Friday, June 12, 2009

How to Sell Your House Fast When Foreclosure Looms

By Tara-Nicholle Nelson, Esq., FrontDoor.com

When foreclosure looms, many homeowners try to sell their homes. For them, the goal is not just to get the home sold, but to do it quickly. Foreclosure rates are the highest in buyer's markets, when homes take a longer than average time to sell. What's a homeowner to do? Get aggressive, and get your home sold fast!

As a seller, you control the only three factors that influence whether your home sells quickly: pricing, marketing and condition. Here are some easy steps and insider secrets to make your home fly off the market in record time!

Pricing Your House

Don't try to salvage equity that does not exist. The fact that you bought your home for thousands more than homes are currently selling for in your neighborhood is irrelevant to the current fair market value of your home. You have to get clear on your goal: Are you trying to eke dollars out of your home by holding out for the highest price, or are you trying to avoid the seven-year black mark that a foreclosure will leave on your credit report?

Don't overprice your home. Get clear about what you want. If you'd like to get your home sold, make sure you price it aggressively and that means low. If your home is overpriced, some buyers won't even see it because it will appear to be out of their price range. Other buyers will focus on seeing properties whose sellers seem more realistic about pricing. Your house will sit on the market longer than it should and then the lowballers will crawl out of the woodwork.

Get real about what your home is worth. Have your real estate agent prepare a Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) that shows recently sold, similar homes in your neighborhood. If you're serious about getting it sold fast, take the sales prices (not the list prices) from the most recently sold homes in your area, and then go down 10 percent or so from there to get your list price. When a home is slightly underpriced, it seems like a bargain. More buyers will come out to see it, and chances of getting a qualified offer skyrocket.

Make sure you have an accurate understanding of how low you can go. A buyer is not going to pay a premium price for your home just because that's what you owe. If you owe more than your home is worth, you may need to consider a short sale (selling for less than you owe). A short sale blemishes your credit but not as badly as a foreclosure does!

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