Carrie Thompson - HOW TO AVOID PAYING A REAL ESTATE COMMISSION

all the things wrong with the truck.

“The passenger door window doesn’t roll up or down,” he said. “Look at the driver’s side door. The hinge is a little weird, and it doesn’t always shut completely. “When you accelerate, you have to keep steady pressure on the accelerator. Otherwise, the truck may jump out of gear and then kick back into gear. “The entire truck will jerk forward. It’s kind of hard on the transmission when it does that.” The buyer ate it up! He bought it on the spot. He knew that most 20-year-old trucks have problems. He also figured that a seller who was so upfront about the problems wouldn’t be hiding any problems from him. Furthermore, my friend was selling it for 30% more than the fair price he had paid a used car dealer just a year before. He had done some work on the truck, but it was still no bargain. This same strategy works for selling a home. Most buyers are not stupid. They know if they buy an older home, it will have some problems. The more forthcoming you are about those potential problems, the more relaxed they will become about buying your house. If you see something, say something. Most states don’t compel you to discuss issues, if you have no knowledge of them. Don’t run out and hire an inspector to nit-pick every little detail of your home and find problems that might not even affect property value. The problems you must report are the ones that are obvious: leaky pipes, rotting wood, basement flooding—basically anything about your property that has bothered you and that you know will

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