The truth about open houses
As the housing market has slowed in recent years, a great many sellers have discovered a real-estate industry secret: Open houses rarely move houses. In a 1991 survey by the National Association of Realtors, just 3 percent of people who had bought existing homes found them through an open house. Last year, Rebecca Dodd, the Centreville, Va., agent who represented Farah and Rodriguez, didn't sell a single home through an open house, although the 30 or so she held did bring her nine new customers. Says Kay Courtney, a real-estate agent in Grand Rapids, Mich.: "Open houses are real good for me. But as a method of selling homes, they're worthless."
Browsers, no buyers. When serious house hunters are out in force, that may be less true; an open house could bring in a buyer, and if it doesn't you might not notice. But in leaner times, open houses are at best likely to frustrate ("Last year, I got a lot of people saying they were looking to see how the homes were decorated," says Dodd) and, at worst, could hurt your chances of getting the asking price. A house held open frequently can start to look like a loser, making it a prime target for low-ball bidders.
Even under the best of circumstances, open houses should be used judiciously. Unless your house is in a densely populated area, is easily accessible by car or on foot and is visible from the street, you may as well not bother holding open houses at all, says Jacelyn Stretton, a broker with Weichert Realtors in Chester, N.J. Instead, agents for out-of-the-way property owners might try invitation-only showings to homeowners in areas nearby where houses are less or more expensive, and who might thus be potential trade-up or trade-down buyers. Or your broker might direct walk-ins at other open houses your way. At each open house Stretton holds, she keeps a stash of materials on hand about other homes in her inventory at comparable prices.
Source: An Article by Amy Saltzman


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