All sellers want their home to sell for the highest possible price. This is one reason it’s why it’s so easy for agents to “buy” listings. If you’re not familiar with the concept, “buying” a listing is when an agent (unscrupulously) tells a client their home is worth far more than the market value in order to win the listing.
Sellers are susceptible to this tactic because they want to
believe, however irrationally, that their home is for some reason or another
worth more than comparable homes on the market. Sometimes, though, sellers
believe high home pricing is either an acceptable risk or even a benefit.
Here’s what they say, and why it’s a problem:
1. “I can always come down in price later if I have to.”
Yes, it’s possible that someone will find the house irresistible
and pay the inflated price, but the odds are the house will languish on the market
until the price comes down. Buyers, though, will see this from a different
perspective. They’ll be thinking: What’s wrong with the property? Maybe I can
get this house for significantly below market value. Holding out for a high
could end up leading to a desperation low.
2. “I have to keep the price high for negotiating purposes.”
A house isn’t a used car. Don’t start far above what’s acceptable
in order to pad out the negotiations. Buyers will have access to the same
market data, and their agent will have a pretty good idea what the home’s true
market value should be. The ruse will quickly come to pieces, so why not price
right for a quick, fair sale?
3. “This is the price I need to get for my house.”
If that’s true, sellers should also prepared to stay put when the
house doesn’t sell. Despite dire and important reasons why lower offers can’t
be accepted, the market is indifferent to the seller’s situation. There are
other homes and other sellers unencumbered by the same reasons.
4. “A house just like mine sold for this price… so why not mine?”
Sellers will assume houses are identical when the final price
tells sweet story. Odds are there are other outstanding reasons the home sold
above market value, especially when it comes to interior renovations.
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