As a home seller, your goal is to sell your property quickly for the most money possible. However, in the wake of COVID-19, you’ll need to take some extra steps to adapt your selling strategy to the current market — such as incorporating social distancing procedures with in-person home tours.
Here, we’ve outlined several steps would-be sellers should take to seal the deal (safely!) and get top dollar for their home.
Clean and Declutter
If you’re thinking about putting your home on the market, give it a deep clean in preparation for potential buyers who may visit for an in-person tour. You should also declutter the entire space. That’s because you want potential buyers to envision themselves — and not your junk — in the home. Decluttering reveals a room’s dimensions, architectural details and natural light, according to REALTOR® Magazine.
Of all the updates you can make in preparation for a resale, simply cleaning your home is among the least expensive, and it has a big impact. If you do it yourself, you’ll only need to foot the bill for cleaning supplies. If you decide to have your home professionally cleaned, you can expect prices to range from $100 to $180 per hour for a cleaning service, according to HomeAdvisor.com. The fee will vary based on the size, location and condition of your home.
Once the cleaning is done, it may be worth the investment to hire a professional home stager. This person will reconfigure your space using furniture, art and home decor items to make it more attractive to potential buyers.
Choose the Right Agent for You
ust as you would with any contractor, it’s smart to interview at least three agents who do a lot of business in your neighborhood or your condo building. Ask friends and neighbors for references. Or you can search for one on Realtor.com by clicking on the Find Realtors® tab.
When interviewing potential agents, beware of the one who suggests listing your home for the highest possible price. Chances are, he or she is just trying to snag the listing; reality is, it won’t likely sell for that much. This is a tactic that could deter buyers and delay the sale
Once you’ve found an agent you’d like to work with, it’s a good idea to commit to the shortest possible listing period — say, three months — and renew it if you’d like. But that doesn’t mean you’re stuck with an agent who turns out to be a nightmare. Before signing a listing agreement, make sure it outlines the agent’s duties and includes clauses that allow you to terminate or opt out of the contractual relationship if certain circumstances change (say, a job opportunity fell through or your spouse died) or because you believe the agent has failed to perform.
Determine How Much You’ll Have to Pay Your Agent
Traditionally, the seller pays a commission ranging from 5% to 6% of the home’s sale price. That amount is divided equally between the selling agent and the buyer’s agent.
For a lower-cost alternative, consider using an agent who works for Redfin, a real estate brokerage active in more than 90 U.S. markets. Sellers who list with a Redfin agent pay 1.5% of their home’s sale price in commission — or 1% if they also buy their next home from a Redfin agent within one year (the 1% rate isn’t available in all cities). You still pay a 2.5% or 3% commission to the buyer’s agent. So, the total commission ranges from 3.5% to 4.5%.
If you have a nice home and are willing to pay more to sell quickly, consider an iBuyer (“i” is for instant), such as Opendoor, Offerpad, Redfin Now or Zillow Offers. If your home meets their criteria, they’ll make you a free, no-obligation purchase offer. If you accept the offer, you can close for cash in as little as a week. You’ll pay from 6% to 14% of the home’s sale price, but you won’t pay fix-up or carrying costs while you’re trying to sell.
If your home is older and in poor condition, you could list it with an agent to sell “as is” to fixer-uppers, flippers or landlords. You’ll pay the usual agent’s commission, but no fix-up expenses. If you want the quickest possible sale with the least hassle and expense, you could sell directly to a real-estate investor. To find one, ask for a referral from a local real estate agent, search by location at HomeVestors.com or WeBuyHouses.com, or respond to one of the “we want to buy your house” or “sell your house fast” solicitations you’ve probably received in the mail. (For more information, see Retirees, Sell Your Home Without a Hassle.)
Set the Right Price
Your agent should provide you with a comparative market analysis, which examines the selling prices of homes similar to yours in size, amenities and location. You’ll want to use it as a guide to help set your asking price.
If it’s a seller’s market (meaning the demand is strong, but the supply is insufficient) and home prices continue to rise, you may get multiple bids that drive up your original list price. If buyers have the advantage and home prices are flattening or declining, you may have to negotiate a lower sale price or offer to pay some of the buyer’s closing expenses.
Remember, whatever purchase price you agree upon, it still must pass muster with an appraisal of the home’s current market value, which protects the buyer and the mortgage lender.
Be Prepared to Disclose Your Home’s Defects
It’s the law in most places to disclose knowledge of any material defects. You may be required to reveal known problems of your home’s roof, walls, foundation, basement, plumbing, heating and electrical systems, as well as past pest problems and the presence of hazardous materials such as radon, lead paint and asbestos. Your state may even require you to fill out a standard disclosure form.
