Selling a House Where Pets Live
Why don’t home buyers like your pet?
- Nervousness. Pets make some people very uncomfortable. Not everybody grew up with a family pet or enjoys outings at the zoo. Fur and four legs does not a human make.
- Fear. Real and irrational. It’s not only dogs that instill fear in people. All kinds of silly wives’ tales and superstitions involve cats.
- Inexperience. Pets are not always predictable.
- Your pets aren’t their pets. They imagine yours bite, jump, vomit, claw, spit-up hairballs or are just plain hyper and bad.
#1 Preferred pet solution
The best thing to do to ensure top price for your home is to relocate your pets while your home is on the market. Putting them in the back yard, in the garage or in another room that you keep locked is insufficient, and it’s not fair to them. You need to remove them from the house.
- Let a friend or relative care for Fluffy and Spike.
- Board them at a kennel.
- Send them on vacation.
Overcoming negatives associated with your pets
If you shrug off all professional advice and absolutely refuse to move your pets out of the house, then at least minimize the objections and nuisance factors, real or otherwise:
- Cat litter boxes & dog potty pads
Keep them out of sight and impeccably clean. Nothing turns off buyers faster than opening the door to the laundry room and being greeted by a full or stinky cat box.
- Carpet & floor pet stains
Hire professionals to remove the stains. Buyers will spot them and form unfavorable opinions about the rest of the house. If the stains can’t be removed, then remove the floor covering and replace it.
Remove signs of a pet
You don’t need to advertise that pets live at your house. Removing signs that you have a pet is simply smart practice. Why turn off a buyer at the get-go? It’s those first impressions that are so all-fired important.
- Do not put photos online showing your cat asleep on the bed.
- Seal up doggie doors.
- Put away food and water bowls when not in use.
- Vacuum religiously, every day, sometimes twice a day.
- Pick up pet toys and put them away.
- Pack up cat trees and other signs of cat paraphernalia (you know who you are).
- Remove photos of pets from refrigerator, walls and table tops.
- Pack up all cages, carriers and other tell-tale signs.
Showing your house
Put your pets into a carrier and attach a note warning buyers not to disturb them. The last thing you need is somebody sticking their hand inside the carrier and getting bit or scratched. You can’t predict how your pet will react when locked up and alone.
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