If you’re thinking about selling your home, the next few months may be a great time to do it.
Selling a house requires presenting it in the best possible light. For some, that means spending time, money and effort on cleanup and repairs. For others, the project starts at decluttering. Don’t cringe… decluttering your home doesn’t have to be a headache. These cleaning hacks will get you well on your way to a home that anyone would be happy to call their own.
- Work on one room at a time. If you try to clean your entire house at once, you’re likely to wind up feeling overwhelmed and defeated. It’s much better to break it up into manageable chunks. Tackle one room per day until your whole house sparkles. If you don’t have time to polish every square inch to a high shine, focus the bulk of your efforts on the most important areas – kitchens, bedrooms, bathrooms, and entryways.
- Focus on horizontal surfaces. One shortcut to making your home immediately feel less cluttered is to zero in on horizontal surfaces like counters, shelves, tabletops, kitchen islands, mantels, and dresser tops. Clear off these surfaces, leaving only a few basic decorative items. You’ll be amazed how much more open your house feels after performing this one simple trick.
- Look with a buyer’s eye. It’s hard to emotionally disconnect yourself from a place that has been home to you for years, but it’s important to do so. Look at your house dispassionately, and ask yourself, as a potential buyer, what do you see? Chances are, you’ll notice little things to clean or fix that had gone unnoticed for ages but would jump right out at someone who had never been in your house before.
- Clear out personal items. Sellers often leave lots of family photos and other personal items on display, with the idea that they make the place look more lived-in and homey. Unfortunately, that’s not usually a good tactic. Your house should appear to the buyer as a blank slate for their future life. Hard as it may be to pack up all your personal belongings, remember that the buyer should be able to envision their family photos on the walls, and their kids’ drawings on the refrigerator, not yours.
- Don’t forget the yard. The first thing a potential buyer sees isn’t your clean kitchen or your perfectly organized entryway. It’s your front yard. So it pays to make sure the outside portion of your house is just as thoroughly decluttered as the inside. Make sure the porch is clear, put kids’ toys away, and stow all your garden tools in the garage. A clean front yard makes a lasting first impression.
When the time comes to sell your house, remember that presentation counts. Making repairs and improvements can definitely increase your home’s resale value, but these simple decluttering tricks will go a long way toward presenting your home in the best way possible.