First time poster needing help. Moving out of a rental home that I have occupied for the last 2 years into a new home. The owner asked me to clean the carpets after I move my furniture out. It's not stated in my lease that I have to do this but must leave the house clean. I'm thinking of just doing spot removal and vacuuming the rest of the house. I really don't want to shell out another $200-300 to have the house professionally cleaned when he already has my $1000 deposit and after moving all weekend, I doubt I'll have the patience to clean his carpets for 4 hours so he can sell the home faster. Any advice on how to make the carpets look cleaner without having to hire a pro or do it myself for 4 hours? Thanks!
Filed under Selling Your Home by on Oct 18th, 2009. 7 Comments.
I have the idea and I've printed business cards, I have a domain name and I'm working on a website, and I know what I have to do, but I'm stuck.
I feel nervous to start making phone calls and doing the marketing! I need some advice and motivation.
I'm going to do a home staging business (decorating homes to sell faster and for more money - like the TV show "Sell tThis House") - so I have to start calling real estate agents, and putting ads on craig's list.
I think I'm afraid to actually do this. Help?
Filed under Selling Your Home by on Oct 15th, 2009. 5 Comments.
I'm a first time homebuyer. I figure that when I get the house paid off the value of the dollar will be much different than it is today. How can I wrap my head around this?
A generic example: Purchase $100K (I wish!) home today. For the sake of discussion, lets say I sell it the minute the loan is paid off. So, I'm spending 2009 dollars and "cashing in" on 2029-2039 dollars (depending on how fast I can pay), right?
Here is where I get stuck. If I sell the home for, lets say, 200K in 2039, the "net" profit would be 100K. But taking into account the inflation, I would guess that 100K in 2009 dollars would be worth close to 200K in 2039 dollars. So no profit at all, maybe even a loss. Does that make sense? Feel free to ask me to clarify if I am confusing or confused.
I know we can't predict the future, but I would like to know a bit about the theories in practice.
So, Theoretically, if inflation continues at its current pace, how much will a 100K house need to be worth in 2039 to realize any profit?
I also don't see how housing values can climb forever, but that's for another question.
Thanks.
Filed under Selling Your Home by on Oct 14th, 2009. 2 Comments.
I have a 1997 Liberty 14x52 mobile home in Missoula, Montana. The area is growing faster than imagineable and is a great university town. Payments are low and so is lot rent, but being a divorced single parent is difficult and has brought hardships which I'm recovering from.
I know about eBay, but what are some other creative options? I don't want the responsibility of renting the house. I want to cut my ties with it and move on.
What is the best option in trying to sell a mobile home when you don't earn a lot and would like to move to another state quickly?
Professional real estate agent's suggestions are very welcome and highly recommended at answering this question.
Filed under Selling Your Home by on Oct 13th, 2009. 1 Comment.



