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Posted by StagingWorks on November 22nd, 2011
The article below by Rachel Naud was published in the Calgary Herald on November 10, 2011. It touches on a number of very practical points.
Selling your home can be one of the most personal transactions you’ll ever experience.
Think about it, your home is where you make your memories, mark your milestones, celebrate your achievements and learn from your failures.
It’s hard to put a price tag on the place where you built your life.
Yet when it comes to selling your home, homeowners are wise to leave their emotions at the door.
That’s probably the first thing a homeowner needs to know and do before putting up a for-sale sign.
If you want to sell your home for top dollar, home sellers need to have their home “move-in ready,” says Carmen Paradis, a realtor with Re/Max Real Estate Central.
“Buyers want a house they can just move into,” says Paradis.
“They don’t want to have to do anything. People do not want to do the work. They just like to move in and live.”
And although some home sellers may translate this to mean they have to completely renovate their bathrooms and kitchens before putting their home on the market, Maxwell Canyon Creek realtor Joe Samson says this isn’t the case. In fact, sometimes he even advises against it.
“If you’re trying to sell a home that’s below the average selling price, there’s no point in spending $15,000 on a kitchen renovation,” says Samson. “Renovate to what your surroundings are. Don’t get carried away and out-renovate your neighbours.”
He says if a buyer walks into your starter home and sees high-end appliances and granite countertops, they’ll also most likely see a higher price tag.
“If buyers are looking for a house in the $300,000-range and nine out of 10 houses are $300,000 but yours is $350,000 because you have all this beautiful stuff in there, it’s going to take longer to sell, if at all,” says Samson.
“Doing renovations like that will force you to sell higher than your direct competition. You’ll never get your money back.”
Instead, both Paradis and Samson say the biggest investment a homeowner can make to fix up their homes doesn’t cost much at all – paint.
“Paint is biggest thing you can do,” says Paradis. “Sometimes, even if you wash your walls, you can’t get smudges or fingerprints off. Paint fixes that.
“It can also fix odour in the home. Odour turns people off. Especially if the home sellers smoke.”
When it comes to choosing a paint colour, Paradis recommends going with a neutral colour that will appeal to a wide range of buyers. The same rule applies to carpets.
“Some people really like colour but it doesn’t appeal to everyone,” says Paradis. “So let’s say you put in a carpet two or three years ago but it’s purple. You may want to get rid of that.
“Replacing your carpet is one of the most inexpensive things to do but it will give you great bang for your buck. People walk in and it feels fresh and clean and gives you a lot of value because you have more people interested in your house.”
Paradis also recommends fixing all those little projects you have been meaning to get to for years, such as squeaky door handles and loose railings. “It’s the little things that turn people off,” she says. ” It just doesn’t look good.”
Curb appeal is also huge. So if you have chipped paint, an unkept yard and garbage on your lawn, you could scare away potential buyers before they even step in the door.
“If the house looks unkept, quite often people make the decision even before getting out of car,” says Samson.
“They’ll say forget it. I don’t need to see this house.”
Instead, Samson suggests homeowners make the outside of their home look engaging, welcoming and well maintained.
“You want to create an image so people think your house feels like home,” says Samson. “They want to envision themselves living there, not seeing themselves fixing up the outside for two months.”
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


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No Comments » Tags: Anne Bourne, home stager, home stagers, home staging toronto, homestaging toronto, selling toronto home, selling your home, stagingworks blog, Toronto Condo Stager, toronto condo staging, toronto home stager, toronto home staging, toronto home staging blog, toronto stager Posted in Home Staging Tips, Real Estate
Posted by StagingWorks on November 22nd, 2011
The article below by Susan Pigg was published in the Star on Tuesday November 15, 2011.
There may be widespread economic panic in the rest of the world, but Toronto’s housing market keeps plowing ahead unscathed:
Consider these numbers:
• $478,137: The average price of a house in the GTA in October, up almost 8 per cent from $443,633 at this time last year, according to the Canadian Real Estate Board.
