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Getting
the House Ready to Sell
Kitchen Clutter
The kitchen is a good place to start
removing clutter, because it is an easy place to start.
First, get everything off the counters.
Everything. Even the toaster. Put the toaster in a cabinet
and take it out when you use it. Find a place where
you can store everything in cabinets and drawers. Of
course, you may notice that you do not have cabinet
space to put everything. Clean them out. The dishes,
pots and pans that rarely get used? Put them in a box
and put that box in storage.
You see, homebuyers will open all your
cabinets and drawers, especially in the kitchen. They
want to be sure there is enough room for their "stuff."
If your kitchen cabinets, pantries, and drawers look
jammed full, it sends a negative message to the buyer
and does not promote an image of plentiful storage space.
The best way to do that is to have as much "empty
space" as possible.
For that reason, if you have a "junk
drawer," get rid of the junk. If you have a rarely
used crock pot, put it in storage. Do this with every
cabinet and drawer. Create open space.
If you have a large amount of foodstuffs
crammed into the shelves or pantry, begin using them
especially canned goods. Canned goods are heavy
and you dont want to be lugging them to a new
house, anyway or paying a mover to do so. Let
what you have on the shelves determine your menus and
use up as much as you can.
Beneath the sink is very critical, too.
Make sure the area beneath the sink is as empty as possible,
removing all extra cleaning supplies. You should scrub
the area down as well, and determine if there are any
tell-tale signs of water leaks that may cause a homebuyer
to hesitate in buying your home.
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All Buying &
Selling articles courtesy of © 2000 RealEstate
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