Selling a home is not just about putting it on the market and hoping for the best. A little preparation goes a long way, and the right moves made before you list can make a real difference in both your final price and how quickly you sell.
Here is a simple breakdown of what we look at together before your home hits the market.
1. Presentation and First Impressions
Buyers decide fast. The way your home looks and feels in those first few minutes, online and in person, shapes everything that follows.
This usually means:
Professional cleaning. It sounds basic, but it signals care. A professionally cleaned home photographs beautifully and feels different the moment someone walks in.
Decluttering and simple staging. Less is almost always more. Clearing surfaces, simplifying furniture, and removing personal items helps buyers picture themselves in the space.
Fresh paint where it counts. You do not need to repaint everything. A few tired walls or scuffed trim refreshed can make a home feel years newer.
Bright, warm lighting. Replace any burnt out bulbs and open the blinds. Light sells homes.
Curb appeal. The front of your home is the money shot, the photo that stops the scroll. Light landscaping, pressure washing the driveway or deck, and tidying up the yard can make a significant first impression before anyone steps inside.
2. Maintenance and Repairs
Small issues can become negotiating leverage for buyers. Addressing them proactively keeps the process clean and your position strong.
This usually looks like fixing minor repairs before listing, things like dripping taps, sticking doors, and loose handles. Tightening up anything visibly worn or tired. Getting quotes for any larger items like roofing, decks, or siding so buyers have accurate information rather than guessing. And neutralizing any strong odours, since pets, smoke, or moisture are worth addressing early.
None of this needs to be a renovation. It is about reducing friction and building buyer confidence.
3. Inspections and Documentation
Having the right paperwork and information ready ahead of time makes for a smoother transaction and a more informed buyer, which usually means fewer surprises and a firmer deal.
Depending on the property, this can include:
Utility bills. Buyers often ask about average monthly hydro and gas costs. Having that info ready is a small thing that signals organization. You can request your averages from Nelson Hydro, Fortis Electrical, and Fortis Gas.
Property tax information. Simple to have on hand, useful for buyers doing their math.
Renovation permits and warranty documents. If work has been done on the home, having the paperwork for it adds credibility.
WETT inspection. If you have a wood burning fireplace or insert, buyers will often need a current WETT (Wood Energy Technology Transfer) inspection to secure home insurance. If yours has not been done in the last several years, it is worth getting ahead of. A WETT inspection typically runs around $200.
Septic inspection (for rural properties). If your home is on a septic system, having it pumped and inspected before listing helps avoid surprises during subject removal. This usually costs in the range of $800 and I recommend asking the contractor for photos of the tank for your records.
Well information (where applicable). Flow rate, potability test results, and any relevant documentation.
None of This Has to Feel Overwhelming
My job is to walk you through what is actually worth doing for your specific property, what can be skipped, and where to focus your energy. Not every home needs every item on this list and I will tell you honestly what will move the needle and what will not.
The goal is always the same: get your home in front of buyers looking amazing, priced right, and ready to sell with as little friction as possible.
If you are thinking about listing and want to talk through where to start, I am always here to help.