• $362,899: The national average price of a house, up 5.5 per cent from October, 2010.
• 16: The number of bids Monday on a Cleveland St. detached house in Toronto’s Yonge-Davisville area which sold for $146,000 over its $839,000 asking price.
“There was no shortage of headline news in October about global financial market volatility and economic uncertainty, but it doesn’t appear to have dampened homebuyers’ spirits,” said Gary Morse, president of the Canadian Real Estate Board in explaining why resale house buying activity picked up again in October after a strong September.
Realtors say they continue to see “cautiously optimistic” homebuyers buoyed by continuing low interest rates and Canada’s resiliency through the global economic crisis.
The only slight downturn appears to be in the high-end market — homes listed for more than $2 million — where both buyers and sellers tend to be more heavily employed in sectors with closer ties to global stock markets.
While a substantive increase in new listings has helped ease the bidding wars and upward pressure on prices that plagued the Toronto market in the spring, realtors say, competition remains fierce in some prime neighbourhoods.
Midtown realtor Richard Byford says he was “pleasantly surprised” to see about 70 couples, many with babes in arms, file through a weekend open house at the three-bedroom Cleveland St. home in Davisville Village he had listed for $839,000. But his jaw dropped when 16 officers were registered as of Monday.
“Low interest rates are driving a lot of it (continued demand despite the economic uncertainty) because it’s seen as free money,” says Byford.
Almost 400,000 homes have changed hands via the MLS system in Canada so far this year, up 1.8 per cent from the same period last year.
The average price nationally for a home stood at $362,899, up 5.5 per cent from October 2010.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


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Popularity: 9% [?]
No Comments » Tags: condo stager, condo stagers, home staging toronto, homestaging toronto, stager toronto, Staging Toronto, StagingWorks, toronto home staging company, toronto home staqing, toronto homestaging, toronto stager, toronto stagers, toronto staging blog Posted in Real Estate
Posted by StagingWorks on November 22nd, 2011
The article below by Garry Marr was published in the Financial Post on November 16, 2011.
October sales highest since beginning of year.
The Canadian housing market continues to defy those who have long predicted its collapse.
It was just another set of numbers, but if anything the market seemed to pick up steam with October sales across the country the best they have been since January.
The upward push caused the Canadian Real Estate Association to slightly revise its predictions for 2011. The group now says sales will be up 1.4 per cent from a year ago, instead of 0.9 per cent.
“The continuing strength of home sales activity in the face of ongoing financial volatility speaks volumes about the confidence of Canadians in our housing market,” said Gary Morse, president of CREA.
Even going into 2012, CREA doesn’t see much changing in the marketplace with interest rates near record lows. It’s calling for a relatively minor 0.5 per cent reduction in sales next year.
The industry continues to have plenty to gloat about as annual sales have held steady in the $450,000 range for the past three years. Prices have also shown a steady upward trajectory and are now forecast to reached an average of $362,700 in 2011, which would be a seven per cent jump from the year before. Next year, prices are expected to remain flat – something most people in the real estate industry see as an accomplishment in the present economic environment.
“Home sales activity over the past couple of months suggests buyers are confident that the Canadian economy will remain relatively unscathed by global economic risks, since every home purchase is a homebuyer’s vote of confidence in the future,” said Gregory Klump, chief economist with CREA, adding there is strong feeling the government’s fiscal policy would be coordinated to give housing any support it should need in the event of a pullback.
So far, the industry seems to be getting all the support it needs from a low interest rate environment that has kept people in the market. Variablerate mortgages tied to prime are still available as low as 2.7 per cent while a five-year fixed rate closed mortgage is now being discounted down to 3.19 per cent.
