Easily Conquer Bad Home Habits

Kevin Shirley, Associate Broker (DC), GRI, ASP, e-PRO

Homeowners, take note: Stop neglecting your filters!

That was only one of many “bad home habits” blogger Annie Stevens admitted to in a recent confessional outpouring on the Aussie web site Domain. “Bad home habits” may not be a phrase local homeowners are accustomed to thinking about, but it’s an idea worth mulling — especially if selling your area home is something that could be in your immediate (or even middling) future.

In its mildest form, a Stevens bad home habit would be one that needs to be straightened out before John and Jane Q. Public come to look your house over after it’s listed. In the extreme, a bad home habit can lead to escalating maintenance issues. Neglecting your filters is one of those.
Filters you neglect can be the thin, washable, plastic-and-foam panels you slide in and out of your window air conditioner. If you have one, you are among the many area homeowners who were grateful to have it last summer.

Filters you neglect can also be one of the larger, paper-foil-and-mesh replaceable thingies that you are supposed to replace in the workings of your central air unit. They can also be the cottony stuff you wad into your tropical fish aquarium, but that’s not the kind that’s a big homeowner concern. That one is strictly between you and the fish.

In all but that last example, neglecting your filters can lead to an air circulation problem or even a burnt-out blower motor. This bad home habit can be blamed on the location of the filters. Being out of sight, it’s hard to remember they are even in there, much less that they require your tender ministration.

Another of blogger Stevens’ bad home habits is “buying exercise equipment you will never use.” It’s easy to see why this is a lousy budgeting habit, but not really a bad home habit. After all, if you turn the garage into a home gym, it could be a selling point when you’re ready to sell. And if you don’t ever use the exercise equipment, it will be appealingly shiny and new (even if you are more out of shape than you want to be). Potential homebuyers won’t care about that.

Stevens actually described eight bad home habits, but some of them don’t really apply to local homeowners (she writes from Australia). For instance, leaving half-drunk cups of tea around the place is not a typical U.S. homeowner failing. And sleeping with your phone is more of a poor lifestyle habit since constantly checking an iPhone in the middle of the night disrupts a regular sleep cycle.

Much more applicable is Bad Home Habit #6: Letting dirt build up on the things you forget to clean. It’s easy to forget to clean areas and things that are in dim, out-of-the-way corners, but when it comes to getting your home into shape for open houses and showings, it’s incredible how prospective buyers somehow seem to make a beeline for them. Fortunately, a few serious deep-cleaning sessions will cure any vestige of bad home habit #6.

It’s a Murphy’s Law kind of rule that any neglected maintenance feature will tend to go completely kaput just when you least want it to. If you’re thinking of getting your home ready for the resale marketing, catching it in advance is definitely to your advantage. Also, to your advantage: giving me a timely call!

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