WHAT TO KNOW WHEN SELLING YOUR HOME

WHAT TO KNOW WHEN SELLING YOUR HOME

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Whether you are a first-time seller or a seasoned expert, selling your home can be a daunting task. Here are five tips to follow as you prepare to sell your home.

Get Your Home Inspected

When preparing to sell your home, getting a home inspection is important. Home inspections can uncover costly problems that may devalue your property, causing you to lose out on money. If you know about these problems before you sell, you won’t encounter any surprises during closing, and you can decide which repairs to make before putting your home on the market.

Upgrade

Nowadays, buyers want move-in-ready homes. Or they want as close to move-in-ready as they can get. Making a few upgrades before listing your home puts you ahead of the competition. So go ahead. Install hardwood floors or new carpet. Upgrade to stainless steel appliances or add some curb appeal to the outside. Buyers want upgrades, and they will be happy when they find them in your home.

Know the Market

When getting ready to sell your house, make sure you know the market. A licensed Realtor is your greatest tool in this case. He or she can research current market trends and comparably priced homes in the area, which helps you list your home at the correct price.

Price Your Home Fairly and Realistically

Once you have seen comparably priced homes in your area, you can decide on a list price. Be realistic when pricing your home. Don’t over-price your home, but don’t list it too low either.

Stage

Once your home is on the market, it is important to keep it looking presentable. Staging is a great way to help yourhome sell. You can hire a professional or do it yourself.

Have any tips for home sellers you would like to share? Leave me a comment.

Boulder Real Estate

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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4 HOME PPROJECTS FOR BEATING CABIN FEVER

4 HOME PPROJECTS FOR BEATING CABIN FEVER

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 1. Install a programmable thermostat:

This task can be a bit daunting but will be worth the effort in the long run.  This device will help your heating system run more efficiently by automatically adjusting your home’s temperature. Using a programmable thermostat also reduces your energy bills by keeping your heating system from overworking itself unnecessarily.

 2. Replace interior doors:

Interior doors are often hollow and boring. Replace them with some more interesting pieces to add character to your home and keep yourself busy. This is a task that is relatively easy and inexpensive making it a great project to complete over the weekend.

 3. Replace lighting fixtures:

Install new ceiling fans to dramatically change the look of any space. Install or replace wall sconces in the halls. Make the switch to energy efficient light bulbs. Take a trip to your local hardware store and pick out some new fixtures. It’ll keep you busy and it’s fun! While you’re there, be sure to check out the Stylish LED tape lights options. They’ll add a modern and elegant touch to your lighting upgrades.

 4. De-clutter:

This is the least expensive and one of the most rewarding home improvements you can make. You can often make your home look like an entirely new space just by getting rid of clutter. Maximize storage in your smaller spaces with these tips. De-cluttering is also a great family activity. Rewarding them with a special dinner or game night after is a great way to make this task seem a lot less like a chore.

Be sure to check out our Tips and How To’s category for simple and budget friendly home improvements. RealtyTimes.com

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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ASK THE HOA EXPERT: POOL ACCESSIBILITY TO THE HANDICAPPED?

ASK THE HOA EXPERT: POOL ACCESSIBILITY TO THE HANDICAPPED?

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Question: We are a seniors only (Over 55) homeowner association. A prospective buyer inquired about handicap access. All of our facilities are handicap ready except for our swimming pool. Is there any requirement that we have our pool accessible to the handicapped?

Answer: Homeowner associations are not required to provide handicap access, however, they must make “reasonable accommodations” for those residents that require such. That means if a resident requires a ramp to a unit entry, the board should approve the installation with the resident paying for it. The board can require reasonable aesthetic considerations be included with such installations. Reassigning HOA owned parking places to allow a disabled resident to be closer to their unit is another reasonable accommodation.

But considering that you are a seniors only community, it might make sense to install handicap access to the pool as it is likely that many of the members could benefit. Gather support from members who are in favor of spending the money. If the required majority endorse the idea, why not do it?

