Home staging is hiring a designer or stylist (called a home stager) to suggest ways to make your home more appealing to potential buyers. When selling your home, it often helps to have a professional help highlight your home’s selling points and make it appealing to a wide range of buyers.
But home staging is not a one-size-fits-all service. Here’s what to consider when deciding whether to hire a home stager.
- Many levels of service are available. For about $100, a home stager will walk through your house and offer advice on how to best show it. You may be told to remove clutter, hang mirrors in strategic places, repaint or clean carpets. Or, for a higher fee, a stager can perform a more hands-on role, such as repositioning furniture and arranging flowers. For those willing to pay in the thousands, there are stagers with warehouses full of furniture and decor items with which they can redecorate your house.
- Stagers say the cost is worth it. Some studies show that a house that has been staged is on the market for fewer days and sells for a higher price than comparable homes. Others have found the price increase can be sizable in a hot market or in an area of luxury homes.
- Check the local market. Then decide whether a home stager is really going to make a difference to you. In a hot seller’s market, houses may not need staging in order to move. As well, if your home is in a modest neighborhood, you may not get the return on an extravagant makeover. A little old-fashioned advice may be enough: clean up and clear out the junk.
- Consider your time. For busy people, hiring a home stager may be money well spent. If he or she gets your home into selling shape in about a day, it can save a lot of stress and aggravation. If you need to sell quickly, or if your house has been on the market for some time and received little interest, staging may be the answer.
- Ask your REALTOR®. If you are considering a stager, ask your REALTOR® about the cost versus benefit. He or she may be able to recommend someone. Some REALTORS® will also pay all or a portion of a stager’s fee as part of their marketing plan.
You can also find home stager directories through associations such as the International Association of Home Staging Professionals, Accredited Staging Professionals or the Interior Redesign Industry Specialists.
Published on January 11, 2007