THE SMART WAY TO LOOK AT HOME IMPROVEMENTS
By Rich Legg
www.UtahRealtor.info
What
home improvements really pay off when the time comes to sell your house?
That’s
an important question for any homeowner contemplating moving or
remodeling. And the only possible answer
is a somewhat complicated one.
That
answer starts with the fact that really major improvements – room additions,
total replacements of kitchens and baths, etc., -- rarely pay off fully in the
near term. It ends with the fact that
small and relatively inexpensive changes can pay off in a big way in making
your home attractive to buyers if your decision is to move now.
It’s a simple fact, consistently confirmed
across America over a very long period of time, that even the most appropriate
major improvements are unlikely to return their full cost if a house is sold
within two or three years.
Does that mean that major home improvements
are always a bad idea? Absolutely
not. It does mean, though, that if your
present house falls seriously short of meeting your family’s needs you need to
think twice – and think carefully – before deciding to undertake a major
renovation. Viewed strictly in investment
terms, major improvements rarely make as much sense as selling your present
home and buying one that’s carefully selected to provide you with what you
want.
Even
if you have a special and strong attachment to the house you’re in and feel
certain that you could be happy in it for a long time if only it had more
bedrooms and baths, for example, there are a few basic rules that you ought to
keep in mind.
Probably the most basic rule of all, in this
regard, is the one that says you should never –unless you absolutely don’t care
at all about eventual resale value – improve a house to the point where its
desired sales price would be more than 20 percent higher than the most
expensive of the other houses in the immediate neighborhood.
Try
to raise the value of your house too high, that is, and surrounding properties
will pull it down.
Here
are some other rules worth remembering:
Never
rearrange the interior of your house in a way that reduces the total number of
bedrooms to less than three.
Never
add a third bathroom to a two-bath house unless you don’t care about ever
recouping your investment.
Swimming
pools rarely return what you spend to install them. Ditto for sun rooms – and finished basements.
If
you decide to do what’s usually the smart thing and move rather than improve,
it’s often the smaller, relatively inexpensive improvements that turn out to be
most worth doing.
The
cost of replacing a discolored toilet bow, making sure all the windows work or
getting rid of dead trees and shrubs in trivial compared with adding a
bathroom, but such things can have a big and very positive impact on
prospective buyers. A good broker can
help you decide which expenditures make sense and which don’t, and can save you
a lot of money in the process.