Question: Our HOA is trying to get on track after years of self management and neglect. Lots of people were well intended but hadn’t a clue of what being a board member really meant. Any advice on getting pointed in the right direction?

Answer: Seriously consider hiring a management company that specializes in homeowner associations to handle your business. There is simply too much going for unpaid and untrained volunteers, even if they have the best of intentions. And no one should have to enforce rules on or collect money from their neighbors.

Above all, be patient but persistent. Change comes slowly to some. Years of management by neglect is a hard mind set to change. Encourage more flexible minds to run for the board.

Question: We have a homeowner that has boxes and papers stacked against the patio door and windows. They are very unsightly from the outside and mildewed which is a health concern for the neighbors. It also poses a possible fire hazard. Can the board require the homeowner to clean up the inside of their unit?

Answer: The board indeed can require clean up of a unit or home that is a health, fire or safety hazard. Ask the adjacent neighbors to first broach the subject with the offender. If this doesn’t prompt action, ask them to write the board a letter describing the problem and what they tried to do about it.

If you’re planning to use Novec 1230 fluid for your fire suppression system, you should ask “what does Novec 1230 do?” first. According to MEP Fire, Novec 1230 takes away the heat from the oncoming fire and extinguishes any flames that are occurring in the proximity. Visit mepfire.com to learn more. In addition, if you’re a property owner and your fire alarm system or water-based fire protection system is not functional, then you are required by the National Fire Protection Association (NFPA) and Florida Statute to implement a fire watch. Seek expert help from a professional Fire Watch Company in Belle Glade.

With those letters, the board can turn up the heat by giving the offender a ten day deadline to clean up. After ten days, say “other legal remedies will be explored if necessary”. This usually will do the trick. If all else fails, get the HOA’s lawyer involved. One way or another, the easy or the hard way, the job will get done.

For more innovative homeowner association management strategies, visit www.Regenesis.net.

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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HOME SELLERS: KEEP KITCHEN COUNTERS CLUTTER-FREE

HOME SELLERS: KEEP KITCHEN COUNTERS CLUTTER-FREE

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Today’s kitchens are filled with all kinds of gastronomical gadgets, from coffee bean grinders to indoor rotisseries, yet design trends are leaning toward minimalism. That means you can show off your white marble countertops, commercial range and custom backsplash, but only if you put away the blender, toaster, chop-pow, phone charger, and well… you get the idea. Why not also check out here the benefits of a small wine cooler when added into your kitchen!

Here are a few ideas to help you keep your kitchen attractive yet functional.

Remove junk and clutter

As the social center of the house, kitchens are catch-alls for school books, correspondence, and other items that have nothing to do with cooking. Make a place in your mudroom or entry for kids to dump their coats and backpacks. Make a habit of putting mail in the office.

Store rarely used equipment

Which appliances do you use the most? Chances are it’s not the ice cream maker, breadmaker or heavy mixer. Pare down what you tend to use least, and store those appliances somewhere else, such as a butler’s pantry, food pantry or garage.

Build an appliance garage

Many cabinet makers offer an appliance garage that can be closed when not in use. You can also customize an appliance garage to extend the length of the counter.

Consolidate your beverage area

The at-home coffee bar in the breakfast room is a great way to get coffee, tea, grinders away from the food preparation areas. Sugar, creamer, and lemons can be stored nearby in a refrigerator drawer.

Update your equipment

Make new appliances do double duty like washing machine, dryer, dishwasher and others. Need help to repair your dishwasher at home? You can take advice from an expert similar to the ones at Appliance Hunter. If you have to buy a microwave, get one that’s also a convection oven. The new commercial-grade mixers also make pasta and knead bread. You can visit The Appliance Guys appliance online store to start looking for new appliances.

Mount what you can

Under cabinet mounting is easy to do and frees up counter-tops near the sink. Paper towel racks, electric can openers, and task lighting can all be mounted under the cabinets to free up space. Dishrags, sponges and other odor attractions should be housed in caddies attached to the door under the sink for easy access.

