Boston Herald

Green upgrades bring return, if Realtor knows how

- BY KENNETH R. HARNEY

WASHINGTON — If you make extensive energy-conservati­on and other green improvemen­ts to your home, will they earn you a premium price for the entire house when you go to sell? For years, the easy answer has been, oh yeah, absolutely: Green is good, everybody knows that saving energy is a nobrainer, and buyers will pay more to get it. There’s research to back that up. A study of California sales found that greencerti­fied homes sold for between 2.1 percent and 5.3 percent more than similar homes with minimal or no green features. A 2015 study of renovated homes in Washington, D.C., concluded the average price premium was around 3.46 percent. A study last year in Texas found that green-certified homes sold for 8 percent more than comparable properties. Home builders have told researcher­s that two-thirds of their customers say they’re willing to pay higher prices for homes with significan­t green features. So is that it? Going green always nets you more green — case closed? Not so fast. Two recent studies by appraisers with long experience valuing green homes suggest the answer is more nuanced. Some of the researcher­s’ findings in brief: Though generally it’s true that green improvemen­ts will earn you at least a little higher price, the size of the premium may depend on external factors you hadn’t thought about:

•Does the Realtor you picked to list your home know enough about green improvemen­ts to market them effectivel­y? Is the agent competent to market what you’ve got to sell?

•Does the agent have any formal training in this area, evidenced by a green designatio­n in her or his own listing presentati­on or advertisin­g?

•Does the listing for your home in the local Multiple Listing Service contain crucial informatio­n about your green improvemen­ts, such as a “green addendum” that details the special features that make it energy-efficient?

•Does the local MLS have “green fields” that allow listing brokers to fill in the blanks with appropriat­e detail so that other agents — the ones who are going to find your buyers — know what your house really offers in terms of green improvemen­ts?

•Do Realtors in the area know much or anything about rating systems such as HERS (Home Energy Rating System), LEED, Energy Star or others? If none of these key factors is working for you, your green features may be impressive, but may not earn you much of a premium. Sandra Adomatis, a Florida-based real-estate appraiser and nationally known expert on valuing green improvemen­ts, headed the research teams for both of the new studies — one focusing on “paired-sale” transactio­ns of homes in the San Francisco Bay area, the other in Virginia and Maryland. A paired-sale analysis examines price difference­s in transactio­ns, comparing virtually identical homes, one of which has significan­t green features. In the California study, green-certified houses sold for an average 2.19 percent premium. In some Virginia locations, where the local certificat­ion company had marketed its services to realty agents, the average price premium was 5 percent. But in areas where Pearl had not yet reached out to Realtors and provided informatio­n on how to market certified properties, some premiums dropped to 1 percent or lower. Adomatis, author of the Appraisal Institute’s manual “Residentia­l Green Valuation Tools” and developer of training courses on the subject, told me that in interviews, some agents who listed certified green properties in California admitted they “had no clue what they were selling.” A few even said, “I don’t know what makes a house green.” Bottom line: If you want to reap the maximum return from your green improvemen­ts, make sure that your Realtor understand­s what they are and how best to sell them.

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