Baltimore Sun Sunday

Avoiding resale regret

5 home improvemen­ts that may not pay off when you sell

- By Kate Wood

You spent the holidays bingeing on HGTV, and now visions of shiplap accent walls and freestandi­ng soaking tubs are dancing through your head.

Don’t let your desire to upgrade your home downgrade your home’s market value. Before you make a renovation fantasy a reality, consider whether the project will pay off when you’re ready to sell. Plenty of home improvemen­ts add value, but others — like these five — can hurt it.

A chef-quality kitchen

If you love to cook, a high-end kitchen could be the ultimate gift — for you. But if you think a massive overhaul will majorly affect resale value, you might be in for a surprise. An upscale kitchen renovation recoups just 54% of its cost in added value, according to Remodeling magazine’s 2020 Cost vs. Value report.

“If you do marble countertop­s and high-end appliances, you could spend $100,000, and it doesn’t necessaril­y mean your house is worth an extra $100,000,” says Beatrice de Jong, a consumer trends expert for Opendoor, a San Francisco-based direct homebuyer and seller.

Smaller kitchen upgrades could yield a bigger payoff. Chris Arienti, broker and owner of Remax Executive Realty near Boston, suggests keeping updates reasonable: Think granite rather than marble, and GE instead of Sub-Zero.

DIY painting

A bold statement wall can say the wrong thing to potential buyers if the workmanshi­p is questionab­le. Streaky, chipped or low-quality paint can knock $1,700 off a home’s sale price, according to Opendoor data that looked at home offers made from June 2018 to June 2019.

“A good paint job is not easy,” says Sarah Cunningham, a real estate agent with Ethos Design + Remodel in Boise, Idaho. “It is all in the prep work, and most people don’t want to do the prep work.” Hiring a profession­al to paint can help ensure a more attractive result.

An expanded master suite

Knocking down a wall to create an oversize master bedroom or stealing closet space to build out a spastyle bathroom may sound dreamy. But how about as a selling point? “If you go from five bedrooms to four, and you can make it work, no big deal,” Arienti says. But he cautions that losing a bedroom in a smaller house could mean a lower selling price.

As for cutting into closet space, residentia­l building codes don’t mandate that bedrooms have closets. But, Arienti says, “Once you take the closet out of a bedroom, to a buyer, that no longer looks like a bedroom.”

Plush wall-to-wall carpeting

Carpet can be especially unattracti­ve to first-time homebuyers, who may be used to landlords updating carpet between renters, de Jong says.

“In general, people are grossed out by (carpeting). It can make a room look a little bit dated.”

It can also ding your sale price. Carpet as the primary flooring in a house drops the value by $3,900 — and carpeting in the master bedroom causes a $3,800 plunge, according to Opendoor. Conversely, a 2019 report from the National Associatio­n of Realtors estimated that sellers could recoup the entire cost of refinishin­g hardwood floors. New wood flooring

could actually add value, with sellers getting $1.06 for every dollar spent according to NAR.

A swimming pool

It doesn’t matter if it’s infinity edge or abovegroun­d, any pool can be seen as a drawback by buyers who don’t want to deal with maintenanc­e or insurance. Even in Florida, a pool doesn’t add value, Liede DeValdivie­lso, a real estate agent with the Keyes Company in Miami-Dade, said via email. If you’re thinking resale, it’s not worth it — you’ll never recoup the cost, DeValdivie­lso said. But if you’ll use it and enjoy it, put in a pool.

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 ?? BILL OXFORD/GETTY ?? Carpet as the primary flooring in a house drops the value, according to Opendoor.
Consider your timeline.
Consult an expert.
Compare home features in your area.
Get an appraisal.
BILL OXFORD/GETTY Carpet as the primary flooring in a house drops the value, according to Opendoor. Consider your timeline. Consult an expert. Compare home features in your area. Get an appraisal.
 ?? MILAN2099/GETTY ?? A bold statement wall can can turn off potential buyers if the workmanshi­p is questionab­le.
MILAN2099/GETTY A bold statement wall can can turn off potential buyers if the workmanshi­p is questionab­le.

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