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What should you avoid doing when staging your home?

Updated: Jan 24, 2023

Make Sure You Avoid These 10 Staging Mistakes When Selling Your Home







Making significant modifications.

Simple house modifications will yield a tremendous return, but extensive renovations involving altered floor plans and high-end finishes are probably not a sensible investment.


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Listing a property before it is prepared.

Buyers of today seek out properties that have been well-maintained and are ready for immediate occupancy. This is a mistake that will result in little buyer traffic and offers below the list price is putting a house on the market before it is ready. A home is sold for three reasons: location, price, and condition. The condition is entirely under your control as the vendor. Therefore, investing the time in the tasks that your real estate agent or home stager recommends will be worthwhile in the long run.


Beginning without a strategy.

Working with a professional stager to develop a successful plan for preparing a property for sale is one of the biggest blunders homeowners can make. Home stagers take a comprehensive approach to the property and fix any potential issues that would discourage a buyer from continuing.


Not using a professional camera.

It is equally crucial to have professional photos of your staged home taken and published on selling websites as it is to show your staged home to prospective buyers who come to see.


Not replacing or removing shabby décor.

Items like wallpaper border trim, Corian worktops, sponge-painted walls, swag drapes from the 1980s, outdated light fixtures, and antique furniture won't do anything to draw purchasers. Instead, take down the outdated border and wallpaper. Refresh the paint with a coat in a neutral color. Replace outdated window treatments with solid drapery panels in white or gray. modernize the light fittings. If you can, replace the counters with quartz, and if you must keep the shabby furniture in the space, cover it with a soft fabric.


Using hues other than neutrals.

Buyers will be hesitant to make a commitment if a home's color scheme is not neutralized. The generation that is currently buying homes does not want to make any alterations after moving in.



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Photos that are hung too high or too low.

Art should be at least 50 inches high from the picture's center to the floor. The pieces may hang a few inches higher if the artwork is placed above furniture, such as a headboard, but 50 inches is the ideal distance.


Neglecting straightforward home upgrades.

It is worthwhile to take special care of areas that need attention and are affordable to fix. It enables more accurate professional photography and demonstrates to potential buyers that the house was taken care of. Not updating the wall, trim, cabinet, and light fixture paint colors and finishes is a frequent and easily fixed home staging mistake. A property looks decades younger with new paint and lighting fixtures, which add far more value than they cost.


Assuming staging and tidying are identical

Numerous sellers think that cleaning and light tidying imply staging. Not at all. Merchandising a home for potential buyers is staging. You concentrate on promoting the home's admirable characteristics and downplaying its negative attributes. To convey the buyer a picture of what their life may be like if they were to buy your property, you construct emotional connection points throughout the house.


Disregarding lighting

Replace your old light bulbs with clean, bright bulbs even if upgrading obsolete lighting fixtures is not in the budget. We advise using Lightbulbs with a 3000K color temperature since they are slightly less yellow and have a sharp, clean appearance. Anything designated "natural light" or more than 3500K should be avoided because they appear excessively blue and make customers think of sitting in a dentist chair.– Ines Cortes, Envision Redesign



 
 
 

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