‘In the know’ Australians talk about selling their house
By Nina Tovey
Hiring staging furniture, understanding your target market and being open to negotiating with potential buyers are just some of the top tips recommended by a collection of savvy property owners when it comes to selling your first home.
If you’re about to move onto the next chapter and sell your first home or investment property, you might be feeling mixed emotions about seeing the ‘for sale’ sign go up as you reflect on the memories you’ve made in that particular phase of your life.
On top of the emotions that can come with selling your first home, there are a lot of important practical decisions to consider that can help maximise your chances of a smooth sale and securing the right price. That’s where it could be a good idea to learn through the experience of people who have been down this road before. With this in mind we’ve asked a group of Australians to reflect on their key lessons learned, and to offer some of their top tips for first-time vendors.
Keep your buyer’s motivation in mind
“Before you even come to selling your home, don’t overcapitalise when building or renovating. Always keep in mind who your potential target market might be should you decide to sell your home. Try and find an agent who is honest and backs up their opinions with factual reports. In our case, our first home sold well under what we thought it was worth, because when we first placed the house on the market, we hadn’t understood the motivation for the buyer to purchase our home in a semi-rural suburb.
Once we understood we were looking for tree changers who were motivated
downsizing their mortgage, we were able to price accordingly and sell within the month, after sitting on the market for 12 months at the higher price point. Had we priced appropriately from the start, we would have saved a considerable amount in agent fees, meaning the lower sale price would not have been so significant.”
Make the most of your mortgage offset account
“Our first property ‘swap’ was much easier than we expected it to be because of one thing: we’d made extra repayments not into our initial loan, but into the attached offset account. While it’s important to carefully read the terms and conditions to make sure you’re getting a good deal, offset accounts can potentially offer a range of benefits. Need a deposit? It’s there. If you buy before you sell, enough money sitting in an offset account could even avoid the need for any bridging finance. Trust me: it could be cheaper and far less stressful. And a top tip from me: if you decide not to sell but to retain your first property and rent it out, the fact you’ve never technically paid the loan down means you could get the full whack of investment tax deductions.”
Get the property price guide right from the start
“When we were selling our first home we had thought the most important part of the process would be the final negotiations or auction day. Our mistake. The most important factor at play was negotiating the price guide at the start of the campaign with the agents vying to sell the house.
Ultimately, what we learnt was that the price guide was read differently by us and buyers. We only wanted to sell at the top end of the price guide, and had a notion the lower figure was just to lure in buyers to create more competition. Conversely, buyers saw the lower figure as a sale figure that would secure the property.
We wouldn’t have sold at the price we did, but had to because we’d already broken that first rule of thumb in real estate: never buy before you’ve sold.”
Do your homework, no excuses
“I sold my first house in Norman Park, Brisbane, having moved to Melbourne years earlier, and was anything but intimate with the Norman Park market. There was no online property site then, and I relied on feedback from real estate agents to set an asking price and accept the eventual offer. To this day I don’t know if it was a good deal. It’s a lot easier now, with websites offering a comprehensive history of market action and current listings, to complement good old-fashioned word of mouth.
So, in my view there’s no excuse these days – do your homework before putting your property on the market. Go online to see what homes are selling for in the area. Get a feel for what people are saying about what they are looking for; seek advice from new neighbours who bought recently and former neighbours who sold over the last six months. Then fully research recent sales and current listings.
You’re now ready to talk to your conveyancer or solicitor about drawing
a contract of sale. More importantly, you are ready to challenge the price estimate enquirers might give you. Is it unrealistically high to win your business, or low to achieve a quick commission for the ski holiday? As well as your research listen to your gut feel.”
Be careful to only add value that counts
“I was 20 when I bought my first house in 2005 in Ashgrove, Brisbane. It was the first house I looked at and was listed for $365,000. I offered them $358,000 and they rang me back the next day and took it. To this day I still kick myself for not offering less, although realistically I know I may have missed the house if I’d tried that.
At the time I was looking for the biggest block of land I could find, as close
the CBD as possible, for the lowest price, and this big old Queenslander ticked the boxes, being on 807 square metres and roughly 8 kilometres from the city. I rented it out and planted a hedge, returfed the yard and put new gutters on the roof because the old ones had rusted so badly. I sold that house just a few years later for $469,500, a week after it went on the market, for a profit of just over $100,000. I deliberately didn’t get too attached to it so that I didn’t spend unnecessary money thinking it will add value.”
A little can add up to a lot
“Working as an architect back in the 1980s, my first foray into property was designing, building and selling four townhouses in Alice Springs. Planning with the end in mind, we decided to spend 5% more to create an ‘oasis in the desert’ – building the apartments around a beautiful, green courtyard while also using light, cool colours – in stark contrast to every other dry and brown apartment in town!
The strategy paid off. The properties sold quickly and for around 15% more than expected. It taught me a valuable lesson that I continue to apply in property to this day – sometimes it’s worth spending a little more if it helps create unique appeal that makes a lot more!”
Be open to negotiating with your potential buyers
“Temper your desire to have negotiations go all in your favour when selling, sometimes you have to give to get. Two potential purchasers of my first home had what I decided at the time were unreasonable demands, including a 5% deposit request and another to keep a few furnishings.
My initial ‘how dare they ask’ reaction was curtailed by my solicitor who encouraged me to agree to these requests. The result was a purchaser who paid the full asking price, and all went through without a hitch.”
Ever considered staging furniture? You should
“Investing an appropriate budget for presentation to attain full market price really paid off.
The decision to invest in landscaping our yard several years earlier certainly helped. At the time I was concerned we were overcapitalising by dolling up our humble three-bedroom Queenslander, but in the end it went a long way to sell the ‘feel’ of our home to prospective buyers, who tended to move through the house quickly and pause on the deck looking over the yard. In fact, the whole promotional video shot by drone, focussed on the outdoor spaces.
We also took up advice to rent staging furniture, despite multiple friends
us it was an unnecessary expense given the price bracket we were working with. The house was unrecognisable after shifting out our tired ‘family-friendly’ furniture and bringing in a professional to deck the place out and work with its strengths. I feel it really helped us put our best foot forward and secure quick interest in the house as well as achieving the best price possible when it went on the market.”
Presentation is key
“I bought my first house in Adelaide when I was 24 and sold it two years later after I got a promotion and had to move to Melbourne. Given the price difference between Adelaide and Melbourne I called it a ‘promotion to poverty’. I sold the house pretty much while I was still living in it and am sure I would have achieved a much better price had I de-cluttered, brought in some nicer furniture and pictures for the wall, tidied up the garage and got in a gardener to properly tidy up of the garden and put in some fresh plants. I was too focussed on not spending any money to sell, but in the end probably cost myself more by not presenting the property at its absolute best.”