The Immutable Laws of Buying and Selling Real Estate

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Newtons Laws of MotionYou’ve got Netwon’s Laws of Motion (depicted mathematically at the right). You’ve got the Laws of Thermodynamics, the economic Law of Supply and Demand, heck you’ve even got Murphy’s Law.

Why aren’t there any Laws of Real Estate?

Well, there are now.

First Law of Real Estate: It doesn’t matter what your neighbors home sold for in the past. The corollary to the First Law of Real Estate is that it doesn’t matter what your own home was worth in the past.

It. Doesn’t. Matter. Home prices are dynamic. They rise and fall, wax and wane, and can change daily – seemingly on a whim. What a home was worth five years ago, last month or yesterday has no bearing on what it is worth today. If you are in the Phoenix real estate market, this can be a difficult pill to swallow. You need to stop thinking about “woulda, coulda and shoulda”. You didn’t sell your home two years ago when you could have gotten twice what you’ll get today, so getting upset about what it sells for today simply is a waste of energy. You can’t go back in time (according to Einstein, a pretty sharp dude) and sell your home, so stop worrying about it.

Second Law of Real Estate: A home is worth what a ready, willing and able buyer will pay for it. In today’s market, “able” is usually the limiting factor. Blame the banks.

Your real estate agent can’t tell you what your home is worth. Zillow and other automated valuation models (AVMs) certainly can’t tell you what a home is worth. A home appraiser can’t even tell you (though the bank will listen to an appraiser and not loan you more than what they claim the home is worth).

A real estate agent can give you a general idea of what a home may sell for. Software valuations are fun to play with and are reasonable ways to look at pricing trends, but should never be relied on to price a home. And appraisers do very good work at drilling down into a home’s value. But the bottom line is, unless you find a buyer that is ready, willing and able to buy your home – at the price they deem appropriate – it’s not going to sell. Ever. (With the possible exception of being “sold” back to the lender at foreclosure).

In short, it doesn’t matter what you think your home is worth. And it certainly doesn’t matter what you wish your home was worth. What matters is what a buyer thinks it’s worth. And whether a lender will approve a loan at that amount.

Third law of Real Estate: Your home improvements will not make your home value increase in an amount equal to or greater than what you paid for the improvements. The corollary to the Third Law of Real Estate is that money spent on maintaining your home adds zero to the home’s value (though maintenance will help keep your home value from decreasing).

Have a $25,000 swimming pool installed, and your home value is not auto-magically increased by $25,000. Depending on the pool, the location, nearby amenities and the direction the prevailing wind blows, your $25K pool addition might add 5 or 10K to the value of the home. Or it may in fact, add 0K. Some improvements, especially kitchen and bathroom improvements, tend to have higher rates of payback than others. But there is no improvement that adds equal or more value to a home than what it cost.

That shiny new water heater you added last year, the pretty new roof or that $3,000 air conditioner compressor that was installed last week add ZERO dollars to your home’s value. Oh the fact the water heater, AC and/or roof is newish may appeal to some buyers. That may well be what triggers their decision to buy your home versus another one, but they don’t make the home intrinsically more valuable . Does it suck to dump three grand into an air conditioning repair on a home you’re not even living in? Hell yes it sucks. But try selling a home in Phoenix without A/C. Or without a water heater. Or a roof. You’d have to discount the price of the home at a far greater amount than those repairs would cost in order to sell a home missing such basic functionality. And you’ll cut your potential buyer pool significantly without those mandatory “features”. If you need to make fundamental repairs, you’re just going to have to suck it up and make them and not expect to recoup any of that money.

Fourth Law of Real Estate: The odds of getting an offer on your home increase exponentially if your real estate agent goes out of town. The corollary to the Fourth Law of Real Estate is your dream home will come on the market 15 minutes after your agent boards a plane.

Seriously! Ask any agent what happens to their business when they go to a conference. Or on a vacation – whatever that means. They’ll tell you that business invariably increases when they leave town. Usually in direct proportion to the level of inconvenience it requires to respond to offers, buyer inquiries, etc. So if you really want to get an offer on your home that is for sale, send your agent on a trip to Hawaii. It’ll work every time…

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About the Author
Jay Thompson

I'm a real estate broker in Phoenix, Arizona and the publisher of the Phoenix Real Estate Guy blog. I tend to drive too fast and scream at the University of Texas and Denver Broncos football teams. My two kids are smarter than most adults I know and my wife is simply amazing.

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Just awesome and very helpful articles, love the way how you relate it with scientific laws. thanks for sharing.

No doubt a great post, all three laws were brilliant. Being a real estate agent this is something that is actually helpful. And yes there is something I would like to share with you all, a book helped me a lot. This book called REO Boom is a complete guide when it comes to understanding the real estate market, you can buy and view it from,
http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/193666156X?ie=UTF8&tag=rb0b4-20&linkCode=xm2&camp=1789&creativeASIN=193666156X

Great Blog about the Laws of Selling. It is amazing how many home owners believe their home will sell for more than the exact home down the street. I was taught early in my real estate carrier it is Price, Terms, Condition, Location and Exposure that sell a home. Not because your home has a brass widget and the neighbors house don't.
I had a close family member who built a beautiful water garden in his backyard. When it was time to sell he was convinced that would make the home sell faster and for more than comparable properties. When the home sold, the new owner had a truck full of dirt delivered the next day. Filling in the water garden and proving my point.

