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Home Improvement Projects That Pay Off For Pittsburgh Home Sellers

Home Improvement Project Value To Pittsburgh Home Buyers


2008 Cost vs. Value Report:
 
Remodeling magazine’s annual report shows that maintenance-related projects and moderately priced upgrades are providing stable paybacks, even in a slower market.

Despite home price drops in many cities, remodeling projects are holding their own as a way for owners to add value.

 

Many people are wondering where their money will be best spent during these uncertain economic times. When home owners turn to you for your expert advice, counsel them that some things never change: Investing in their home still pays off.

 

NATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REALTORS® statistics show that home prices have fallen by an average of 7 percent nationally in the past year. But the value of home owners’ investment in remodeling projects has declined only 3.86 percent on average between 2007 and 2008, according to Remodeling’s 2008–2009 Cost vs. Value Report.

 

Remodeling produces the Cost vs. Value Report each year in cooperation with REALTOR® magazine. REALTORS® responding to a survey in midsummer said home owners could expect to recoup a national average of 67.3 percent of their investment in 30 different home improvement projects. At the height of the housing boom in 2005, home owners could expect to recoup a national average of 86.7 percent on projects.

 

Remodeling remains hot in 10 cities, where, on at least some projects, home owners can recover 100 percent of their costs. In Charlotte, N.C., for example, decks, midrange kitchen remodels, vinyl siding, and window-replacement projects all would net more than they cost, in respondents’ estimation. High rates of recovery were seen in both strong real estate markets and weak ones. 

 

Many cities with the highest rates of recovery were smaller—Jackson, Miss., and Billings, Mont., for example—which may point to lower labor and materials costs that are easier to recoup. 

 

Seattle also made the list of cities with a cost recovery of more than 100 percent on decks and minor kitchen remodels. In fact, Pacific Coast cities recorded the best payback on remodeling by a wide margin, as they did in 2007. Although construction costs on the Pacific Coast are nearly 17 percent higher than national averages, the value of renovations at resale more than makes up for those higher prices. 

 

The result is an average cost-recouped percentage that’s 14.8 percent higher than in the rest of the country. The toughest place to get your money back: Midwestern cities such as Chicago, Cleveland, Indianapolis, and Milwaukee.

 

Top 10 Project Paybacks 

 

Once again, exterior remodeling projects lead the way for recovery on dollars spent in this year’s Cost vs. Value survey. When you compare the national averages, replacement projects that boost curb appeal—siding, windows, and decks—give you the greatest chance of recouping your money. Inside, only kitchen remodels can compare, at least on a national level.

 

1. Upscale fiber cement siding (86.7%)

2. Midrange wood deck (81.8%)

3. Midrange vinyl siding (80.7%)

4. Upscale foam-backed vinyl (80.4%)

5. Midrange minor kitchen remodel (79.5%) 

6. Upscale vinyl window replacement (79.2%)

7. Midrange wood window replacement (77.7%)

8. Midrange vinyl window replacement (77.2%)

9. Upscale wood window replacement (76.5%

10. Midrange major kitchen remodel (76.0%)

 

 

The Real Deal: Examples from You

 

REALTORS® around the country helped us track down home owners who had recently completed remodeling projects. In all cases, the projects cost far less than the job cost estimates provided with the Cost vs. Value survey.

 

ATTIC-TO-BEDROOM 

Location: Oak Park, Ill. 

 

When Rick Nagle and Eileen Deamer of Oak Park, Ill., spent more than $35,000 to convert the attic of their 100-year-old home into a combination master bedroom and office, “resale value wasn’t our concern,” says Deamer, a U.S. government employee and the married mother of two. 

 

The transformation turned 600 square feet of makeshift office with a toilet in the middle of the room to a colonial-style bedroom/office with two walk-in closets and an adjoining sage green bath with a walk-in shower. To allow two simultaneous uses, pocket doors separate the bedroom and office spaces.

 

BATHROOM 

Location: Fountain Hills, Ariz. 

