2011-2012 Cost vs. Value: Which Remodeling Projects Pay Off the Most?

When tackling home remodeling projects, you’ll find some projects pay off more than others at times of resale. Remodeling Magazine, in conjunction with REALTOR® Magazine, recently released findings of its annual Cost vs. Value report for 2011-2012, revealing which remodeling projects offer the biggest bang for your buck.

Overall, the trend right now is replacement over remodeling–swapping out the old for the new rather than doing a total gut job, which can be much more costly.

This year’s Cost vs. Value report found that exterior replacement projects–such as new garage doors and a new entry door–offer some of the best returns at resale, allowing home owners to recoup close to 70 percent or more of the costs of the project at times of resale.

The following are the top, mid-range projects from this year’s report, based on what home owners stand to recoup at time of resale:

1. Replacing the entry door to steel

Estimated cost: $1,238

Cost recouped at resale: 73%

2. Attic bedroom (converting unfinished attic space into a bedroom with bathroom and shower)

Estimated cost: $50,148

Cost recouped at resale: 72.5%

3. Minor kitchen remodel (including new cabinets and drawers, countertops, hardware, and appliances)

Estimated cost: $19,588

Cost recouped at resale: 72.1%

4. Garage door replacement

Estimated cost: $1,512

Cost recouped at resale: 71.9%

5. Deck addition (wood)

Estimated cost: $10,350

Cost recouped at resale: 70.1%

6. Siding replacement (vinyl)

Estimated cost: $11,729

Cost recouped at resale: 69.5%

By Melissa Dittmann Tracey, REALTOR® Magazine

http://styledstagedsold.blogs.realtor.org/2012/01/25/2011-2012-cost-vs-value-which-remodeling-projects-pay-off-the-most/?cid=WR02012012:41359&ed_rid=2888282

Hattiesburg Real Estate- REDUCTION

11 SMITH Dr. Hattiesburg , MS  39401  $59,900

Well maintained home on cul-de-sac. Enjoy both privacy and convenience (to town and HWY 49)  in this rural setting. Vaulted ceilings, garden tub, and more.

Call Crye-Leike today for details and a private showing.

 

Hattiesburg Real Estate – New Price and More!

3405 Lincoln Rd was just reduced to $135,000. This home has been remodeled complete with all new flooring, paint, and new AC unit! Now priced below the comps and offering concessions like a home warranty and 3% towards buyer’s closing costs with full priced offer. Not located in a flood zone and school down the street is moving, so… NO MORE SCHOOL TRAFFIC! This home has it all including bonus room, formal dining room, vaulted ceilings, and exterior enclosed storage. Call for a showing today!

Hattiesburg Real Estate- REDUCTION

219 W Canebrake Blvd. Hattiesburg , MS   39402   $ 1,600,000

Luxury living at it’s finest…over 8500 sq ft in this stunning “one of a kind” waterfront home  in Canebrake. 5 bedrooms, 5.5 baths, media room, office/library…plus all that Canebrake has to offer!

Call Crye-Leike today for your private viewing!

 

Buyers/Sellers and Real Estate Professionals

2011 Profile of Home Buyers and Sellers/ Highlights 

Home Buying and Real Estate Professionals
• Eighty-nine percent of buyers purchased their home
through a real estate agent or broker—a share that has
steadily increased from 69 percent in 2001.
• Forty-one percent of buyers found their agent through
a referral from a friend or family member and 9 percent
used an agent they had used before to buy or sell a
home.
• About two-thirds of recent buyers only interviewed one
agent before they found the agent they worked with.
• Nearly nine in ten buyers would use their agent again or
recommend to others.

Home Selling and Real Estate Professionals
• Thirty-nine percent of sellers who used a real estate
agent found their agents through a referral by friends or
family, and 22 percent used the agent they worked with
previously to buy or sell a home.
• Two-thirds of home sellers only contacted one agent
before selecting the one to assist with their home sale.
• Ninety-two percent of sellers reported that their home
was listed or advertised on the internet.
• Among recent sellers who used an agent, 85 percent
reported they would definitely (69 percent) or probably
(16 percent) use that real estate agent again or
recommend to others.

 

http://www.realtor.org/topics/homebuyers_sellers_profile

Home Buyer Seminar

Join us at our office on March 20, 2012  for our next Home Buyer Seminar. The Crye-Leike office is located at 118 Fairfield Dr., directly behind the Shell station on Hwy 98.

Topics of discussion  include:

  • Credit
  • Loans
  • Home Inspections
  • The Closing Process

Please call Crye-Leike (601 336 6941) today to reserve your seat. We look forward to seeing you there.

