Using a broker to sell your home can cost you up to six percent of the selling price -- in other words, if you sell your house for $400,000, you can lose up to $24,000.
But you'll save that money if you sell the house yourself -- and it's not hard to do!
Thoroughly revised and scrupulously researched, For Sale By Owner in California takes you step by step through the entire selling process, from putting the house on the market to transferring the title. Even if you choose to use an agent, this book is a great way to prepare yourself for the home-selling process. Learn how to:
pick the best time to sell
prepare your house for sale
advertise widely and inexpensively
sell while you're buying another house
set the sale price
screen buyers for financial feasibility
make all disclosures required by law
negotiate with potential buyers
handle multiple offers
remove contingencies
complete the escrow process
The 7th edition of For Sale By Owner in California reflects the most recent changes in the housing market and federal and state laws. It also provides all the forms you need, including:
disclosure forms
offer and counteroffer
sales contract
contingency releases
deeds
second mortgage note
and more
All forms come with complete instructions for filling them out.
A note to those outside California: Even though For Sale By Owner in California provides state-specific forms and information for Californians, there's plenty of material in the book that can help home sellers in the other 49 states as well. Don't sell your home without it!
The Adobe Reader format of this title is not suitable for use on the Pocket PC or Palm OS versions of Adobe Reader.
When Is the Best Time To Sell Your House? Introduction...
Before rushing to put your house on the market, let me suggest that you research the pros and cons of selling your house at this particular time. You may conclude that now isn't the right time and that you'd be better off delaying your house sale, at least for a little while. You will rarely hear a real estate agent say this, of course, because brokers earn their commissions only when a house changes hands. Just the same, if brokers spoke frankly, most would tell you that too many people sell their homes for too little money because they sell at the wrong time or are in too much of a hurry.
A. Plan the Timing of Your Sale
Put bluntly, there are times when it's unwise to put a house on the real estate market. Why? Because sometimes the market is flat and getting a fair price is extremely difficult. I've seen hundreds of houses sell for considerably less than they would have had they been sold a year or two earlier or later. Indeed, in recent years, with fast changes in interest rates and consumer confidence, a few months one way or the other can mean a difference of thousands of dollars in the price of a house.
My point is simple. When it comes to selling your house, you are in the driver's seat, if you really want to be. By planning properly, you can choose a good time to sell, set a fair price and wait until you get it. Unfortunately, the reverse is also true: If you don't take the time to really understand how the real estate market works, you can lose a bundle.
B. Why Sell Your House?
People have many reasons for wanting to sell their house:
Job change. You can't -- or don't want to -- commute to your new job from your old house.
Personal status or lifestyle change. You get married or divorced, move in with someone (or someone moves in with you), you have a new child, your daughter leaves for college, your spouse dies, your health argues against continuing to live in a house with stairs or in a city with very cold weather, or you've always wanted to try living in Hawaii.
Investment or lifestyle upgrade. You're selling your existing home to move up to a nicer one. Your old house isn't that bad, but now you can afford something you like more -- because it's bigger, closer to work, in a better neighborhood or school district; has a pool; is a better investment; or provides something else that's important to you.
Financial needs. You can't afford the mortgage payments. This doesn't necessarily mean you're headed for foreclosure or bankruptcy, but it does mean that an unreasonable share of your income is going towards housing payments, and you have other priorities -- like paying your other bills and having cash to spare, taking trips or helping your children go through college or buy homes of their own. You'd like to live in a place that costs you less per month, or where the cash you take out of selling a more expensive house can make a real difference in the quality of your life.
Table of Contents
Introduction
1. When is the Best Time to Sell Your House?
2. Legal Requirements of Selling Your Own House
3. Tax Considerations When Selling a House
4. How to Work with Real Estate Agents
5. How Much Should You Ask For Your House?
6. How to Tell the World Your House Is For Sale
7. Preparing Your House for Sale and Making Disclosures
8. Making Sure the Buyer is Financially Qualified to Buy Your House
9. The House Sale Contract
10. Offers, Counteroffers and Negotiations
11. After the Contract is Signed: Proceeding Through Escrow
12. What If Something Goes Wrong During Escrow?
13. When Your House is Difficult to Sell: Lease-Option Agreements
Appendix (Tear out forms)
Index
Reviews
San Jose Mercury News...
The best all-around workbook guide for do-it-yourself home sellers.
Los Angeles Times...
Real estate agents won’t be happy about this. Nolo has a book for homeowners who want to sell their home without using an agent…contains forms and instructions for the entire selling process, from deciding when to sell to closing escrow.
About the Author
George Devine is a licensed real estate broker and a widely respected educator in the real estate field. He holds a B.A. from the University of San Francisco, and an M.A. from Marquette University, and has pursued additional studies at San Francisco State University, Seton Hall University and other academic shrines. Currently, he teaches real estate at the McLaren School of Business at the University of San Francisco, where he was named the Outstanding Adjunct Professor in 1991. For several years, George wrote the popular “Real Estate Handbook” column in the weekly Real Estate Guide section of the San Francisco Progress. He is the author of For Sale By Owner and co-author of How to Buy a House in California.