 

“This is such a crazy market to try to judge how much a renovation is worth, but having a refurbished kitchen and bathrooms makes almost any house more salable,” says Shari Gay, ABR®, sales associate at RE/MAX Sun Properties in Fountain Hills, Ariz. The owner—Gay’s sister—added Saltillo clay floor tile throughout the 1,800-square-foot home, including the new bathroom. Bathroom finishes included a new cherry vanity cabinet, a tile shower, oil-rubbed bronze fixtures, and a soothing, sophisticated yellow color scheme, which all add up to a great look. 

 

Total cost? About $5,000. “She’ll at least break even on the upgrades,” predicts Gay. “If this were a boom market, she would get even more.”

 

KITCHEN 

Location: Honolulu 

 

A kitchen is the heart of most homes. That’s why Hollywood set designer Wally White decided to spend most of his $15,000 renovation budget on upgrading the kitchen of his Honolulu studio condo. To spruce up the existing white cabinetry, which he left to save costs, the owner added bursts of color with celadon green granite countertops and walls painted in a complementary shade of light green. An undermounted white porcelain sink, a six-light halogen fixture on a dimmer, and brushed stainless steel faucet completed the look. It paid off. 

 

White grossed $45,000 when he sold eight months later. “The unit sold for more than any other studio—and most of the one-bedroom condos in the building,” says Susan Weinik, a sales associate with Realty Executives Oahu.

 

BASEMENT

Location: West Brighton, N.Y.

 

In a modest 1950s ranch in West Brighton, N.Y., a midrange basement upgrade suited Bernard Fallon’s mother-in-law, Ligaya Nocon, just fine. After purchasing her home “on the high end of the market,” according to Fallon, broker at Fallon Associates Realty in Rochester, N.Y., Nocon kept basement renovation costs under $9,000. 

 

She created a cottage feel by whitewashing the knotty pine paneling rather than replacing it. She also reupholstered the existing bar to cover wear and warmed up the room with wall-to-wall carpeting instead of wood or tile. “We just dressed it up for the personal enjoyment of my mother-in-law,” says Fallon, “but I think it will help sell the property later.”

 

 

The Specs

 

To help respondents determine the resale value of improvements, the survey provided specifications for each project:

 

  • Attic Bedroom Remodel. Convert unfinished attic space to a 15-by-15-foot bedroom and a 5-by-7-foot bathroom with shower. Include a 15-foot shed dormer, four new windows, and closet space under the eaves. Insulate and finish ceiling and walls. Carpet floor. Extend existing HVAC to new space; provide electrical wiring and lighting to code. Retain existing stairs, but add rail and baluster around stairwell.

 

  • Minor Kitchen Remodel. In a functional but dated 200-square-foot kitchen with 30 linear feet of cabinetry and countertops, leave cabinet boxes in place but replace fronts with new raised-panel wood doors and drawers, including new hardware. Replace wall oven and cooktop with new energy-efficient models. Replace laminate countertops; install mid-priced sink and faucet. Repaint trim, add wall covering, and remove and replace resilient flooring.

 

  • Basement Remodel. Finish the lower level of a house to create a 20-by-30-foot entertaining area with wet bar and a 5-by-8-foot full bathroom; construct 24 linear feet of finished partition to enclose mechanical area. Walls and ceilings are painted drywall throughout; exterior walls are insulated; painted trim throughout. Include five six-panel factory-painted hardboard doors with passage locksets. Electrical wiring to code. Main room> Include 15 recessed ceiling light fixtures and three surface-mounted light fixtures, as well as a snap-together laminate flooring system. Bathroom> Includes standard white toilet, vanity with cultured marble top, resilient vinyl flooring, two-piece fiberglass shower unit, a light/fan combination, vanity light fixture, recessed medicine cabinet, towel and paper-holder hardware. Bar area> Include 10 linear feet of raised-panel oak cabinets with laminate countertops, stainless steel bar sink, single-lever bar faucet, undercounter refrigerator, and vinyl floor tile.

