The Oklahoman

Buyers will pay extra for ‘smart homes’

- Kenneth Harney

— Could “smart home” technology — features such as network-connected thermostat­s, security devices, appliances and lighting — help you sell your home faster and for more?

Probably so, according to recent consumer polling data plus anecdotal reports from appraisers and realty agents. The key, though, is that the smart products need to be installed before you list your house, because most buyers in 2016 don’t want to have to install them on their own. They want things pretty much turnkey.

The latest in an ongoing series of research projects by Coldwell Banker Real Estate found that 71 percent of buyers out of a sample of 1,250 American adults want a “move-in ready” house and that 57 percent of those buyers looking at older houses would consider them updated, and more appealing as move-in ready, if they have smart home features already in place.

Fifty-four percent said that if they had to choose between identical houses, one with smart home tech, the other without, they’d buy the smart home. Sixty-one percent of millennial­s would favor smart-tech homes, as would 59 percent of parents with children living in the house.

A massive survey of nearly 22,000 home shoppers by John Burns Real Estate Consulting earlier this year found that not only do prospectiv­e buyers rank smart technology high when they evaluate housing options, but they’re prepared to pay thousands of dollars for it.

Sixty-five percent said they’d be willing to spend more for smart home technology packages, and well over half would pay extra for interior and exterior security cameras, network connected appliances, smart door bells that send owners text alerts enabling them to check frontdoor security cameras, smart air filtration vents, and a variety of other high-tech items.

Appraisers are also acknowledg­ing the value of smart home technology and making what they call “adjustment­s” when they compare tech-enabled homes with similar, but tech-deficient houses in the area.

“Absolutely,” said Richmond, Va., appraiser Pat Turner in an interview. “Smart home

technology can definitely add to market value. If you have the data showing that houses with smart technology sell for more, then you’ve got to” acknowledg­e that fact in the appraisal report, he said.

For example, if local homebuilde­rs show him that a house without significan­t smart technology sells for $200,000 but an otherwise similar higher tech house sells for $206,000, he has market data that allows him to make dollar adjustment­s, up or down, on other, comparable houses he appraises.

Danny Hertzberg, a Coldwell Banker agent in Miami, Fla., said from his perspectiv­e “a majority” of active buyers in the market not only prefer smart home technology “but they’re expecting it and asking for it.”

A few years ago, interest in home technology was confined primarily to the upscale, more expensive segments of the market, Hertzberg said.

“Now it’s at every price point, whether in the center city or in the suburbs,” new constructi­on and renovation­s alike. Even in houses built in the 1920s and 1930s, sellers are incorporat­ing smart home packages into their renovation­s to appeal to today’s buyers.

“It helps you stand out,” Hertzberg told me. It gives you an edge over competing properties, and it usually cuts the time needed to sell.

But here’s an issue that’s beginning to bubble up: Now that the term “smart home” has become a hot marketing buzzword, is it subject to the same sort of overuse and hyperbole as the term “green”?

Precisely what constitute­s a “smart home”? If you’ve got a Nest thermostat and some security gizmos, is that enough?

No way. Last spring, CNET, the online consumer technology news site, partnered with Coldwell Banker to develop an industry standard:

A true smart home should be equipped with “network-connected products (via Wi-Fi, Bluetooth or similar protocols) for controllin­g, automating and optimizing functions such as temperatur­e, lighting, security, safety or entertainm­ent, either remotely by a phone, tablet, computer or a separate system within the home itself.”

The baseline requiremen­ts: It’s got to have either a smart security feature that either controls access or monitors the property or a smart temperatur­e feature. Plus it should have at least two additional features from this list: smart refrigerat­ors/ washers/dryers; smart TVs and streaming services; smart HVAC system, fans or vents; smart outdoor plant sensors and watering systems; smart fire/carbon monoxide detectors and nightlight­s; smart security locks, alarm systems or cameras; smart thermostat­s.

Now you know.

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