Showing posts with label how to prevent foreclosure. Show all posts
Showing posts with label how to prevent foreclosure. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 5, 2025

🏡 The Real Estate Market Has Changed: How to Sell Your Home Fast and for Top Dollar in 2026

The Real Estate Market Has Changed: How to Sell Your Home Fast and for Top Dollar in 2025 (Georgia Guide)

🏡 The Real Estate Market Has Changed: How to Sell Your Home Fast and for Top Dollar in 2026

Serving: Metro Atlanta & surrounding Georgia markets


Presenting your home the right way drives more views, showings, and offers.

Not long ago, real estate felt like easy money—buy a home, wait a bit, sell for profit, repeat. Those days are gone. Today, even with a solid market, buyers are selective and many listings never make it to closing. If you want results, you need a plan.




This guide shares a 9-step system I use with Georgia sellers to help them sell faster, attract stronger offers, and net more.


1) Know Why You’re Selling — and Keep It to Yourself

Your motivation shapes pricing, prep, and timing. But don’t reveal it to buyers; it can weaken your negotiating position. If asked, a simple line works: “Our housing needs have changed.”

2) Price with Precision (Before You List)

Buyers compare your home to dozens of others. If your price doesn’t match the value on day one, you risk going stale and inviting low offers. Use a data-driven Comparative Market Analysis (CMA) to set a strategic list price designed to attract multiple qualified buyers.

3) Study the Market Like a Pro

Review sales from the last 6–12 months, analyze active competition, and track pending trends in your micro-market (neighborhood, school district, and price band). Knowledge = leverage at the negotiating table.

4) Hire the Right Real Estate Agent

The #1 complaint sellers have about agents is poor communication. Choose a REALTOR® who provides consistent feedback, understands local Georgia trends, markets with video + social + texting tools, and negotiates fiercely for you.


5) Maximize Presentation & Staging

  • Declutter + deep clean: hotel-level bathrooms and spotless kitchens.
  • Repair: squeaks, leaks, loose handles, scuffed paint.
  • Stage: neutral decor, good lighting, clear traffic flow.
  • Give buyers space: let them imagine living there.

6) Make It Effortless to Get Info

Traditional open houses account for a tiny slice of actual sales. Today’s buyers want instant, no-pressure details. My listings use:

  • 24/7 info hotlines and text codes linked to your property
  • Short-form videos, virtual tours, and floor plans
  • QR-code yard signs that drive straight to rich listing pages

7) Know Your Buyer

What’s their motivation and timeline? Are they relocating, already in a lease, or rate-locked? Are they fully pre-approved? Understanding the “why” behind the offer helps you control pace, terms, and net.

8) Write a Complete, Protective Contract

Disclose known defects in writing, clarify who pays for what, and lock in timelines. Avoid off-contract favors like early occupancy—keep it clean and professional to reduce risk and fallout.

9) Don’t Move Out Before You Sell

Vacant homes can feel cold and often net less. Staged or occupied homes typically show better and sell faster. If possible, plan your move for closing day.



Ready to Sell Smart (and Net More)?

I’ll tailor this 9-step system to your property and neighborhood. Text or call 678-378-9837 to schedule your free Georgia Home Value Strategy Session.

Priscilla Hammond, REALTOR® — HomeSmart Realty

Seller FAQs (Georgia)

How long does it take to sell a home in Georgia?

Timing depends on price point, condition, and location. With strategic pricing and presentation, many well-prepared listings attract strong interest within the first 7–14 days.

Should I stage my home?

Yes. Even light staging (declutter, neutral textiles, fresh paint) can boost perceived value and photos, leading to more showings and better offers.

What if the buyer asks to move in early?

It’s safer to say no. Early possession increases risk. Keep terms inside the written contract.

Is an open house necessary?

They can add exposure, but modern buyers respond best to high-quality media, instant info access, and targeted digital marketing.




Friday, December 22, 2017

Help With The Question- Should I Really Sell My Home?


Help With The Question- Should I Really Sell My Home?

Many homeowners are ready to sell their current home to buy a new house because of so many different reasons.


There are some homeowners who currently owe more than what their home is worth. Does that mean they should sell it? Not necessarily. The home values will go back up in the future and you will no longer owe more than what your home's value is.


 You should sell if:

    You’re moving to a new area and you need to sell your home to buy a new house.
    You can make a decent profit on selling your home.
    There is no way possible to maintain your mortgage payment and you’ve already tried a loan modification.
    Your home no longer fits your current family composition, budget and or lifestyle.

But don’t abandon it and let it get foreclosed on. Owning your own home is still every American's dream, so don’t just give up on yours without a fight. There are several alternatives to help prevent you from losing your home and I can give you tips on how to prevent foreclosure.


For example, I know a guy that had to move out-of-state due to a family emergency. He could no longer afford his current mortgage payment because he had a household to maintain out-of-state. He was going to abandon his home and let it get foreclosed on.


I advised him that before he allows that to happen, I could try to help him. I called his mortgage company to find out how bad his situation was. Luckily he was only 2 payments behind and not nearing the foreclosure process yet. They told me that if he can just pay something on it during the month of October it would keep him safe for a little while.


I talked to him about allowing me to find a tenant for it and to provide property management services for his home since he lived out-of-state.


I found 4 tenants for his property within a week (which the rent amount will cover his mortgage payment and my fee) and I’m going to manage his property for him and pay the mortgage monthly with the rent that I’ll be collecting from the tenant.


There are several other viable solutions to just allowing your home to get foreclosed on, call for a consultation, no problem is too big or too small for me.


#should I sell my home #how to prevent foreclosure #selling a home

Priscilla Hammond, Real Estate Agent
RE/MAX Consultants Realty 1
1625 SE 17th St. Causeway
Fort Lauderdale, FL 33316
Cell 305-783-4269
Office 954-767-4667