Five Reasons We Were Able To Sell Our House So Quickly

The deal is done, the papers signed at the lawyer, the only thing left to do to complete the selling of our old home and finalize the transition to our new home is to hand over the keys on Friday (okay, the realtors do that.)

Anyhow, beyond the very obvious single answer that “There was a buyer looking for what we were offering at the same time we were selling”, there are a few things I think we did to help move our property so quickly.

Strangely, pricing below market value (which is what most people would expect for a house that sells in four days and which we did to sell our Calgary condo quickly) is something we *didn’t* do this time.  We actually listed above market value as we saw a big gap in what the market had for houses in our price range with the features our house had (five bedrooms!  Numerous upgrades! Great location!).  We were prepared to sit on an empty house for a bit to get our price and in the end, we ended up getting slightly more than what other similar houses in the area were going for, even with selling in December.

So what are some of the things we did (or were encouraged to do by others) to make our house sell so quickly?

1. Maintained Our House
We saw some houses in the same price range that were, frankly, dumps, and very few that had as many upgrades as ours did.  But you have to remember that until a couple months ago, we weren’t planning to move (in any serious way) so a lot of the things we had upgraded were things we chose to do to better our own home over the years – installing new windows, replacing the furnace, installing air conditioning, redoing the entire fence – with a rough objective of doing one major project per year.  Right before we listed, we also tried to do some “touch-up” repairs – painting over the chipped paint behind the garbage can, updating some trim that had come off in the bathroom, a new coat of paint in one room that really needed it.

2. Took Professional Pictures
I remember asking our realtor if she took photos or hired someone.  She said she normally just took her own photos but she’d recently had good luck using a professional photographer so I’m not sure if my question prompted her but she decided to do the same with ours. In the end, I think it made a world of difference to have a pro who knew how to stage rooms, photoshop out some blemishes (I wondered if that was ethical but I guess magazines do it all the time and really, any buyer would get to see the actual condition or where our daughter decided to draw in permanent marker on the carpet when they viewed the house!)

3.  Took Pictures Before Moving Out Completely
On a related note, we made the timing work so that we were able to have much of the clutter gone and the house clean then the photos taken only a couple days before the movers arrived to clean out the house completely of all furniture and any other large items.  This was great for a couple reasons – in the photos, the house looked clean and sleek but also lived in.  Also, some furniture in the pictures helped hide ding marks from over the years (again, ethnically, I think you have to disclose anything that’s not visible but if a couch is covering up some chipped paint on the wall, that’s visible to anyone who cares to look).  Also, research shows that houses that are photographed empty get much lower selling prices because, whether it’s true or not, an empty house conveys the message that you’re desperate to sell.

4. Were Flexible on Possession
Partly to reduce our own stress, we did not make the buying of our new home conditional on the selling of our old home.  But that also meant we were prepared to sit on two mortgages for a month or two and possibly well into the spring since the market in Regina is already quite soft.  In the end, not tying the buying and selling together meant we could move into our new house at a somewhat leisurely pace and then, by the time, we had it listed and started getting showings and offers, we were able to accommodate a buyer who wanted a very quick possession date instead of having to wait for our new house to be ready or whatever.

5. Decided To List Before Christmas
As I mentioned in a recent post, we seriously debated whether to even list before Christmas but our realtor earned her money more than in any other way by convincing us to list early (in fact, by the end of November very soon after we took possession of our new house) and that led to six showings and one solid offer within four days.  (Of course, that makes me wonder if we could’ve listed our house for even more but again, not having to carry two mortgages with all associated costs plus the stress of looking after two houses was offset by any “discount” we gave on our selling price.)

Bonus: Wrote Our Own Blurb
Real estate listings are sort of like obituaries – they tend to follow a similar template and use similar language, always with a goal of painting the subject in the most positive light.  When our realtor was getting close to listing our house, she said she would send it around to other agents in her office first and I offered to write a summary of our house to include.  Although I used a similar format to what I saw in other real estate listings, I put a few unique touches in my write-up about the home’s history, the neighbours, a couple unique inclusions that others might not even list – all of which she ended up including in the blurb that got posted to MLS.

And now the deal is done and we can focus on building our new life in our new house!

