There’s curb appeal and then there’s home appeal. Your
garage sort of straddles both worlds. The exterior is usually visible from the
curb and the interior will be viewed when potential buyers tour the home.Thus,
we’ve put together a list of 5 simple upgrades you can make to your garage in
order to sell your home faster, and to help get the price you want.
Keep in mind that in many cases, the garage is to the man
what a nice kitchen remodel is to the woman, so your home will be more
attractive to at least 50% more home shoppers if you do a mini-makeover.
5 Garage Upgrades to Impress Future Buyers
1.
Replace
the garage door. If your door is damaged, dented or scratched beyond what a
fresh coat of paint can handle, consider replacing the door. Base model garage
doors are a small investment that will improve how your home shows on the
exterior and will prevent a potential buyer from thinking, “well, we’ll have to
replace the garage door ASAP….” If it needs a new coat of paint, read Painting Your Metal Garage Door for
quick tips. Replace any obviously worn or torn weather stripping to maintain a
clean look. Buyers these days want automatic garage doors – period – so replace
your door if you have an outdated, manual version.
2.
Organize
it. Even if buyers know that the clutter in your garage will go with you,
it’s not a good selling point. You want the buyer to open the garage door and
think, “aaaaah….look at that nice clean space,” rather than, “eeek! What a
nightmare to clean this junk out of here…” Organizing
your garage will help your garage show better and it will also simplify
your own packing and moving process when you sell your home. If your realtor is
staging your home, resist the temptation to move the boxes of stuff into the
garage. See if a friend or relative will store them for you for a couple or
months or load them into an affordable storage unit.
3.
Clean it.
As long as your organizing the garage, clean it up. Get all the dust, grime and
cobwebs cleared from every nook and cranny. Try to get rid of the oil stains
and hose/soap the floor down with a cleaning agent designed to get rust and oil
stains off garage floor concrete. If certain, stubborn oil stains won’t come
out, cover them up with a basic oil drip pan from a local hardware or auto parts
shop – it shouldn’t set you back more than $15 or so. Wash the windows to
increase natural lighting. You’ll be amazed at what a difference it makes when
a garage is organized AND clean.
4.
Throw in
a few cheap extras. There are some garage organization tools that don’t
cost much but add a whole lot of panache to the space. While investing in a
full set of metal storage racks might be a bit much (unless you plan on taking
them to your new space), you can screw a few hooks into the rafters to hang
bikes and lesser-used kid toys, which looks like an added perk. If you have a
tool bench that isn’t used, make sure it’s cleared off - with unused tools
organized above it on a cheap peg board – to show the work area off.
5.
Add some
lights. If you only have a single, florescent strip – consider adding
another light fixture or two, or put a decent floor lamp in the corner by the workbench.
If the garage looks like a gloomy cave, it’s not as enticing. If it’s well-lit
– homeowners can start imagining themselves working out there and tinkering on
their own, future hobby projects.
Need a little help upgrading your garage door and operating
system? Need some new garage
door weather stripping? Contact R&S
and we’ll hook you up. 1-925-671-7606.
These tips show that even small changes can greatly enhance a garage's appeal, making it a valuable asset. Thanks for sharing this. Contact them for any kind of "garage door service."
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