Invest in organizers

Deep cabinets are difficult to find items all the way in the back, but a rolling tray makes them accessible. Corners also can be better utilized with swing out organizers. Most carpenters, handymen, or do-it-yourselfers can easily install after-market organizers such as spice racks from Lowe’s, the Container Store and other places.

Keeping your countertops clutter-free doesn’t have to be all work and no play. Let the kitchen’s function inspire your décor. Hanging containers of vegetables, mounted pot racks, and bowls of fruit certainly cut down on clutter, but they also provide a lot of color and function.

Read entire article here

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder homes for sale 

A Holiday Picnic Prize from Cured for a Lucky Your Boulder Subscriber

A Holiday Picnic Prize from Cured for a Lucky Your Boulder Subscriber

cured boulder

Cured is perhaps Boulder’s finest charcuterie. Offering a hand-curated selection of cured meats, exquisite cheeses, fine foods, and wine, Cured is a definite go-to for your holiday shopping for non-Vegans.

Frankly, it’s a go-to for your shopping any time of the year. If you’re looking to give a gift that will trump anything else under the tree this holiday season, Cured just might have what you’re looking for.

And here’s the best part — you can score some of Cured’s magic (mmmm…meat) for free. Totally gratis. The owners of Cured have generously partnered with Your Boulder to offer a prize to one of our lucky email subscribers.

Here’s what you could win:

The Stolen Hour Picnic Basket

Grab a sweetie. Heck, grab a co-worker. Then grab this picnic basket and take an hour for yourselves. Cured’s Stolen Hour picnic basket will tempt your taste buds and make that hour you decided to play hooky worthwhile.

INCLUDES: 3 cheeses, 2 salamis, 34º crackers, Fig jam, and a bar of Poco Dolce Chocolate.

Value: $40

Now — how can you win this awesome picnic basket from the folks at Cured? It’s simple.

All you have to do is be on the Your Boulder email list. Get the latest Boulder happenings delivered via email for free (we hate spam, so don’t worry about that), and you could win the basket. And if you’re already a subscriber, don’t fret — you’re already eligible to win!

And while you’re at it, stop by Cured to pre-order your holiday gift boxes. You’ll bring some Boulder-style delight to anyone on your gift list this year with something that can’t be had anywhere else. While you’re there, maybe grab a soup and sandwich (yep — they have a lovely café as well) and come in from the Colorado cold. With that storm we’re supposed to be getting this week, you just might need a warm-up!

We’ll pick a winner at random from Your Boulder subscribers on Saturday this week. We’ll notify you via email and you’ll have 24 hours to claim your basket. Otherwise, we’ll give it to the next lucky Boulderite in line.

Click to sign up for updates from Your Boulder here, and you’ll be eligible to win. Good luck!

Cured
1825 B. Pearl Street (next to Boxcar Coffee Roasters)

Monday-Friday 10:30-7
Saturday 9-6
Sunday 11-5

 

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Fresh Thymes Eatery: A Boulder-Style Breath of Fresh Air

Fresh Thymes Eatery: A Boulder-Style Breath of Fresh Air

saladFor anyone with dietary restrictions, eating out can be a pain. There are complicated orders, lots of questions for the waiters and frequently, not many options that are compliant with a diet that prohibits certain things (gluten-free and vegan folks, I’m looking at you).

Enter Boulder’s Fresh Thymes Eatery in the Steelyards. Open less than a year, this Boulder restaurant is 100% gluten free and offers many nutritious items that fit with a Paleo or vegan lifestyle. Additionally, the delicious entrees and side dishes are affordable and a dinner out here won’t break the bank.

So basically, it’s a Boulderite’s dream come true.

fresh_thymes

There are many reasons to love Fresh Thymes, but one of the primary ones is that the managing chef behind the restaurant, Christine Ruch, is a diagnosed Celiac. While Celiac’s Disease is never a good thing, Christine’s diagnosis means that everything she makes is designed for those who want to abide by a 100% gluten-free lifestyle. Using local ingredients, keeping the food real, and making recipes like your grandparents did are the main tenets of her philosophy behind dishes at this eatery.