Music Monday – “It’s bitterly cold with three feet of snow/And this wouldn’t be home If the wind didn’t blow”

Just Me and the Ponies (For Christmas This Year)” – Corb Lund

Saturday Snap – Elfis?

Last year, we gave in and bought a stupid Dollar Store “Elf on a Shelf” rip-off to move around every night for Sasha.

Turned out it was actually kind of fun coming up with scenarios and jokes for the little guy and I might’ve got more enjoyment out of it than she did!

This year, “Rainbow” (Sasha’s name for the elf) had a bit of a challenge since we were in the midst of a move and we weren’t sure if he’d spend time at the old and new houses or just the new house or what as we transitioned from one to the other in early December.

Rainbow ended up spending every night in December exploring the new house and when we’d pop by every day, he’d be in a new spot (completely unrelated, the day before, dad might “forget his keys” or “have to check the lights are out” once everyone was loaded in the van.)

Anyhow, I’m very conscious that childhood magic is fleeting (Sasha’s already questioning Santa but yet seems to fully believe in Rainbow’s ability to move around the house every night and how he loses this ability if a kid touches him) so I’m going to make the most of it!

Friday Fun Link – My New Christmas Movie Tradition?

I was in the habit of watching *Love Actually” every December but last year I didn’t get to it and instead I watched this which has nothing to do with Christmas but, since I watched it right before Christmas, still managed to feel like a Christmas movie if that makes sense?

 

Throwback Thursday – First Glimpse of Our New House (September 2019)

For the last few years, Shea and I have been occasionally “kicking the tires” on houses that caught our eye.  We were looking for something a bit bigger, something a bit newer, something a bit more fully featured than the 1977 starter home we bought fifteen years ago.

When we went to see another house that had caught Shea’s eye (and which is one she later told me had stood out to her a few years ago the last time it sold!) on our way home from camping on September long weekend, who knew that three short months later, I’d be sitting pretty much in the same spot where Shea appears to be pointing in this photo that I took during that viewing! 🙂

Sold!

Some Thoughts On Buying And Selling Houses in December

Shea and I made the offer on our new house on October 5 and took possession on November 22.

For a variety of reasons, we were in a fortunate position where we didn’t have to make the purchase conditional on the sale of our old house and, in fact, we were fully prepared to float two mortgages for a while if we had to including into the new year as the conventional wisdom is that you shouldn’t list houses for sale in December because people don’t tend to buy houses at that time of year anyhow so your house just ends up sitting on the market longer than if you’d held off until the new year for a new listing.

Our realtor said there were reasons to list it before Christmas and reasons to hold off until the new year but she pointed out that ultimately, if you list before Christmas and don’t get much interest, other realtors will know it’s likely due to the holidays being a slow time and not assume your house is sitting for a long time because there’s something wrong with it.

On the other hand, she pointed out that you never know when your buyer is looking and you don’t want to miss that window.  Or leave your house empty for an extended period with all the increased risks of break-ins, water breaks, higher insurance costs, etc.  Or, even if you’re in a position and willing to do so, why would you carry two mortgages (and all related expenses for two houses – utilities, insurance, etc.) not to mention that a house might simply be *harder* to sell once it’s completely empty since buyers assume you’re desperate.

Thinking how we’d bought our previous house in December, how I’d moved into an apartment for library school in December, how many people get transferred for work or start school on January 1, how an increasing number of people don’t even celebrate Christmas so they’re less likely to hit “pause” on a home search just because it’s December, etc. made us realise that it’s not like no one is moving in December.  In fact, you might even have some big advantages selling around the holidays.

For all those reasons, we decided we could make all the timelines work and we were able to get our house listed before the end of November using professional photos taken while our house was still in-transition rather than completely empty so we didn’t look like, well, people who were desperate to sell and likely carrying two mortgages. 😉

I don’t want to jinx anything but I will mention that we had six showings within three days (!) and at least one potential buyer was *very* interested.

So it remains to be seen what might happen next. But with my fingers crossed, I’ll say that deciding to list our house in late November might turn out to be a great decision after all!

Music Monday – “Christmas Eve will find me/Where the love light gleams/I’ll be home for Christmas/If only in my dreams”

I can’t believe I’ve never posted this song before – one of the most absolutely beautiful, heart-wrenching Christmas songs of all-time.

And so appropriate these days too.