 

  • Upscale Bathroom Remodel. Expand an existing 35-square-foot bathroom to 100 square feet within existing house footprint. Relocate all fixtures. Include 42-by-42-inch shower with ceramic tile walls with accent strip, recessed shower caddy, body-spray fixtures, and frameless glass enclosure. Include a customized whirlpool tub, stone countertop with two sinks, two mirrored medicine cabinets with lighting, a compartmentalized commode area with one-piece toilet, and a humidistat-controlled exhaust fan. Use all color fixtures. Use larger matching ceramic tiles on the floor, laid on the diagonal with ceramic tile base molding. Add general and spot lighting including waterproof shower fixture. Cabinetry includes a custom drawer base and wall cabinets for a built-in look. Extend HVAC system and include electric in-floor heating and heated towel bars.

 

 

Why Renovation Pays

 

Why are renovations holding their value better than home prices today? “When housing slows down, people stay put and renovate their house to make it more livable,” says Paul Zuch, president of Capital Improvements, a designing, building, and remodeling company in Dallas. And by renovating before they sell, home owners get to enjoy the new space themselves, not just make the home more appealing to buyers. “It just makes sense,” says Zuch.

 

Recent renovations also make buyers’ lives easier. “Home owners who remodel their home are providing a service to future buyers,” says Eileen Nelis, a broker at Savvy and Co. in Charlotte, N.C. “When buyers purchase, they don’t want to do all that painting and remodeling, and they don’t want that price tag. They may be willing to make improvements down the line, but when they purchase, they want to open the door and have everything complete. It reduces their stress.”

 

Making home improvements can also reduce sellers’ stress by heading off that time-honored negotiating technique—pecking away at the sales price by pointing out imperfections. “If sellers have done some improvements and dressed up their property, the improvements will help sell it,” says Bernard Fallon, broker at Fallon Associates Realty in Rochester, N.Y. “If sellers don’t want to improve their property, buyers will tick off the repairs and try to take them off the price.”

 

That doesn’t mean that every home owner should do every renovation, even in a more stable real estate market. Take Tulsa, Okla., where median home prices actually edged up slightly more than 2 percent in 2008, according to NAR. REALTORS® in Tulsa reported that, of the 30 remodeling projects surveyed, only 16 netted home owners at least 80 percent of the cost. 

 

“Not every neighborhood will support the additional work,” says Jim Hemphill, a sales associate at Coldwell Banker Select in Tulsa, “but in older, more established neighborhoods, if you redo a kitchen or bathroom or add a master bath or bedroom, you’ll get your money out.”

 

Despite the value, the weak economy is likely to slow seller spending on remodeling, at least in the short term, predicts the most recent Leading Indicator of Remodeling Activity computed by the Joint Center for Housing Studies at Harvard University. 

 

The LIRA for the third quarter of this year estimated that owners’ spending on home improvements will decline at an annual rate of 12 percent by the second quarter of 2009, continuing a two-year downward trend. Spending is unlikely to recover until the housing market turns around, according to the Center.

 

Yet, despite declines in overall remodeling dollars spent and a still shaky housing market, “people’s homes are still one of their best, most solid investments,” notes Zuch. “Even though the markets have gone through some adjustments, it’s still smart to invest in your home.”

Visit www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com to check out our whole array of Pittsburgh Home Buyer and Seller resources.

SearchPittsburghHomes.com:  Where More Pittsburgh Home Buyers Start!

 

 

 

Keller Williams Real Estate Ranks Highest Among All Realty Companies

This study measured the customer satisfaction of home buyers with the largest real estate firms.  Overall satisfaction is determined by examining three factors for the home buying experience:  Agent (65%), office (21%) and services (13%).

Keller Williams achieves a score of 831 on a 1000 point scale and receives the highest ratings from customers in all three factors.  Following in the rankings are Prudential and Coldwell Banker.

When buying a home, customers particularly appreciate agent professionalism, responsiveness to calls and e-mails, and the agent’s skill in locating and showing properties in the appropriate price range.  All of these are areas in which Keller Williams excels according to Jim Howland, senior director of real estate and construction practice at J.D. Power and Associates.

The 2008 study includes 3,670 evaluations from 3,205 respondents who bought a home between April 2007 and June 2008.

Whether you are new to Pittsburgh or just new to the area real estate market, the www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com Team would like to say Welcome Home.  Our team at Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals Pittsburgh offers high tech home search solutions and personalized service.