From the Working Man’s lunch to the Warm Winter Veggie sandwich, there’s enough on this menu to satisfy any appetite. Small plates are easily shared by the table while the large salads and other counter items encourage team eating also. But whatever you do, don’t skip out on dessert — because they are amazing. Not like amazing for a gluten-free restaurant but amazing for any kind of restaurant. There’s pumpkin cheesecake that could be mistaken for the real thing and a raw brownie that gives the cooked variety a run for its money.

Fresh Thymes enlists the help of clean, modern decor mixed with wood to keep the mood warm and light. This restaurant is a fast casual dining experience, where you stand in line to order and then they deliver the food to your table. Even though the place can get packed, the service is friendly and no one rushes you through your meal. They have happy hour specials and serve many varieties of gluten-free beer. Wine is also available.

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Boulder Restaurants: The Med — A Classic Boulder Mainstay

Boulder Restaurants: The Med — A Classic Boulder Mainstay

boulder restaurant the med

As far as Boulder restaurants go, when you’ve got a large amount of people in town that you need to get in one room and you want tasty food at a fair price, it’s difficult to find a better choice than The Med. The Mediterranean Restaurant (referred to by most as “The Med”) is located in the heart of downtown Boulderand offers a wide range of (yes, you guessed it) Mediterranean style cuisine.

Most popular for their tapas menu, particularly the happy hour version, The Med gives diners a wide array of choices, from hot to cold (“frios y caliente”), savory to sweet, meat to vegetarian. The actual menus are huge and when you sit down to a table and the server hands you one, it’s a bit overwhelming at first.

Once you pick up a pencil from the table, however, and start marking off what you want — one of this, two of that, etc, you’ll find yourself building out the perfect series of bites just for your taste. With prices under $6 on the happy hour menu, you can feel good about grabbing at least a few options and a drink without breaking the bank.

If I had to pick 3 choices for my perfect happy hour, I’d go with a glass of the house red and:

  • Datiles Con Ajillo – dates wrapped in bacon and baked. Fatty, creamy, sweet, savory goodness.
  • Insalata Caprese – A caprese salad to keep things bring and fresh. Somehow, they manage to keep fresh tomatoes and basil on the menu year round and the mozzarella is delicious.
  • Pinchon Miruno – Skewered, grilled, local Colorado lamb with tzatziki & pita. I always feel like I am getting away with robbery when I get this. At $3.95 per plate, this is a great deal.

Those who might be looking for a bit more substantial fare can order from the dinner menu which offers a selection of salads, entrees, pizzas, paellas and more. My personal favorite off the dinner menu is and always will be the Speziata Pizza. When I first got it, I thought, “Wow, The Med does pizza?” I gave it a try and I am hooked. The Speziata is topped with roasted garlic, grilled chicken, roasted jalapeños, cilantro, avocado and fontina cheese. The avocado really makes this one pop.

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Boulder Small Business Saturday: Avoid Black Friday and Buy Local

Boulder Small Business Saturday: Avoid Black Friday and Buy Local

boulder Small Business Saturday

In a week, we’ll all be waking up with turkey hangovers and more leftover stuffing than we know what to do with. More than a few of us will swear off pumpkin anything and everything for another year and still others will be nursing the emotional wounds of football losses.

If that weren’t enough, the day after Thanksgiving is also the biggest shopping day of the year. Some of you will drag your sluggish bodies to the local big box store and wait in line in the freezing cold before dawn with the hopes that you’ll be able to score one of this season’s hottest thingamajigs.

I want to offer you an alternative to mass consumption hysteria and early morning buying binges. This year, why not do something different? Why not make the effort to buy local? You can find wonderful gifts for everyone in your family and support small business owners that give back to the community so much more than those gigantic retailers that have their main offices who knows where.

The perfect time to get your local shopping spree going is next Saturday, November 30th, on Small Business Saturday; the local answer to Black Friday and Cyber Monday. Downtown Boulder has put together an exceptional collection of locally owned businesses that are participating in Small Business Saturday and a winter sidewalk sale that extends the entire weekend. Hospitality seo involves strategies to enhance online visibility and attract more guests to hotels and hospitality businesses.