We’re extremely excited for our first Christmas in our new house of course. But it also comes with mixed emotions knowing that a decision we made only two short months ago to make an offer on a new house means that somewhat abruptly, we won’t get to celebrate a final Christmas in the house we’ve called home for fifteen years.

I never got around to it but I had a mini-tradition where I’d position myself in such a way on Christmas morning that I could shoot video of Pace (and eventually Sasha) running down our main hallway to get their first glimpse of the Christmas tree with Santa’s gifts under it.

My idea was to cut the videos from each year in such a way that the kids would morph from young to older as they ran down the hall (and the fact I can describe it better than do it is why I’m an English major and not a Film major!) 😉

Anyhow, take it away King…

I’ll Be Home For Christmas” – Elvis Presley

10 Random Thoughts About Our Move

  1. No matter how organized you are, there will be things you need to put your hands on that you can’t find.  (I have a box that I kept separate that has all my essentials – screwdriver, box cutter, tape measure, packing tape, scissors, jumbo sharpie marker, etc. etc. but when I need some regular Scotch tape, do you think I could find it?)
  2. No matter how much you measure and visualize, not everything will fit as expected when you get it into your new house.
  3. I’ve written about how we’re trying to keep the process stress-free for us but I’m also trying to keep it stress-free for the contractors we’re using.  It was very nice to hear one of our movers at the end of the day talk about how much he enjoyed working with us when a lot of their day-to-day work is people (admittedly who are in a stressful situation) micromanaging and criticizing everything they do.  How much fun did they have?  At one point, one worker felt comfortable enough to say “I’m not going to lie – I tried out your massage chair before we carried it up” and, instead of giving him shit, I said “Good, then you’ll know how it should work when you put it back together on the other end!”  Or how they loaded our bikes by riding them up the ramp instead of walking them.  Or how they tried the kid’s slide that our new house has attached to our deck. Or how they cracked up when I said “The next time you guys move me, it’ll be straight into a nursing home and I ain’t taking any of this heavy shit with me!”
  4. There are a lot of hidden costs in moving you might not think of – from moving supplies adding up to more than you budget to all sorts of fees and charges from everyone you work with to realising all the things you thought you had but need to buy for your new house to the cost of buying your movers lunch.
  5. On the flip side, you can save lots of money in various ways as well – we got the majority of boxes we used for free from the liquor store and grocery store instead of buying new (or used) moving boxes, we lucked into a bedroom set that was marked down $700 the week *before* Black Friday when it went back up to the original price – hmmm?), I’m not averse to buying stuff from discount racks anywhere I go – Canadian Tire, Leons Furniture – or from resell sites like Kijiji and Facebook Marketplace.
  6. One of the toughest parts of moving is once you get everything into your new house but then you realise it’s still going to take weeks (months?) to get it all unpacked and organized. <sigh>
  7. No matter how many trips you make to your empty old house, you’ll still keep finding things you’ve forgotten to pack – decorations stuck on windows, a security cam hidden out of sight, a toilet brush that you should probably replace anyhow (should’ve listed it as an “inclusion” on our house listing! 😉
  8. Moving about six blocks from your old house to your new house is awesome – while the movers were loading up on big furniture and household items, I loaded our van and made about three or four runs to our house to unload smaller stuff.  (Also, from a cost saving point of view, we paid the movers to actually move stuff instead of having to pay them to sit on a truck which would’ve been the case if they had to make three trips across Regina and back and could’ve added hours to our day.)
  9. Yes, we did have three moving truck loads of stuff to move even after filling a dumpster *then* loading a Big Steel Box container ourselves!  To be fair, since we moved all the boxes ourselves, the remaining furniture didn’t fit into the truck neatly (I spent a lot of time thinking about how much I played Tetris as a kid during this move and how people always say video games aren’t providing life skills!) which is part of the reason they had to do three trips instead of two.
  10. It’s a toss-up on whether buying the new house or selling the old house is more stressful but hopefully we’ll have an update on that sooner rather than later! 🙂

Saturday Snap – Coming Together Nicely

Moving day is done, lots of unpacking still to do but the new house is starting to come together!

(Hard to believe those two black couches are ones we bought from The Brick over fifteen years ago when we lived in Calgary.  They’re still in great shape to this day!)