 

We are Very Motivated to Earn Your Business!

Eric Nichols and Kathy Haggerty – www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com

Pittsburgh’s Premier Home Search Website

 

Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals – Gallery Drive, McMurray Pa 15317

Office: 724-941-9400   Eric Cell: 724-413-6983   Kathy Cell:  412-983-5531 

Pittsburgh Homes Burgh Blog Endorses Federated Mortgage

The SearchPittsburghHomes.com Team at Keller Williams Pittsburgh Real Estate officially endorses Federated Mortgage Corporation as a prominent Pittsburgh based home mortgage lender. 

Many of our Pittsburgh home buyers have found that they receive the most competitive mortgage rates, low transaction fees, excellent service, upfront honesty and a great array of mortgage and refinance loan products to fit individual needs.  Our team at Keller Williams is always pleased to work with Federated Mortgage because we know that they will work as hard as we do to help ensure a smooth transaction for our home buyers.

The SearchPittsburghHomes.com team at Keller Williams Pittsburgh Real Estate will help you find the home and Federated Mortgage will help you get the loan!

Visit Federated Mortgage at:  www.PittsburghMortgageCenter.com for information about all their mortgage loan and refinance products or to get a same day mortgage preapproval. 

Perfect Partners To Make Your Dreams Of Owning A Home In Pittsburgh Come True!

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Visit www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com for Virtual Tour and Additional Pittsburgh Home Buyer Resources.  Click on Featured Homes.

Contact Eric Nichols at Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals for additional info or to schedule a showing. 

Office:  724-941-9400 or for faster service call Cell:  724-413-6983

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Take the virtual tour at www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com where more Pittsburgh Home buyers start!

The www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com Advantage For Pittsburgh Home Buyers

Whether you are new to Pittsburgh or just new to the area real estate market,

Kathy and I would like to say Welcome Home.  We are the team leaders of the SearchPittsburghHomes.com team at Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals offering high tech home search solutions and personalized service.

 

Here are some of the advantages we offer our home buyers:

 

  •  Individual password protected home search websites with advanced hybrid mapping technology and favorite home status change notification.
  • Custom multi list search with email alert for fresh listings.
  • Knowledge of neighborhoods, commute times, property taxes, wage taxes, public improvement projects and other area information.
  • Network of proven professionals in: property settlement, mortgage, appraisal, home inspection and home repair / improvement.
  • Mobile listing information technology – to lookup home listings while on the road.
  • Advanced knowledge with Pennsylvania real estate law and procedures.
  • Skillful negotiating ability honed by years of experience.
  • Attention to every detail from contract to closing.
  • Same day call or email response so you stay informed every step of the way.
  • Ability to really listen and get in tune with your most important criteria.
  • Some clients even say we are just darn nice people!

 

Thank you for considering us your Pittsburgh real estate resource,

 

Sincerely Yours,

 

Eric and Kathy

 

We are Very Motivated to Earn Your Business!

Eric Nichols and Kathy Haggerty – www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com

Pittsburgh’s Premier Home Search Website

 

Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals – Gallery Drive, McMurray Pa 15317

Office: 724-941-9400   Eric Cell: 724-413-6983   Kathy Cell:  412-983-5531 

Email:  ericnicholsrealtor@msn.com  -  kathyhaggerty@kw.com

This is not meant to be a solicitation if you are currently contracted with a buyers agent.  

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Contact Eric Nichols at Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals Pittsburgh 724-941-9400 X247for additional info or to schedule a showing.  For Faster Service Call 724-413-6983.

Top Ten Things To Know When Relocating To Pittsburgh – www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com

1.     Pittsburgher’s “Drive on the Parkway and Park in the Driveway”.  Confusing as that may be, the major highways in Pittsburgh are referred to as Parkways.  If you are not used to driving in western Pennsylvania, you find that the local geography creates a very complex road system that is very difficult for newcomers to navigate.  Most Pittsburgh residents make reference to the amount of time it takes to get from place to place instead of the number or miles.