Great article Jay! The fourth rule really was evident last week when I decided to take a quick family vacation.

Thank You Jay.

I always thought the first three rules of Real Estate were: LOCATION, LOCATION, LOCATION. With that said I can understand the new rules -- especially the one which talks about how your current property value doesn't reflect past values. Maybe the laws listed above should be law #4, #5 ... because as most of the agents know, if the market ever turns, the sellers will demand the value based on what they paid for the property.

This is great information. You have provided a really great article here that many home sellers need to read. It's hard to get them to understand that home sales change so much that it really doesn't matter what they sold for in the past. It's also hard for them to understand that they have a personal attachment to their home that buyers will not have.

This is so good I would love to get your permission to print it, give you credit as author & use it in all my pre-listing packages! A great post.

Great post Jay! My favorite law of real estate is 2 and 3. You are right, it's what a ready, willing and able buyer wants to pay for a home. I also wish homeowners stop thinking their upgrades would get them the highest price possible. Thanks for sharing!

Hi Jay,
I like the 4th Rule, a "colleague" of mine called and asked if I could show one of his houses for a client because he was on vacation. I was there and show the villa and the customer liked me and wanted to see some of my house instead. "Thanks for the client".

These points were brilliant... Loved the bit about renos not necessarily increasing home values; so hard to get this through to people sometimes but I think you pinpointed it perfectly!

All three laws are right on the nose. And with these days of mortgage lenders killing people's ability to get a loan (albeit, a lot times they shouldn't give the person a loan), it will only manifest itself in lower property values.

Murphy's Law made me LOL. That seems to be the way it goes with real estate. Now if only I could enroll and graduate from Murphy's Law School that would be something. I think I'll take a home course and perhaps come up with a 5th law of real estate. :)

I hope you get a free trip to Hawaii out of this post somehow :P

Absolutely Priceless!

I had personal experience with the fourth law this past weekend. I have a listing that is priced slightly higher than it needs to be to be in that "sweet spot" of showings and yet, on Friday, I took my family two hours down the road for a short, before school starts, "vacation". I had FOUR people call for showings the day I was going out of town...not counting those that made appointments to see the home with OTHER agents in the area! All four folks were taken care of with their showing requests by agents I hand picked to help them, but none the less, had I been here, I would have shown them...So far today, the first full day back at the grindstone and not one request! Very funny, Jay!

Hah you are so funny Jay! That is exactly true. I need to head out of town!

What a great post Jay. Thanks. Here is mine: The waitress at the Waffle Iron or Hairdresser may not always be right when giving you advice on real estate.

That should be Real Estate Law #5...

That is VERY generous of you!

The fourth law of real estate is the unexplainable truth. I made 3 offers last week and 2 out of the 3 agents were at the beach. Strangely, I also got 2 of the 3 deals done...you can probably guess which ones!

jay - Outstanding post! Thanks for sharing these "laws" with everyone and hopefully many of your readers will share them with their clients.

Just a small point. This:
Your home improvements will not make your home value increase in an amount equal to or greater than what you paid for the improvements.
seems to contradict this:
You’d have to discount the price of the home at a far greater amount than those repairs would cost

Otherwise, great piece!

I don't think it conflicts Chris, it's just not clear / poor writing on my part.

I was trying to make two points -- on improvements and repairs. Those are different. There aren't any improvements that add value to the home dollar-for-dollar what was spent. And there are certain repairs (A/C, water heaters. roofs, etc) that HAVE to be done and really add zero to the value of the home. If you want to sell a home in Phoenix with a broken A/C, you're going to have to discount the home $5K. Add a $3K A/C unit and you've brought the home back to its base value, not really increased it's value. Yeah, technically it's increased in value over a home with a broken A/C, but it has not really made the home more valuable. An appraiser, for example, is not going to apply any positive adjustment to a home because it has a functioning A/C. Now do a bathroom renovation, and they will adjust the value upward (though not as much as the cost).

I had this happen to me a few years ago. The seller put on a new roof. The agent actually negotiated the contract down because his point was that the new roof is something that doesn't add value, but makes it more appealing for a buyer. So he negotiated the price down...even with a new roof.

I'm not sure how you come up with this stuff but you always hit the nail on the head. Especially with "Thompson's 4th Rule". Love it!

I love this - especially that last one. I remember a couple years ago when I went to the annual Keller Williams Family Reunion, and it seemed that my business shot through the roof the moment I boarded the plane.

I wasn't the only one. The conference hall was filled with real estate agents on their laptops and phones working on finalizing deals and putting our fires.

In regards to the first three laws, I agree 110%. "Ready, able, and willing" - hit the nail on the head. I think the hardest part when explaining this to sellers is that you're trying to convince someone who has an strong emotional attachment to it.

You'll usually never run into this if you speak with an investor; someone who understands most of these laws as an intrinsic part of their line of work.

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