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Real Estate Marketing Online - An Agent's Guide To Success
To understand real estate marketing online, you first have to understand how consumers have evolved over recent years. This article will show you how to improve your online messaging to an "info savvy" audience.
Each year, more and more consumers...
Rent Control Rehab for the Well-Heeled
For those who don't need it, rent control can become an addiction, resulting from too many years of a sweet deal. It can leave the real estate muscles paralyzed and the investment portfolio sick. "Penny wise" might have a "pound foolish" problem....
The Snowball Effect
As Rich Levin had stated on his book, Guide to Windows Me, "The moment somebody buys a computer, it's already obsolete. Computer technology has always evolved rapidly."
This concept of Levin also applies to what the real estate industry is...
Tips For Successful Apartment Hunting
The hunt for an apartment may seem like an extremely challenging ordeal, but it does not have to be. People looking for an apartment usually have a good experience if they educate themselves on what to look out for, and they have a good idea of what...
Why Stock Home Plans Are Perfect For Your Dream Home
Stock home plans are perfect for your dream home because they save you time and money. Also, you may prefer to look at homes while not under the watchful eyes of a real estate agent. Home plans are a great way to look at homes without any sales...
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Selling a Home – What Personal Property Stays?
The home selling and buying process can be confusing, particularly when it comes to figuring out what items stay with the home. This is especially true when it is a FSBO (for sale by owner) operation. It’s even tougher when neither the seller nor the buyer is in the real estate business. This article sorts out what personal property stays with the home when it is sold.
Personal Property
Although every state has slightly different rules, there are general guidelines to what goes and stays when a house is sold. Typically, any items attached to the home stay with it while non-attached items are considered personal property and go with the seller. For instance, the seller typically takes personal property such as tools and potted plants.
Certain personal property items, however, don’t always go with the seller. In Virginia, items such as stoves, washers and dryers, refrigerators and built-in microwaves usually stay with the home when the buyer moves in.
If you’re a seller and you don’t offer the items generally expected to convey, you make your property less attractive than the competition. With the
red-hot real estate market, it may not matter. You may still sell your property quickly and easily.
Conversely, if you’re a buyer, you can gain an edge with a seller who wants to keep an item of personal property. Allowing them to haul off a particular item is a good way of building good will. When deciding how you want to approach your options here, consider how competitive the situation is and the monetary value of the item. You always want to keep the big picture in mind.
As with most things related to the real estate buying and selling process, keep in mind the relationship between the parties. The buyer and seller are not enemies and all items on the table don’t carry equal importance for both parties. If you are willing to be reasonable, there is almost always a win-win solution.
Selling and buying a home can be an emotional rollercoaster. If the parties work together, it doesn’t have to become a scary one.
About the Author
Raynor James is with FSBOAmerica.org - sell and view homes for sale by owner online. Sellers list your home for free the first month.
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