Brad Borem
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Articles and Advice

How to Make Your Home Look Move-In Ready

Most sellers focus on price, but buyers are making a different calculation when they walk through your door. They're asking whether the home feels like somewhere they could actually live. That answer forms fast, often before they've made it past the entryway. So the question worth asking before you list isn't just what it's worth, but what it feels like.

Clean Like Someone's Judging Every Square Inch

Think about things such as grout lines, window tracks, the tops of door frames, and the inside of the cabinet under the bathroom sink. Buyers on a second showing slow down and look harder, and the places you haven't touched in a year are exactly where their eyes go.

Odors are often underestimated. You've lived in your home long enough that you don't notice yours. Pet odors, old cooking smells, or a musty basement that doesn't get much airflow — none of it is invisible to someone walking in for the first time. Be sure to clean the carpets and add an air purifier if necessary.

Fix the Things You've Stopped Seeing

Every homeowner has a to-do list that includes things like a dripping faucet, a door that doesn't latch properly, or a baseboard that's been scuffed since the last time someone moved furniture. None of these is expensive to address, but left alone, they compound. A buyer doesn't register them individually but as a pattern. And a pattern of deferred maintenance raises questions you'd rather not be answering.

Patch nail holes, touch up paint, and replace burned-out bulbs. Then walk the home top to bottom as though you've never been inside it before.

Take Your Personality Out of It

This is the hard one. Your home reflects choices you've made over the years: colors, art, collections, furniture that's exactly right for how your family uses the space. But buyers aren't looking for your life. They're trying to imagine theirs. Bold accent walls and personal décor make that harder, not easier.

Neutral paint, such as warm whites and soft grays, gives people room to project. Pack away the family photos and the pieces that are distinctly yours. The bones of the home are still there. You're just letting buyers see them.

The Outside Matters Before the Inside Gets a Chance

Buyers form their impression in the driveway. By the time they reach the front door, they've already decided how they feel. To impact that, mow the lawn, edge the walkway, and deal with whatever's overgrown. A freshly painted front door and updated house numbers do a surprising amount of work. Add a doormat and a potted plant or two. Your efforts don't have to be elaborate to have an impact.

Light Is Doing More Than You Think

Clean the windows. Pull back the curtains. Swap out low-wattage bulbs for brighter ones. It sounds minor. It isn't. Dim rooms photograph poorly and feel smaller in person. Light makes spaces feel bigger, cleaner, and more move-in ready than almost anything else — and it costs almost nothing to fix.

Getting a home ready to sell isn't about perfection. It's about removing the friction between a buyer walking in and a buyer wanting to stay.

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