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"Your Personal
Estate Consultant!"
425-954-4020
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The High Cost of
Overpricing
by Dick Baldwin, Owner, Windermere-Seattle Capitol Hill
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he most
critical step in preparing to market a home is
determining the listing price. |
All sellers want to realize the highest possible
return from their property. It is obvious that pricing a
property too low cannot provide the highest return; it
is less obvious, but true, that pricing a property too
high will also produce less than the best return. The
right price produces the best return.
Too high a price is costly because it causes a
property to miss its market. When a price is too high,
those buyers for whom the home would be right won't see
the house because it is out of their price range. Buyers
who are in the price range suggested by the asking price
will not see the property as a good value and will buy
something else. Further, agents will be reluctant to
show the property, except perhaps to make a competing
property look like a good buy. Good agents are not those
who can sell overpriced homes to gullible buyers; good
agents are those who present to buyers homes which are
good, fair values.
Sellers often feel that they want to test the market
at a high price. While there may seem to be no harm in
starting high and lowering the price if necessary,
testing the market can be risky. A property receives its
fullest exposure in the first three to five weeks on the
market. The best buyers for any property are those
choice prospects who will see a property during those
first weeks. If it does not appear to be a good value,
they will decide not to buy, and it is rare that such
buyers return to a property later even if the price is
reduced. Thus, the person who tests the market may turn
away the best of his potential market.
Another danger of testing the market is that the
seller will come to believe in what started out as an
exploratory price. Even when the market provides
evidence that the price is too high, the seller will be
unwilling to reduce the price. Or, what is worse, a
seller may turn down an offer that is low relative to
the asking price but which in fact is the best offer
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that will be received. In an extreme example, a seller
whose house was listed at $600,000 turned down an early
offer of $450,000; a year and a half later the house
sold only after the asking price was reduced to
$395,000. The overpriced house stays on the market, and
statistics from the Multiple Listing Service indicate
that the longer a house is on the market, the lower the
selling price in relation to the asking price. The
owner of an overpriced home risks receiving less than
value not simply because the price ultimately received
is lower than might have been obtained with a more
realistic initial price. The high price includes other
costs. Some of those costs are financial; a home on the
market is a non-productive asset. An unsold house
represents financial resources committed to continuing
ownership costs: interest, taxes, maintenance and the
loss of the potential alternative uses of the funds tied
up in the property.
There are also non-monetary costs. An unsold house
prevents the owner from proceeding with whatever plans
led to the decision to sell: purchase of a different
home, moving from the area, consolidating households,
liquidating an estate, concluding a divorce. The costs
of deferred personal plans cannot be measured, but they
should still be kept in mind when pricing a home.
Pricing a home is part art, part science. Like
science, the pricing process should be based on
evidence: the prices paid for comparable properties in
recent sales. Since no two homes are exactly alike,
however, the evidence must be evaluated and a judgment
reached. Because each of us has a great deal of
emotional attachment to our own home, the judgment of
professional agents who can take a detached view is
vital. The right price produces the best return.
The cost of overpricing can be very high. |
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Presented By: Chris Mattix, Lynnwood
425-954-4020 | mattixc@windermere.com
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