still not perfect - if we had it to do over again there are several changes we would make.  What a shame when they cannot visualize how easily the un-perfect could be perfected!

Jan 18, 2009 07:42 AM
Corey & Erika Kahler
The Cascade Team - Kirkland, WA

So true!  My house is far from perfect, but we loved the location, the layout, and the big backyard.  Little by little, we are transforming it into what I pictured when I first saw it!  In the meantime, the house works for us and we love our neighborhood.  

I know people are busy and don't want to do a lot of work, but if the changes simple... why not go for it?

Feb 17, 2009 04:59 AM
Gabrielle Nemes
RE/MAX Realty South - Tumwater, WA
206.300.8421, S King & Pierce County RE Advocate

Thanks for stopping by, Corey & Erika! I sometimes wonder whether, as agents, we're so accustomed to seeing the "non-perfect" houses and we naturally are able to see past the imperfections! I've been told, though, that the expection of "perfect" is a generational thing. AACK! That must mean I'm old!!!

Feb 21, 2009 05:15 AM