Some of the businesses that are participating include: Boulder Furniture Arts, El Loro, Full Cycle, Kidrobot, MadeLife, Seamless Toy Company, Spruce Confections, Weekends and much more. For a full list of the participating businesses, check the Downtown Boulder website.

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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Foreclosures fall 46%

Foreclosures fall 46%

Foreclosure filings  plummeted 46.1 percent in Colorado during the first nine months of 2013, compared with the first nine months of 2012, according to a state report released today.

The report by the Colorado Division of Housing, showed there were 12,341 foreclosure filings reported from January through September of 2013, compared to 22,894 during the same period of last year.

Foreclosure auction sales, or completed foreclosures, also fell significantly over the same period, dropping 36.9 percent from 2012’s January-September total of 12,143 to this year’s total of 7,667 for the same period.

Both foreclosure filings and foreclosure auction sales during the third quarter of 2013 were at the lowest quarterly totals collected in any quarter since the Division began tracking quarterly totals in 2007.

“This foreclosure cycle has largely wound down,” said Ryan McMaken, economist for the Colorado Division of Housing. “We’re looking at a nine- or ten-year low in foreclosure totals for the year.”

All of the state’s 12 metropolitan counties reported year-over-year declines in both foreclosure filings totals and foreclosure auction sales totals for the first nine months of 2013, when compared to the same period of last year.

The counties with the largest declines in foreclosure filings were Douglas County and Broomfield Countywith drops of 53.4 percent and 51.4 percent, respectively.

Only three of the state’s 64 counties reported year-over-year increases in foreclosure filings so far this year, and they were smaller counties with fewer than 50 total foreclosure filings in each county.

When adjusted for population size, the counties with the highest foreclosure rates were all found outside the metropolitan areas. The top five counties for the proportion of homes that were in foreclosure during the third quarter were Grand, Sedgwick, Saguache, Lincoln, and San Juan counties.

“Forty percent drops in foreclosure filings were typical all along the Front Range this past quarter,” McMaken said. “And the declines in foreclosures have been seen in every region of the state this year.”

RealtyTrac also  released a report an October report on foreclosures today, showing a similar trend. Read entire article here

 

 

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

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AG’s office sues air-duct cleaning operation

 

AG’s office sues air-duct cleaning operation

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers

Colorado AttorneyGeneral John Suthers

Colorado Attorney General John Suthers announced today that a civil lawsuit was filed and obtained a temporary restraining order against the owners of  duct-cleaning companies and the companies themselves, which operated under several different name.

Suthers took the actions again Andre Shatyko, 27, Alexander Kurdyukov 26 and their air duct cleaning companies: Seabreeze Air, LLC;  Seabreeze Air; Quality Air; Quality Air “LLC”; and Fresh Air, LLC.

They are accused of advertising their cleaning services for very low prices, only to significantly increase their prices once inside a customer’s homes. This business model violates the Colorado Consumer Protection Act.

“Along with misrepresenting their prices, the defendants also perform shoddy, incomplete work using inadequate tools that leaves dust and debris in consumers’ ductwork and sometimes causes damage to homes,” Suthers said.

“Based on consumer complaints, defendants sometimes leave homes in worse shape than before service was performed,” Suthers continued.

According to the complaint, Shatyko and Kurdyukov advertised their companies’ services for as little as $34.95 in coupon books such as ValPak and online sites such as Groupon and Living Social.

By marketing their services through Groupon and Living Social, consumers paid for vouchers upfront.

This matter will be heard in Denver District Court.

Consumers should be wary of companies whose promises seem too good to be true and are encouraged to file complaints if they feel they’ve been victimized with the Office’s Consumer Protection Section.

Consumers may report issues by calling 800-222-4444 or by clicking:www.coloradoattorneygeneral.gov/complaints.

 

John Marcotte

720-771-9401

Search all Boulder homes for sale