Toronto continued to carry the national market in October with sales up 14.3 per cent from a year ago. The activity in Canada’s largest city helped boost overall sales activity, which rose 8.5 per cent from a year earlier. Prices across the country continue to be moderate with the 5.5 per cent year-over-year increase the smallest it has been since January.
The consensus among economists is that the housing industry might not have much more to give in terms of price increases or sales but they also are not predicting a massive decline either. “The fact that prices are overvalued today does not necessarily mean they will crash tomorrow,” said Benjamin Tal, deputy economist with CIBC World Markets.
He thinks a “violent market meltdown” would need a catalyst like the a sub-prime crisis or a jump in interest rates like the industry saw in 1991. “We do believe the housing market in Canada will stagnate in the coming year or two,” Tal said.
That housing market has become a key component of the country with a report from TD Economics saying the construction industry was second fastest growing industry in the country and accounts for 10 per cent of GDP. “While the industry’s performance over the last decade has been astonishing, some of the recent strength is likely to taper off in the coming years,” the bank said.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


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No Comments » Tags: condo stager, home staging toronto, selling toronto home, selling your home, Staging your home for sale, Toronto Condo Stager, toronto condo stagers, toronto home staging, toronto home staging company, toronto real estate, toronto staging, toronto staging company, vacant condo staging Posted in Real Estate
Posted by StagingWorks on November 22nd, 2011
The article below was published by CREA on Wednesday November 16, 2011.
Sales activity in Canada reached a nine-month high, led primarily by a buying surge in Ontario, according to the latest national statistics.
Stronger than anticipated MLS sales in Ontario helped raise the national total by 1.2%, and convinced the Canada Real Estate Association (CREA) to up its resale housing forecast from a 0.9% gain in 2011 to a gain of 1.4%.
“The continuing strength of home sales activity in the face of ongoing financial market volatility speaks volumes about the confidence of Canadians in our housing market,” said Gary Morse, CREA’s president. “Interest rates look like they’ll remain at levels that are friendly to the housing market for some time to come, and that’s good news for Canadian home sales activity and the overall economy.”
Ontario sales are forecast to rise 1.2% in 2011, compared to 1.4% nationally, but CREA said in a press release the province showed the most significant upward shift recently.
“Activity came in broadly in line with expectations across much of the country in the third quarter of 2011 with the exception of Ontario,” said the CREA release. “Sales there came in stronger than anticipated in a number of regions over the summer, but were held aloft mostly by Toronto activity as the third quarter ended.”
In terms of price, CREA predicted the national average would increase 7% in 2011, then remain the same at $362,700 a year later by the end of 2012.
Leading exceptions in 2012 on the positive price end will be Manitoba, up 4.9% to $246,000, and Quebec, up 3.3% to $269,900, said CREA.
British Columbia will see prices drop 1.8%, however, coming up 11.5% gains to remain the only province over $500,000 at $563,500 this year. No other province will see a price declined in 2012, said CREA, although Ontario and New Brunswick will remain essentially neutral.
Independent of market conditions, home staging is a highly effective marketing tool used to maximize the selling price of Toronto area homes and condos.
StagingWorks is the premier Toronto home staging company. We provide a complete range of professional services which include vacant home staging, occupied home staging and condo staging. We have staging packages to accommodate most budgets and serve Toronto, GTA and surrounding areas.
Please visit our home staging portfolio for more samples of our staging projects. Give us some some details on your home and when you’re planning to sell, and get a free home staging estimate. Or, call us for a free estimate at (647) 409-2091 or anne@StagingWorks.ca.
StagingWorks has been voted Toronto’s top home stager by Toronto Life.


Please take 60 second to complete our poll on the left side of the screen.
Popularity: 11% [?]
No Comments » Tags: condo staging toronto, home stager, home stagers, Home Stagers in Toronto, Home Staging, home staging blog, home staging toronto, StagingWorks, stagingworks blog, toronto condo staging, toronto home staging, toronto home staging company, toronto staging blog, vacant home staging Posted in Real Estate
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