9 Remodeling Tips to Make Your Home Feel Bigger

1. Multitask the dining room …

Cost: $500 to $2,000

If you have an eat-in kitchen, your dining room is probably used for special occasions only.

“Why have a prime spot sit vacant except for two or three holidays a year?” says Susanka.

Use it every day as an office or homework room without giving up dinner-party capabilities. Install doors ($300 to $500 each, with labor); add shelves or a cabinet for supplies; and invest in fitted pads to protect the tabletop.

For more flexibility, try a table like homedecorator.com’s $629 Mission Table Cabinet, a sideboard that — amazingly — telescopes into a full-size dining table.

2. … and the guest room

Cost: $100 to $3,000

Stop dedicating a whole room to infrequent out-of-town visitors.

With a decent air mattress, futon, or pull-out couch, you can lose the spare bed and use the room for day-to-day needs. (If you go with an air mattress, make sure to choose one with a built-in reversible motor to simplify the inflating and deflating.)

Add furniture, and what was only a guest room can double as a media or game room or home office.

3. Add a powder room

Cost: $3,000 to $6,000

Adding a first-floor powder room is simple if you have an unfinished basement or crawlspace for running the new pipes. Look for an existing room — a coat closet, say — and you won’t have to build walls.

To save more, forgo the tile. The minimum space required by code is typically 2½ by 4½ feet, but you can often get an exemption to go even smaller.

4. Build a home office closet

Cost: $100 to $3,000

If your family is already bursting the seams of your abode, a home office might seem out of the question. But every household needs at least a small desk for paying bills and to anchor a wireless Internet system — and you can often fit it all in a closet or armoire.

At its simplest, all you need are five or six deep, sturdy shelves made from wood or a composite product, which can total less than $40 at a home center. In a closet, set the lowest shelf at 30 inches high so you can wheel up a chair.

5. Bring the laundry upstairs

Cost: $5,000 to $7,000

Hiking up and down the stairs with laundry is enough to make anyone wish she could trade up. Instead, just move the machines.

Today’s full-size high-efficiency washers and dryers are all designed to stack. You can steal the space — a little more than four square feet — from a closet, hallway, or nook.

You’ll need to run new pipes and wiring, so being near an existing bathroom helps keep costs down, says Raleigh, N.C., architect Tina Govan. Make sure to include a drain pan to collect overflows or spills.

6. Open the floor plan

Cost: $2,000 to $4,000

A choppy layout of undersize rooms can make any house feel claustrophobic.

“People like the look of older homes, but not the way they function,” says Seattle architect Thomas Lawrence.

To open your floor plan without major expense, remove doors from rooms that don’t need them. Interior walls can come out for $2,000 to $4,000, unless they support the building or contain pipes — in which case a window or pass-through may be a more feasible solution.

7. Use built-ins to replace a closet

Cost: $4,500 to $6,000

If you choose to eliminate a closet to expand or enhance your living space, create some built-ins to get back the lost storage. A run of four- to 10-inch-deep shelving along a wall has almost no effect on the size of a room, says Corvalis, Ore., architect Lori Stephens.

And it can handle many times the capacity of a closet. You might spend $4,000 removing the closet and another $2,000 on new built-in cabinetry, or just $500 if you use assemble-it-yourself home-center cabinetry, such as the Billy collection from Ikea.

8. Build a bump-out

Cost: $6,000 to $12,000

Another trick to expand a home without a full-blown addition is called a bump-out. You hang extra space off the side of the house, sort of like an oversize bay window.

Structurally, it can’t extend more than about three feet from the existing exterior wall, but it can run nearly the whole length of the building — enough space to add an eating area to your kitchen or a closet to your master bedroom suite.

Because there’s no foundation work, a bump-out costs about $150 a square foot — or just $100 if you can tuck it under an existing roof overhang.

9. Finish non-living spaces

Cost: $15,000 to $30,000

Converting a full-height basement or garage into living space gets you an addition at half price. You’ll need a floor, ceiling, walls and more, but no structural work, no foundation, and no roof, so it’ll cost $50 to $100 a square foot — vs. about $200 for a true addition.

Attics are fair game, too, but more complicated because you may need to add a stairway and probably extend the plumbing, heating, and cooling systems a flight up. Doing all that brings the cost to around $150 a square foot.

 

http://money.cnn.com/2012/01/20/real_estate/home_remodeling.moneymag/index.htm

Petal Real Estate- Price REDUCTION

120 JACKSON St. Petal , MS  39465  $87,500

3 Bedroom, 2 Bath home. Clean as a whistle.  Conveniently located-close to shopping, schools, downtown, everything!

Call Crye-Leike for details on this listing and many more!