Could Your Closet Make a Difference?

Could Your Closet Make a Difference?

hollyReal Estate: Selling a Home Leave a Comment

Could Your Closet Make a Difference?When this article caught my eye, I chuckled. Who would buy a home on some Smith Mountain Lake Real Estate based on the closets in the house? But the more I read, the more sense it made to me. So if you are trying to sell your home, spend a few minutes on this bit from Phoebe Chongchua with Kirk Greer’s Real Estate Update. Your closet indeed might make a difference.

Homeowners are always looking to fine-tune the look of their homes before they put their houses on the market. But all too often an area that gets forgotten is the closet.

Everyone seems to have more stuff than ever before and a lot of that stuff gets crammed into the closets. Then when you list the home on the market, and Mr. and Mrs. Buyer come to have a look, they reach for a closet door and are greeted with an overstuffed, unorganized mess. The prospective buyers don’t see your valuables as prized possessions; instead what they see is too much stuff and too little space. Often buyers can’t picture their belongings in a home that’s filled with clutter. That’s why a lot of agents will recommend organizing, not just the space you see immediately upon entering the home, but also the closets.

“I think that instead of being kind of a luxury, now it’s something that everybody thinks they need,” says Paula Gallegos, co-owner of Conejo Closet Designs in Thousand Oaks, California. Gallegos says an organized, well-planned closet can be a huge attraction. “Who wants just a regular shelf and pole when you have all these capabilities of the hangers and the drawers and the belt racks, shoe shelves — everybody needs storage,” she says.

The requests for closet organizers are growing interestingly. Closets are turning into spaces where people don’t just store their clothes. They’re also considered an important upgrade for many buyers. Just as a large renovated kitchen and bathroom area are typically more appealing to buyers, so too are organized closets.

“They’re getting bigger. They want more bells and whistles. They want more accessory items. There is one home we’re bidding (on the project) right now that has an upstairs bedroom and they’re putting a refrigerator in the closet,” says Gallegos.

At the top of every homeowner’s list is how to maximize space. “Sometimes that might be extending your organizers higher than what you have, maximizing the overhead space and sometimes it’s a matter of using the extra space you have below with baskets and shoe shelves and things like that,” says Gallegos.

One of the newest trends for closets is being borrowed from the dry cleaning industry. It’s a rotary closet device called Rotabob and it brings the clothes that are stuck in hard-to-reach places right to you.

“For instance, you probably see a lot of closets that are not too deep — you know a reach-in closet and they’ve got a real long return where you look down the side of it and it’s two or three feet of really hard-to-get-at space. So, with the Rotabob you can install one of those and just basically bring your clothes to you instead of having to reach in for them,” explains Gallegos.

They carry a price tag of about $900 to $1,200 for a unit with installation but after it’s put in there’s nothing else to do. “They are stainless steel units with ball bearings so there’s no maintenance and no electricity and they work for just about any closet,” says Gallegos.

These units are becoming popular not just for closets but also for laundry rooms, storage spaces, and garages. “Someone put it in a utility closet and loaded it up with baskets and hung their mops and rags on the handles and put their cleaning supplies in the basket,” says Gallegos.

Being organized on the outside of your home creates curb appeal that gets prospective buyers in the door. Then keeping them there long enough to decide they can’t live without your home requires careful, well-thought-out organization inside your home including those areas that you don’t notice right away but your prospective buyers most certainly will.

Written by Phoebe Chongchua at Kirk Greer’s Real Estate Update.

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