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observer
11-15-2014, 07:27 PM
I bought my house from villages realty. When I bought it it had a villages sign in the yard not just a sign but a 4 by 4 post. I saw it as I was driving around the area I could afford, now I can and did buy a house in another area,guess what I am not allowed to put a for sale sign in my front yard. The villages reality cane sale me a home with a sign but I can t really. I need to sell my house I have a high amount of traffic, some people just drive around and find a place they can afford, for sale signs is a clue. You can sell me a property property with a sign, d
And I can t do the same. You set the prescient don't t b bully. You have more money than me good luck, right is right .

sueandskip
11-15-2014, 07:41 PM
you can have a sign but not in the yard...If you have been here for any amount of time I can't believe you haven't seen this...It's been this way for a couple years now...Put the for sale sign inside a window..:loco:

Bogie Shooter
11-15-2014, 07:42 PM
Why are you selling?

DAWN MARIE
11-16-2014, 11:17 PM
I just sold my house without a Realtor. Took two weeks exactly. I put the sign in the window and got a few calls from that. But the majority of my calls (average 2-3 a day) came from a well placed ad in the paper. We purchased a one month ad and got 2-3 calls a day. One thing I thought was good was to place the ad in the middle of the month so we would get both Oct and Nov people coming in looking. Worked. Skipping the middle man was the best thing we did. All the calls came directly to us and we negotiated and settled on a price and the best thing.....no Realtor fees!

Polar Bear
11-16-2014, 11:51 PM
I just sold my house without a Realtor. Took two weeks exactly. I put the sign in the window and got a few calls from that. But the majority of my calls (average 2-3 a day) came from a well placed ad in the paper. We purchased a one month ad and got 2-3 calls a day. One thing I thought was good was to place the ad in the middle of the month so we would get both Oct and Nov people coming in looking. Worked. Skipping the middle man was the best thing we did. All the calls came directly to us and we negotiated and settled on a price and the best thing.....no Realtor fees!


How did you handle all the legalities, paperwork, etc.?

Bonanza
11-17-2014, 12:56 AM
How did you handle all the legalities, paperwork, etc.?

That's the easy part.
You simply pre-arrange the details with an attorney or title company.

KathieI
11-17-2014, 08:35 AM
How did you handle all the legalities, paperwork, etc.?

McLin & Burnsed handle the entire procedure for you. I've used them a few times and have been very happy.

graciegirl
11-17-2014, 10:29 AM
How did you handle all the legalities, paperwork, etc.?


McLin Burnsed does the whole thing for $750. That law firm probably has handled more closings than any other law firm in this country.

pivo
11-17-2014, 10:51 AM
There was a post a while back about flat fee listing, I commented on it as I sold my house up north on flat fee listing, it get's listed on mls and all the top sites, I also listed on craigs list and had a sign on my front window the only work if you call it that was taking photo's of my house and sending it to flat fee to post on the sites.
I saved thousand's of dollars listing this way, this will be the way to sell very shortly.
don't listen to realtors bad mouth this way of listing,
Mark my words pretty soon their will be less realtors getting listings

justjim
11-17-2014, 11:01 AM
Selling yourself works when you have a "hot market" like you currently have in TV. We sold one ourselves here in TV and listed with The Villages and sold another. It has been my Experence that higher priced homes are more difficult to sell yourself.

Regardless, pricing it at or just below the "market" is the key to a relative quicker sale.

DAWN MARIE
11-17-2014, 12:23 PM
How did you handle all the legalities, paperwork, etc.?

We are using the lawyers in Sumter who handle the regular Village Closings. But you can go to any lawyer or title company. Heard there is a Tri County Title Company that is cheaper but this will be $450 to close with the lawyer. Still way better than shelling out $$$$$ for Realtor fees.

DAWN MARIE
11-17-2014, 12:28 PM
Selling yourself works when you have a "hot market" like you currently have in TV. We sold one ourselves here in TV and listed with The Villages and sold another. It has been my Experence that higher priced homes are more difficult to sell yourself.

Regardless, pricing it at or just below the "market" is the key to a relative quicker sale.

Yes, and the market here is hot right now. Our house listed over the $350 mark. We were told the homes between 200-300 sell the quickest so we figured we might take longer. We had two agents give us a price and used their numbers as our bench mark actually selling it for more than either agent thought we would get. Our biggest selling point was our waterfront view. So we marketed that with the ad.

pivo
11-17-2014, 01:05 PM
To get an idea on price check the listings for your area and type of home and judge your price, the market depends on what the buyer can afford not the price, if you can afford a bigger home you like you buy. if not then a less expensive.

also check the houses bough in your area and get a complete price plus taxes, etc.

