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Tips for Determining a Home's Market Value
Wouldn't it be nice to have an easy way to find out how
much the home you want to buy or sell is worth? Some
consider price per square foot to be a valid way to
determine market value. The price per square foot is
arrived at by dividing the sale price or estimated value
by the number of square feet.
In
theory, by using the price-per-square-foot approach, you
could easily determine what price to pay for a listing.
All you would have to do is find out the price per
square foot for a number of properties that recently
sold in the neighborhood that are similar to one that
you're interested in buying. Then average these figures
and multiple the average price per square foot by the
number of square feet in the home you want to buy.
Or,
if you were selling, you could determine how much your
home ought to sell for by finding out how much buyers
paid on a price per square foot basis for homes similar
to yours.
There are shortcomings to this approach. In areas where
there is extreme variability in home size, style,
improvements and amenities, price pre square foot could
mislead you.
Consider three homes that sold within the last six
months in Piedmont, an upscale community in the east San
Francisco Bay Area. All had about 2,600 square feet. One
sold for $712.16 per square foot, another for $617.98
per square foot, and the third sold for $484.18 per
square foot. The average of the three is $604.77.

Given the range of variability, if you used this average
to base your decision on what to offer on a Piedmont
listing with approximately 2,600 square feet, you could
end up paying way too much or offering way too little.
Likewise, if you used this information to select a list
price for your home, you could end up pricing it too
high or too low.
HOUSE HUNTING TIP: For a price per square foot to be
a reliable indicator of value, you need a standardized
housing stock. For example, it would probably be
reliable for condominiums in a development where all the
units were the same size, had the same ownership dues
and offered the same amenities. But, as soon as
variability enters into the housing stock, price per
square foot alone won't tell the entire story.
When
planned unit developments are new, price per square foot
is a useful gauge. But, as these developments mature, so
does the housing stock. Some people will completely
remodel within a couple of decades and others may make
only minor modifications. And, then there are those
homeowners who do nothing, thereby creating a
neighborhood eyesore. |