My wife and I brought a 550k house 3 years ago in a nice suburb of Detroit. 3500+ footage with the basement. Great neighborhood. The houses sell fast, and generally cash. Neighbors keep their 150k cars in the driveway kinda place. (Between John Daly/Beach Daly and Cherry Hill/Ford Rd. in northern Deaborn Heights for those who know the area)
We refinanced in January of 2025 but now we're splitting up and I am dreading selling this place. We put nearly 150k into it. Redid a bathroom. New water heater, furnace, air conditioner, hot tub, privacy fence, garage door. Basement was redone. And in nearly every room there were major repairs or replacements.
Zillow is saying $572,000 – $645,000 and landing at 608,000. How realistic are these estimates in general? And a follow up question. How much do the sort of things we did to the house actually add to the value? I know we won't get the full amount back. I know we won't even get a third back. But is a quarter realistic?
I'm chewing my nails raw thinking about how much we put in versus what we might pull out. She has a great job, I don't. What I get from this is going to in large part define how the next five years of my life go.
How much do improvements matter when judging the price of a home versus the Zillow suggestion?
byu/Real_Walk5384 inRealEstate
Posted by Real_Walk5384
11 Comments
Meet with three realtors and have them give you comps and their input on the property. it’s not just that you won’t get back what you put in, but it has everything to do with what the comps are on recently sold. Stop biting your nails and face it head on and get the facts from the agents.
(When an agent comes out, they understand that you will be interviewing more than one. Make sure to have your list of improvements and ask your questions.
There are past posts on choosing a realtor and questions to ask if you want to look at those.
They should also explain about the new buyers agreement so you understand that as a seller. Usually, different realtors will have different suggestions on things you should do to prepare the property.
Their estimates may be very close when they look at comps. Their suggestions of how to list and when to list may differ.)
The zillow zestimate is garbage in every situation. That is why their buying and selling portion of their business went bankrupt. If you list a home for twice what it’s worth, the zestimate will jump up. The zillow estimate is not based on any actual facts. Zillow themselves lost many, many millions of dollars and admitted it was because they couldn’t accurately predict what homes were worth or would sell for. Get some agents in there to give you suggested listing prices.
Did anyone from Zillow actually walk thru your house? That’s how accurate the zestimate is.
The Zillow suggestion is a random number generator.
Improvements may add some value, but rarely would they raise the value by the cost of the renovation.
The best and only way to assess the current value is to compare to similar homes nearby that have sold recently.
You can’t change the past; let that go and begin working with what’s in front of you.
You won’t get even your original purchase price back after realtor fees. Nevermind any repairs. You bought at the peak. If you are buying again in the same market, dont worry about it
Split the cost of an appraisal and request an “as is” estimate. Have a list of any needed repairs and estimates. You can also have it available for showings to keep everyone grounded.
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Don’t use the Zestimate. Look at recently sold homes nearby and get a sense of what buyers in your area are actually paying.
Zillow is not reality price of houses are lower than Zillow estimates if you actually want to be reasonable and sell. It’s all just ai generated to spike prices and trick the sheeple. Higher prices are not good for owners unless you sell.
Zillow doesn’t know what your home is worth. Market value is what your market will bear, so whatever buyers are currently willing to pay for it. The best assessment of that is to look for homes similar in size, amenities, and condition that have very recently sold and what’s currently on the market you’d be in competition with.