Bill32
11-17-2014, 08:06 PM
I just sold my house without a Realtor. Took two weeks exactly. I put the sign in the window and got a few calls from that. But the majority of my calls (average 2-3 a day) came from a well placed ad in the paper. We purchased a one month ad and got 2-3 calls a day. One thing I thought was good was to place the ad in the middle of the month so we would get both Oct and Nov people coming in looking. Worked. Skipping the middle man was the best thing we did. All the calls came directly to us and we negotiated and settled on a price and the best thing.....no Realtor fees!

Ditto but Took us 3 weeks to sell, TheVillagesFSBO.com web site ( $89.00/ 1 yr),...Two weekends in the Daily Sun. using Advantage Title,LLC For the contract and closing, no Realtor. Sign in window. Had two willing buyers, over 4K

e-flyer
11-17-2014, 08:46 PM
I'm assuming it's ok to put a sign in your yard if you are having an open house, the Villages places flags to mark it open. There was a house in our neighborhood this past weekend that had open house signs in the front and back yard (faces the street). It seemed to be working for them, as there was several folks looking at it. Unless you are in a hurry, or don't have the time, save yourself 5% or more and sell it yourself.

Bonanza
11-18-2014, 03:19 AM
To get an idea on price check the listings for your area and type of home and judge your price, the market depends on what the buyer can afford not the price, if you can afford a bigger home you like you buy. if not then a less expensive.

also check the houses bough in your area and get a complete price plus taxes, etc.

Sorry, but you are wrong on all counts.

Looking at the price of listed properties tells you nothing.
You have no way of knowing if each individual house is priced right
or if it is overpriced.

Most people cannot tell anything by guessing at what the type of home is,
unless you've been in the house and know the details.

The market does not depend upon what a buyer can afford.
The market is determined by properties that have sold and closed.
It is closed sales and only closed sales that determine what the market is.

JB in TV
11-18-2014, 08:52 AM
Sorry, but you are wrong on all counts.

Looking at the price of listed properties tells you nothing.
You have no way of knowing if each individual house is priced right
or if it is overpriced.

Most people cannot tell anything by guessing at what the type of home is,
unless you've been in the house and know the details.

The market does not depend upon what a buyer can afford.
The market is determined by properties that have sold and closed.
It is closed sales and only closed sales that determine what the market is.

With all due respect, I beg to differ with you. The "market value" of a property is determined by many factors, only one of those factors is closed sales. Another factor is what a capable and willing buyer is willing to pay for said property.

In a rapidly increasing market, the price of prior sales is not a true indication of a properties values, and in a rapidly declining market the same applies. Appraisers have a difficult time justifying the value of a particular property in either of these conditions.

You are right when you say that the market does not depend upon what a buyer can afford, of course... however I suspect that the poster who mentiond that really meant "what a capable and willing buyer is willing to pay"

pivo
11-18-2014, 01:26 PM
Thanks JB that's what I meant take everything into consideration and you shpuld come up with a fair price for seller and buyer. wheww

Bogie Shooter
11-18-2014, 01:30 PM
OP was a rant about sign's not how to determine the value of a home.

graciegirl
11-18-2014, 01:42 PM
OP was a rant about sign's not how to determine the value of a home.


Sometimes we just can't choose which rant to respond to on this forum.

Xavier
11-18-2014, 02:01 PM
OP was a rant about sign's not how to determine the value of a home.

... and an almost unintelligible rant at that!

Xavier

Bonanza
11-19-2014, 03:41 AM
With all due respect, I beg to differ with you. The "market value" of a property is determined by many factors, only one of those factors is closed sales. Another factor is what a capable and willing buyer is willing to pay for said property.

In a rapidly increasing market, the price of prior sales is not a true indication of a properties values, and in a rapidly declining market the same applies. Appraisers have a difficult time justifying the value of a particular property in either of these conditions.

You are right when you say that the market does not depend upon what a buyer can afford, of course... however I suspect that the poster who mentiond that really meant "what a capable and willing buyer is willing to pay"

To clarify -- I was not speaking about a single property when I referred to market value. You will note that I said "closed sales" (plural).

When all the factors have been taken into consideration (square footage, updates, landscaping, obsolete factors, number of bathrooms & bedrooms, area etc.) an appraiser or Realtor can get an average and then apply a price range for an individual property, regardless of an up or down market.

We haven't seen a rapidly up or down market in a number of years, but in a case such as that, lenders, appraisers and savvy Realtors will adjust the time frame of sold/closed properties to reflect the changing market.

slipcovers
11-19-2014, 08:54 AM
It's all about SUPPLY & DEMAND.