How To Sell Your House: The Process

Whether you've sold before, or this is your first time, make sure you know what to expect with our guide

Selling Your House Can Be A Stressful Time. How To Sell A Property- The Process

Step 1: Should You Sell Your Home?

First of all consider why you are selling. And then ask yourself, do you need to sell at all? In a slow market, why not consider improvements or an extension to make your home more suitable for you. You could also consider renting it out, then sell it on when the market picks up.

If you decide to go ahead with the sale, it's essential your home looks its best for potential buyers. The National Association of Estate Agents says these are the five classic mistakes sellers make: looking desperate, targeting the wrong buyer, lack of research, poor presentation and overpricing.

Step 2: Getting It Right With The Estate Agent

Then you need to market your home. For most people in the UK, this means using an estate agent. An agent will advertise your property and introduce potential buyers but charge you one to three per cent of the sale price as commission, plus VAT at 20 per cent. Or, if you use more than one agent, you will be charged up to 3 per cent in commission plus VAT for whichever agent introduces the buyer. For instance, on a sale price of £200,000, this would mean estate agent's commission of more than £6,000 before you take into account solicitor's fees and removal charges.

Find a local estate agents at The NAEA.

Selling Property. How To Sell A Property- The Process

Get at least three valuations and be prepared to haggle over commission rates. Check that the agent's properties appear on at least one of the big national sites such as Findaproperty and Rightmove.

To get a guide price for your property visit Property Price Advice, or try Nationwide's House Price Calculator or Zoopla. To check out what properties are selling for in your area visit NetHousePrices and HousePrices. To find out what the experts predict will happen to property prices visit HousePriceCrash.

The first offer you receive is most unlikely to be the one you accept. It's normal practice to haggle over the asking price, and very few buyers will offer you the asking price unless the housing market is booming. But in a slower market, you and your buyer will have to reach a compromise on the final price.

You may be asked to take your property off the market by your buyer. We'd advise that you only do this if they can prove that they are in an excellent position to move forward; they're cash buyers, for instance, or the sale of their home is assured and progressing well. If not, you'd be well advised to keep showing your home to other prospective buyers while your (hopeful) buyer gets into a better bargaining position.

Comments

For sale signs

Property

All the help and advice you need when buying or selling property in the UK or abroad

Search all of 4Homes

Be inspired to create your perfect home...

Search 4Homes product finder

A Place In The Sun Live

Get Your Free Tickets Here

4Homes readers go free to A Place In The Sun Live

Find A New Home

Buy, Sell, Rent Or Profit From Property

Get independent, expert advice and support for your property project

Our Favourite Househunting Blogs

Our favourite property blogs, from historians to secret estate agents

Skip Channel4 main Navigation

Channel 4 © 2012. We have updated our terms and conditions and privacy policy. Please ensure you read both documents before using our Digital Products and Services.