Dallas houses have a great future ahead of them due to the boom times the Dallas economy is facing at the moment. Some say the crime rate in Dallas is pretty high, but that actually depends on where your home might be. If your home were in one of these suburbs of Dallas - Keller, Colleyville, Coppell, Lewisville, South Lake, Las Colinas, Carrollton, The Colony, Highland Park, University Park, Frisco, Allen, and Plano (among many others) - you will find that the crime rate is actually much lower here than the US-wide average.
You may be doubtful anyway and ask: is my home good enough for other people to buy? Well, the answer to that is: it depends what you are asking for it, for the condition it is in right now. There are realtors who are choosy about the Dallas homes they buy but there are also some who will buy Dallas houses that are in any state or condition (meaning, even the most dilapidated ones can be sold nowadays.) But be reasonable - you cannot expect a dilapidated and ugly home to command the same market price as a well-kept and beautifully-designed home. That would be like saying an ugly and run-down car is sold at the same price as top-of-the-line advanced and new car models. It just isn't realistic.
What would be realistic is if you were to take stock of your Dallas home and look into the following factors that may influence its sale price:
1.What was the original price at which you bought your home, or had it constructed for? This gives you a baseline from which you shouldn't budge when given offers by potential buyers - unless, your home is pretty run-down and has been neglected (in which case, you should factor in the depreciation of the market price so that you come up with a fair price to offer buyers.)
2.How well-kept is your home? And the follow-up question to that is: how neglected has it been? If your home is a well-loved piece of property that you constantly attend to (fixing a door hinge on one weekend, painting the walls of a room the next weekend), then the odds are great that you can get a very good price for your home when you sell it. If however your home has peeling paint on its external and internal walls, door hinges have come loose so that the doors are askew, and the wood is warped on certain floors and walls, then the odds of getting a great price go down considerably naturally.
3.How long have you lived in your home? And how old is it? This is also crucial because the older your home is, the more wear and tear it has probably undergone. Wear and tear on real estate is one reason why some landlords refuse to admit couples with young children who are known to write on walls and be rather harsh with using furnishings (like banging doors so that doorknobs are wrecked for instance.) The age of your home can be mitigated though by how well kept the house is at the time you put it on the market.
Having taken these factors into consideration, you are now ready to start canvassing market prices for the area you are in. You can examine the daily paper for news about real estate in your location, or go online and look through industry newsletters and maybe even online forums for that information. The more well-informed you are, the better is your chance of coming up with a competitive price that buyers will be interested in later on.
Dan Heskett is a Expert Author for We Buy Ugly Houses
For more information Regarding selling your houses visit We Buy Houses Quick
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