Before
putting a home on the market or listing with a
real estate agent, savvy home sellers obtain a
comparative market analysis, also referred to
in the industry as a CMA. You've probably
received direct mail letters or post cards from
local real estate agents about CMAs. These
pitches offer you a free report to tell you how
much your home is worth. A CMA is used for
market pricing when selling a home.
What is a Comparative Market
Analysis?
Although reports
can vary, standard comparative market analysis
reports contain the following data:
- Active Listings
Active listings are homes currently for
sale. These listings matter only to the
extent that they are your competition for
buyers. They are not indicative of market
value because sellers can ask whatever they
want for their home. It doesn't mean any of
the prices are realistic. The offered sales
prices do not reflect market value until
they sell, and in buyer's markets, for
example, most sell for a lot less.
- Pending Listings
Pending sale homes are formerly active
listings that are under contract. They have
not yet closed, so they are not yet a
comparable sale. Unless the listing agent is
willing to share information about the
pending sale -- and many are not -- you will
not know the actual sold price until the
transaction closes. However, pending sales
do indicate the direction the market
is moving. If your home is priced above the
list price of these pending sales, you could
face longer Days on the Market (DOM) .
- Sold Listings
Homes that have closed within the past six
months are your comparable sales. These are
the sales an appraiser will use when
appraising your home for the buyer, along
with the pending sales (which will likely
have closed by the time your home is sold).
Look long and hard at the comparable sales
because those are your market value.
- Off-Market / Withdrawn
/ Canceled These
are properties that were taken off the
market for a variety of reasons. Usually the
reason homes are removed from the market is
because the prices were too high. The median
prices of this group will almost always be
higher than the median prices of comparable
sales. However, listings cancel also for the
following reasons:
- Seller's remorse. The
sellers decided they cannot part with their
home and no longer want to sell.
- Priced too high. Nobody
made an offer or the only offers received
were low-ball offers, which were rejected.
- The DOM were too long.
Agents sometimes withdraw listings so they
can put them back as a new listing and fool
buyers.
- Repair requests. The
homes were once under contract and after the
home inspection, the buyer requested repairs
which the seller refused.
- Seller fired the agent.
It's not uncommon for unhappy sellers to
fire an agent and hire a new agent.
- Expired Listings
This group will reflect the highest median
sales price because they did not sell and
were probably unreasonably priced. Some of
the expired listings could also show up as
an active listing, listed by a new agent at
a new price. Listings also expire because
they were not aggressively marketed or
because the home was in need of repairs.
Examining Comparable Sales
Comparable sales are those
that most closely resemble your home. It is
difficult to compare a tri-level home to a
single-story home. Select the homes from this
list that are mostly identical to your home in
size, shape and condition, such as:
- Similar square footage
Appraisers compare homes based on square
footage. Larger square-foot homes are worth
less per square foot than smaller
square-foot homes. The variance among a
group of median-priced homes ideally should
not exceed more than 200 to 400 square feet,
plus or minus.
- Similar age of
construction
Ideally, the age of the home -- the year it
was built -- should be within a few years of
other comparable sold homes. Mixed-age
subdivisions are common. For example, in one
area of Sacramento, a subdivision consists
of homes built in the 1950s, and then they
jump a couple decades to the 1970s. Although
the homes are located next door to each
other, the homes loaded with character from
the 1950s sell for more than their newer
Brady Bunch counterparts. If your home was
built in 1980, say, and brand new homes up
the street are selling for more, you cannot
command the same price as a new home.
- Similar amenities,
upgrades and condition
Appraisers will deduct value from your home
if other homes have upgrades and yours does
not. A home with a swimming pool will have a
different value than a home without a pool.
A completely remodeled home is worth more
than a fixer. Homes with one bath are worth
less than homes with two or more baths.
Deferred maintenance will count against you.
- Location
Everybody knows that real estate is valued
on "location, location, location," but have
you considered what that means? A home with
a view of the city, for example, is worth
more than a home facing a cement wall. Homes
located on busy thoroughfares are worth
considerably less than homes on quiet
streets. Compare your home to those in
similar locations. If your home sits across
the street from a power plant, look for
other homes with power plant exposure or
those located along railroad tracks, among
other undesirable locations.
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