Carol Swain
Senior Real Estate Specialist
(215) 757-7257
Are you an empty nester who needs a home for the future? Is it time to downsize or to move into another home more suitable for your retirement years? Here are some tell-tale signs:
Your current home is too large for your lifestyle. Rather than close off the extra rooms or rent them out, you may opt for a smaller space.
You are retired and your income is lower than it was during your prime working years. You may want or need to mortgage payment or less upkeep. Maybe you could live more comfortably in a lower cost-of-living area. If you have loaded up a home equity loan, selling the home could give you welcome cash to eliminate those payments.
As you approach your golden years, your wish is to have a home with few, if any, stairs, or one which could be easily converted to be handicap accessible if the need arises.
You prefer a location where the weather is more to your year-round liking and where there are activities you like such as golf, tennis, boating, or socializing with seniors during your leisure time.
Changes in the capital gains tax law mean you don’t have to buy a larger, more expensive home or do extensive renovations to a less costly home in order to avoid a hefty tax bill on you home sale profits. Today, couples can move down and exclude up to $500,000 in home sale profits- $250,000 for singles – without having to buy another home. Even better, homeowners can shelter the profits on the sale of a home as often as once every two years.
Here are some specific questions to ask yourself:
Are kitchen appliances up-to-date and in good working order? Does the kitchen have popular features like a microwave, an island?
Do you have a home office? Is telephone wiring adequate to support an office phone,computer modem, fax machine.
Have you built any additions?
Do carpets and tile need to be replaced? Will a professional cleaning make them look new?
What do the walls look like Do they suffer from puppy-bite or kitty scratch? Should odd,tired wallpaper, be removed? Do walls and woodwork need repainting?
Can you make closets and counters look larger? Are there items you can pack away and do without until after you move?
Are shrubs and trees neat and does the yard look well-kept.
How does your home compare to others currently for sale now? What can you do to make it say, "Buy Me!" Price is one answer. If you’ve owned your home for years, chances are good that you have some serious equity. Perhaps you can afford to be flexible on price in order to get it sold. After all, to get the best possible sale today, a home must be in tip-top shape in every way: price, condition, terms, and exposure. That’s where we come in. Give us a call.