 

2.     If you have to commute to downtown Pittsburgh by car from the suburbs, you can count on these approximate times on the average weekday to get there:  30 to 40 minutes from most immediate Eastern suburbs (such as Penn Hills), 15 to 20 minutes from neighboring Northern suburbs (such as Wexford), and 20 to 30 minutes from neighboring Western suburbs (such as Robinson Township).  Public Transportation is available by bus and by rail (the “T”).

 

3.     Downtown Pittsburgh offers a host of attractions for true city dwellers in terms of entertainment, nightlife, sports and shopping.  There has been a resurgence of downtown living spaces in the form of revamped warehouse spaces being transformed into contemporary lofts.  Areas close to downtown are offering metro living in the form of high end condos in areas like the Southside, North Shore and the Waterfront.  All of these areas offer their own flavor of Pittsburgh city living at its best.

 

4.     Home shoppers in the Pittsburgh area need to be aware of any impending highway projects that could have an effect on their property in the future.  For example, the proposed Southern Beltway project through Pittsburgh’s southern communities could affect areas of North Strabane, Nottingham and Union Township.  The Pennsylvania Turnpike Commission provides links to web pages on their site that give the most current information on the various projects.

 

5.     There are local wage taxes in the area that are based on where you live.  If you prefer to live right in the City of Pittsburgh, your wage tax will be 3%.  Almost all of the neighboring areas outside of the actual city limits will charge a 1% wage tax.

 

6.     Real estate transactions in the City of Pittsburgh will incur a transfer tax of 4% of the sales price (usually shared with the buyer and seller each paying 2%).   While it does vary by municipality, the majority of areas surrounding the city limits will charge a total of 2% (again usually shared with the buyer and seller each paying 1% each). 

 

7.     Property tax in Allegheny County (including the City of Pittsburgh) is likely to cost you more than in the neighboring counties.  Although initial property tax costs may not be all that different if you compare new construction homes of similar price points, you will see substantial differences when comparing older homes of similar value.  This is because Allegheny County reassesses properties periodically as well as each time a property is transferred.  The neighboring counties historically have not reassessed unless a building permit is issued for remodeling, additions, new structures etc.

 

8.     The residential resale single family home market in Pittsburgh is extremely oriented toward the traditional two story colonial style 4 bedroom home.  New comers to the Burgh can find it discouraging to find their dream home if that is of contemporary design (for example).  While there certainly is a diversity of home styles available, it may take longer to find the perfect home for you if colonial style is not your favorite!

 

9.     The Pittsburgh area (and Pennsylvania in general) is very fortunate compared with many other parts of the country to be normally spared from many forms of natural disaster.   However, there certainly are flood zones for which flood insurance is available if you do so desire to live there.  Also, new comers should be aware that western Pennsylvania is rich in coal and many areas have already been undermined.  It is always wise to find out if your property is built above a mine by calling the Bureau of Mines.  Mine subsidence insurance is available and some insurance companies will further insure if additional coverage is needed to cover the full replacement value. 

 

10.                       The Pittsburgh area is one that is rich in ethnic tradition and heritage.  A trip to the Heinz History Center on the South Side will give you a good background for how Pittsburgh has evolved into the city that it is today.  Areas of the city that are aptly named for their ethnic heritage include Polish Hill and Germantown.  The neighborhoods and cultural diversities of Pittsburgh are reflected in area festivals, restaurants and cafés, shops etc. It’s a great place for new comers to explore and experience traditions from around the world. 

 

 

         It’s extremely important for Pittsburgh real estate buyers to be able to make well informed decisions regarding all of these top ten items.  Eric Nichols with Keller Williams provides Pittsburgh’s Premier Home Search Resource website:  http://www.searchpittsburghhomes.com/ to serve area buyers and sellers with advanced internet information and home marketing resources.  Contact Eric today at 724-941-9400 to begin working with an agent who goes above and beyond for his buying and selling clients.

 

About the author: Eric Nichols is a real estate marketing technology trainer and team leader for the www.SearchPittsburghHomes.com Team at Keller Williams Real Estate Professionals Pittsburgh. Contact us at 724-941-9400 X247 for high tech solutions and personalized service.