Honesty is always the best policy. Even if you don’t disclose problems, the buyer’s home inspector is likely to discover them and your lack of transparency could cause the buyer to walk away. And, if he or she discovers the problem after the sale closes, you could be sued for misrepresentation or omission in your disclosure.
You could proactively hire a home inspector to identify small and big problems that you can have fixed before listing your property. The cost of a home inspection will run you about $300 to $400, according to HomeAdvisor.com. The fee may vary by region and sometimes on the age, size and construction of the house.
Protect Yourself and Your Home in the COVID-19 Era
As a seller, you have control over how your property is shown. This past spring, as the coronavirus outbreak emerged, many home sellers delayed listing their homes for sale or temporarily took them off the market.
Meanwhile, the National Association of Realtors® (NAR) strongly urged members to conduct virtual showings and to limit in-person activity as much as possible. Many of the organization’s other recommendations will persist as states and localities reopen for business. Your agent should discuss them with you. They include:
When Buyers Show Up, Leave!
So you’ve done your best to prepare your home for sale: You’ve cleaned, decluttered, repaired and staged. Now, when it’s being shown, leave the premises. You want the buyers to feel comfortable looking around your house, not wondering where they’ll encounter you lurking next.
If they have any questions, their agent will call yours. Besides, when you meet with buyers face-to-face, you might inadvertently reveal how motivated you are to sell and other clues that erode your negotiating power. With social distancing, it’s probably safer not to be there, too.
Bridge the Gap Between Homes
You may face the dilemma of wanting to buy your next home before having sold your previous one. Where will you get the money to make a down payment and close on the new home? You have a couple of options:
You can make your purchase offer contingent on the sale of your current home. Sellers are most likely to accept the contingency if the local market is hot and your previous home is likely to sell quickly. (However, if they have received multiple offers, they may not accept an offer with any contingencies.)
Or, you can borrow the money to cover a down payment and closing costs on your new home until your old one sells. Bridge loans, a type of home-equity loan formerly used for this purpose, have all but disappeared. But you can borrow the money you need from a home-equity line of credit secured by your current home, from an IRA or a 401(k), or from your investment portfolio.
Ultimately, you’ll want to weigh the risk that you could end up owning and paying mortgages on two homes for some time. The safest strategy is to sell first, then buy.
For more about borrowing from your retirement accounts to buy a home, see How Home Buyers Can Tap an IRA Penalty-Free and Should You Borrow From Your 401(k)?
So You Sold at a Loss . . .
Don’t expect Uncle Sam to lend a helping hand if you lose money on the sale of your personal residence. Plenty of homeowners experienced losses if they had to sell in the aftermath of the housing crisis beginning in mid 2006. But, even in a healthy market where home prices are rising, you could lose money if you sell before you’ve increased your home equity enough (through home-price appreciation and paying down your mortgage balance) to offset your cost to sell.
Next Steps If You Profit From a Home Sale
If you own and live in a home for a total of 24 months within the five years prior to the date of sale, you won’t owe taxes on up to $250,000 in home-sale profits if single, or $500,000 in profits if married filing jointly. The home must be your main home (for criteria, see IRS Publication 23, Selling Your Home). That means most homeowners won’t pay a dime to Uncle Sam on their home-sale profits.
If you’re married and filing jointly, only one spouse must meet the ownership test (one of you owned the home for a total of 24 months within the five years prior to the date of sale), but both of you must meet the residence test (you both lived in the home for at least 24 months).
If you inherit a home, you’ll only owe taxes on the stepped-up basis of the home. For exceptions to this rule (notably for divorced spouses, widows or widowers and members of the uniformed services, foreign service, intelligence agencies or Peace Corps on qualified, extended duty), the IRS Publication 523 provides guidance: You may qualify for a partial exclusion of any gain if the main reason for your home sale was a change in workplace location, a health issue, or an unforeseeable event.
The Tax Impact of Selling a Deceased Parent’s Home
Say your father bought his home in 1950 for $15,000. When he died, he left you the house, which is now worth $315,000. Do you have to pay taxes on the $300,000 gain? Probably not.
When you sell the house, your gain or loss will be measured from the fair market value of the home on the date your mother or father died (the tax basis) of $315,000. If you sell for more, the difference will be taxed as a long-term gain. Be sure to keep track of selling costs including the real estate agent’s commission, any closing costs you pay and the cost of repairs that you agree to pay after the buyer’s home inspection. You can subtract these costs from the sale price of the home to reduce taxable profit.
If you sell for less and your capital losses are more than your capital gains, you can deduct the difference as a loss on your tax return. You can claim up to $3,000 of the loss annually (or $1,500 if married and filing separately), and you can carry over the balance of the loss to next year’s tax return.
Source: Kiplinger