Ah, roofs. The hot hot topic right now in the real estate and insurance world. Time and time again I hear that certain items won’t increase your home value, like a new roof (assuming you have something like a 20+ year old roof, or roof in generally poor condition). Oh, it’s not worth replacing, let it fall on the buyer blah blah blah. However, in a sense, it does when it’s time to sell. A roof is one of the largest expenses a homeowner can have when it comes to general maintenance. I don’t know how appraisals work when it comes to appraising home and its value based on updates to things like roof, hvac, electrical, etc, but a new roof can make your home more appealing. It can attract more offers. It can attract BETTER offers. It’s easier to sell because you won’t bump into issues with a mortgaged buyer having an issue getting home insurance policy after you’re under contract- now you might be stuck offering a concession, replacing your roof anyway, or the deal dying. So, you spend $15-20k replacing a roof on an average home. That potential offer that backed out going $30k over asking with waived appraisal just flew out the window. Or the 3 other people who wanted the house backed out because they found out the roof was too old or appeared to be in poor condition. You’re sellin “as is” so your offers will reflect that with your old roof. Obviously every situation is unique, but I truly think that if your house is in otherwise good condition and the roof is something that can hurt your offers or delay selling, it’s just best to replace it or automatically offer concession for it. I work in the real estate world and agents KNOW roofs are killing deals right now. Why would they not bring this up? Am I missing something?
CMV: Having a newer roof does add value to your home.
byu/Walktrotcantergallop inRealEstate
Posted by Walktrotcantergallop
4 Comments
everything about the property affects its value. everything.
I think that a new roof makes a house sell faster. I think it is a wash as to increase or decrease in value. You either end up spending 20k on a roof and not deal with the roof issue or crediting the buyer 20k toward the purchase of a new roof. I don’t think you come out ahead financially with either option. I guess you could argue that your holding costs are lower by selling faster. If the market is hot, you may come out ahead not fixing the roof and crediting less than the roof cost. Alternatively, you could lose if the buyer cannot get insurance for the house.
It add value, but doesn’t increase value
In Texas it’s easier to obtain insurance therefore making the home more desirable and more likely to sell faster for the asking price.
A few years ago when we were house hunting we couldn’t even consider anything that had a roof older than 15 years