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Fixing Houses for Resale: Three Beginning Steps to Increase Profits and Have Fun
Real estate investors specializing in fixers make higher profits when they have a detailed work plan and know how to get around the future resale appraisal issues. Before you begin your fixer makeover, taking a few extra steps helps you make more money, avoid future appraisal pitfalls, and have more fun. 1) Planning for Profits Visualize your final home presentation for sale. Write out a description of the future home you imagine for your sales flyer. Name your home something other than just the street name; calling your fixer "Edna Street" doesn't inspire like "Sugar Plum Cabin." Your overall design plan helps you when shopping for building materials with choosing design details that go together for a harmonious whole house theme. 2) Take Photographs for Your Future Appraiser You may have taken photographs during the escrow process, showing the seller's possessions in the home. If your property was occupied during escrow, it will be worthwhile to take "before" photographs again, both for your own satisfaction and to show appraisers when they ask why you expect to sell the house for so much more than your original purchase price. Detailed photographs substantiate the original condition of the property, compared to the final result. Avoid possible complications by showing the appraiser all the improvements that you made to the property, in order to get the full amount you deserve in your upgraded appraisal. This is a crucial step, because the appraiser must give you credit for your work and expenses, and not use your purchase price as the basis for the updated home's true market value. 3) Hold a Doghouse Open House Party We like to invite friends and family for a preview open house before we begin major work on the house. We ask them to bring any unwanted household fixtures or supplies and to offer any fix-up ideas, wild or practical, that may occur to them during their visit. We jot those ideas into a "transformation journal," and refer to them when we need fresh inspiration. Here's an example of our invitation: Your presence is requested at Jeanette and Brian's Doghouse Open House. Come view our latest project and understand why we'll be busy for the next month. Please bring cuttings from your garden and any unwanted paint. Any household or building material hand-me-downs will also be greatly appreciated! Sunday afternoon, noon to four. Another reason for a preview party is that the amount of work a doghouse may need sometimes seems overwhelming, and a fun event like an open house helps to overshadow the crushing weight of the work we have waiting for us. Taking these first three steps helps you ultimately make more money, avoid appraisal problems, and have fun fixing houses for profit. (c) Copyright 2005 Jeanette J. Fisher. All rights reserved. Professor Jeanette Fisher, author of "Doghouse to Dollhouse for Dollars: Using Design Psychology to Increase Real Estate Profits" and other books teaches Real Estate Investing and Design Psychology. For more articles, tips, reports, and newsletters see http://www.doghousetodollhousefordollars.com/pages/5/index.htm
MORE RESOURCES: Passers-by slow down in front of the house on Cottage Place where John Foxell has lived for 25 years. Sea Cliff bungalows and Victorians often come with water views and many homes have been carefully restored. With the current spate of foreclosures have come bargain-seeking buyers, seemingly undeterred by repair jobs. HGTV is hoping to seduce viewers around the country with tales of the city’s opulent residential properties and the intense New Yorkers who buy and sell them. Real estate agents in northern New Jersey said a concentration of for-sale signs was often the result of sociological change, rather than change of season or economy. Mr. Korman, is a co-president of Korman Communities, a company which has extended-stay hotels and apartments. If you’ve locked in a rock-bottom rate, does it still make sense to make extra payments to reduce your mortgage? It depends. One of the two government-sponsored companies that set lending standards has announced it would stop backing interest-only mortgages. The Mount Morris Bank on East 125th Street has its six red-brick-and-brownstone stories slashed to one. Instead of worrying about the recovery of the real estate market, some Canadians are concerned about the prospect of a price bubble. The Park Avenue maisonette owned by William F. Buckley Jr. has been relisted at less than half of the original asking price. The summer home that John D. Crimmins, a successful Victorian businessman, bought for his wife and 13 children is now on the market. Victor Vargas, the Venezuelan multimillionaire owner of the polo team Lechuza Caracas, has sold his New York pied-à -terre at One Beacon Court for $17,817,734. Stanley S. Tollman, who was once a tax fugitive, has decided to sell his 11-room apartment at 485 Park Avenue, at an asking price of $12 million. Radim Kralik, his wife, Barbora Kralikova, and their two children live in a modern concrete box built on top of a 1943 grain silo. A midcentury modern house in Boise, Idaho, a historic house in Chester, S.C., and a home in Jackson, Miss. Beachfront homeowners in Destin, Fla., would rather see the beaches erode than share their sand with the tanning masses. No matter what happens in the New York City real estate market, Lockhart Steele and his site, Curbed, deem it worthy of loving attention. A homeowner applies for a new loan and discovers unexpected collateral damage of the mortgage meltdown. A 100-year-old shoe factory in the 14th Arrondissement of Paris has been divided into homes with similar layouts but very different decors. A 12,000-square-foot space formerly home to a church then a nightclub will have 35 upscale boutiques and restaurants. After years of growth, the downturn in commercial real estate has hit Phoenix hard, with rents down more than 50 percent in a year. |
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