Exterior appeal
Stand outside your home and compare it to your neighbors' properties. If you do this and it makes you feel slightly mortified, it's likely that you've already failed to impress your potential buyers.
Ask yourself:
- When was the last time I mowed the lawn?
- Have I ever cleaned those gutters out?
- Could those window frames use some fresh paint?
- Were those paving slabs always that uneven?
- Don't those children's toys have somewhere to be?
- Can people see my house number behind that embarrassingly overgrown shrub?
- Does a surplus of weeds say that I embrace all forms of nature, or that I'm a lazy homeowner who probably hasn't maintained the rest of the property very well either?
Depersonalize
Those gorgeous photographs of your daughter, husband, wife, nephew, best friend, cat and so forth that line the hallway and stairwell? Take them down. All of them. The ones in the bedroom too, and the living room, and everywhere else in the house. Don't forget the cute finger painting your three year old made you for your birthday last year that's still stuck on the fridge.
Your buyers don't want to see the lovely life you've made for yourself in your beautiful home. They want to imagine the lovely life they could make for themselves in their beautiful potential new home. Don't allow anything to clutter that vision.
Speaking of clutter
Get rid of it. If you've accumulated a lot of bits and pieces over the years (and you definitely have), now's the time to either a) throw them out, b) give them to charity or c) find proper, neat places for them in a closet or cupboard. You might even consider having a garage sale to purge your house of all that unnecessary 'stuff'. Do whatever you need to so that your buyers never have to lock eyes on it.
Pay specific attention to:
- Books, CDs and DVDs
- Ornaments and knick-knacks
- Kitchen tools and appliances that currently live on the counters
- Potted plants
- Posters on your children's bedroom walls
Another idea many sellers have embraced is renting storage space to temporarily keep any extra furniture that could be making their house feel crowded. Be radical - remove half the furniture in your living room and see how spacious, sleek and light it looks and feels without it. As a general guide, there should be enough space for people to move around the room unhindered, and enough furniture to convey the room's purpose.