Tag Archives: home value

New search page lets you know how your neighborhood home values are doing

The Post analysis, based on data from Black Knight Financial Services spanning 2004 through 2015, shows how the nation’s housing recovery has exacerbated inequality, leaving behind many Americans of moderate means. It also helps explain why the economic recovery feels incomplete, especially in neighborhoods where the value of housing — often the biggest family asset — has recovered little, if at all.

While a typical single-family home has gained less than 14 percent in value since 2004, homes in the most expensive neighborhoods have gained 21 percent. Regional factors such as the Western energy boom explain some differences, but in many cities the housing market’s arc has deepened disparities between the rich and everyone else, such as in Boston, where gentrifying urban neighborhoods have thrived and far-flung suburbs have fallen behind.

The findings of The Post’s analysis underscore another way in which the economy, despite its improvements over the past several years, continues to deliver better returns for some Americans than others.

In good times, housing converts income into wealth. It turns a paycheck into the next generation’s inheritance. But in neighborhoods that haven’t weathered the past decade as well, homes have become a source of debt, a physical trap and an obstacle to life’s other goals.

Enter your zip code at: https://www.washingtonpost.com/graphics/business/wonk/housing/overview/?hpid=hp_no-name_graphic-story-a%3Ahomepage%2Fstory

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only

 

How to sell a house fast

 

Pricing

Decide on a competitive, realistic price guide by checking, with your agent, recent sale prices of comparable properties, advises Simon Exleton of McGrath eastern suburbs don’t want to pitch your property at too high a price where it won’t sell and sits around for weeks or months, but at an achievable level where people see good value,” he says.

Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com, they can help you with listing prices.

Presentation

Making your home look as good as it can is vital to the success of your sale. Rosalie Gordon, principal of Planet Properties inner west, says the first tasks are to have a mammoth declutter and then clean everything until it’s absolutely spotless.

“A fresh coat of paint can do wonders for the interior, and you need to tidy up the garden,” she says.

read more at: http://www.domain.com.au/news/how-to-sell-a-house-fast-20160225-gn117w/

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only.

How to make sure your green home upgrades pay off

GET A HOME ENERGY AUDIT

You want to lower your electric or gas bill. You may even be ready to buy or lease solar panels to generate electricity. But what if you can accomplish big savings by simply re-sealing your windows and doors to prevent air inside your home from venting, driving up your heating and cooling costs? Where do you begin?

MAKE EASY CHANGES FIRST

Tackling less expensive changes first can add up to big savings.

Replacing incandescent lights with compact fluorescent light bulbs, using a programmable thermostat to control when air conditioning or heat turns on can whittle away at your utility bills. Then there’s insulation, the decidedly low-tech but key feature of every energy efficient home.

CONSIDER RESALE IMPACT

Certain green upgrades may add value to your home, depending on whether you live in a part of the country where those upgrades are seen as more of a selling point.

A recent study tracked single-family homes with solar power systems in six states that were sold mostly between 2010 and 2013. The study, conducted by real estate appraisers and the U.S. Department of Energy’s Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, found that the homes sold, on average, for more than other homes without solar power systems. It also found that the sales price gain was higher the bigger the solar system in the home.

Will solar add value to your home?  Contact the appraisers at www.scappraisals.com for you home value questions.  The are Southern California’s forerunners in green property appraisals.

The appraisers, on average, found a premium of around $14,000 for solar homes with typical-sized systems of about 3.85 kilowatts.

read more: http://bigstory.ap.org/article/fc633d5e51544cdc8119762cb60fe8fd/how-make-sure-your-green-home-upgrades-pay

disclaimer: for information and entertainment purposes only