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When
Your Selling Price is too High, Beware!
Dropping Your Price...Too Late
If you start out with a high sales price,
then drop it later -- your house is "old news."
You will never be able to recapture that flurry of initial
activity you would have had with a realistic price.
Your house could take longer to sell.
Even if you do successfully sell at
an above market price to an uninformed buyer, your buyer
will need a mortgage. The mortgage lender requires an
appraisal. If comparable sales for the last six months
and current market conditions do not support your sales
price, the house wont appraise. Your deal falls
apart. Of course, you can always attempt to renegotiate
the price, but only if the buyer is willing to listen.
Your house could go "back on the
market."
Once your home has fallen out of escrow
or sits on the market awhile, it is harder to get a
good offer. Potential buyers will think you might be
getting desperate, so they will make lower offers. By
overpricing your home in the beginning, you could actually
end up settling for a lower price than you would have
normally received.
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All Buying &
Selling articles courtesy of © 2000 RealEstate
ABC
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