While most homebuyers only have time to see what’s “in front of their nose” – most home sellers fail to ensure their house is clean and clutter free!
The most common mistake made by home sellers is not cleaning and clutter-clearing their house or flat when potential buyers come to view their property.
And the most common failing among homebuyers is an inability to see the potential of properties they visit, with a frequent lack of imagination “blinding them” to see beyond the mess or clutter.
This is the majority view of Home Sale Network, the country’s largest grouping of almost 740 hand picked independent estate agents, which has local members in South Yorkshire.
Asked to identify the most common mistake made by home buyers, a third of Home Sale Network members (33.72%) stated a failure to see the potential of properties they visit, with buyers not being able to see beyond the vendors’ taste in décor, furniture, lifestyle and garden layout.
A far bigger proportion of Home Sale Network members (74.12%) said that the most common mistake among home sellers is a failure to ensure that their house or flat is clean and clutter free when their estate agent arrives with potential purchasers.
According to Neil Harrison of Johnsons in Doncaster: “Putting these two findings together says that mess and clutter is probably one of the UK’s biggest killer of house sales.
“This new survey is important to vendors and buyers alike. It shows that the single factor that can boost home sales does not necessarily have anything to do with investing a lot of money in redecoration or garden makeovers – it is just about presenting a clean and clutter free home”.
The survey also revealed other common mistakes made by buyers and sellers:
The second most common mistake made by buyers, according to almost a third (30.23%) of Home Sale Network members is that they arrange to visit too many properties, turning each visit into a “rush” and giving themselves the problem of remembering and comparing the properties they have seen.
Buyers’
third biggest problem according to 17.5% of Network members, is a failure to
produce a well considered list of their requirements – spanning location,
proximity to facilities, accommodation needs, garden-size, and the amount of
maintenance or decorative work they envisage doing.