Articles and Advice
By the time a buyer walks up to your front door, they've already made up their mind about a lot. Agents see it happen constantly. A showing that felt promising on paper turns lukewarm before anyone steps inside because something about the exterior didn't sit right. That's not buyers being unfair. It means the outside of your home is carrying more of the sale than most sellers account for.
The good news is that exterior improvements don't have to be expensive or complicated to make a real difference.
Your front door is in nearly every listing photo, which means it's the first thing many buyers see before they've even looked at the price. If the paint is chipped or the color feels off against the rest of the house, that registers. Even buyers who couldn't tell you exactly why the home felt a little tired when they scrolled past it pick up on it. A fresh coat of paint in something that actually works with the facade goes further than it sounds. And while you're thinking about the door, look at the hardware too, including house numbers that are 15 years old or a handle that doesn't match the finish of the light fixture next to it. These are fast, inexpensive swaps that tend to make the entry feel pulled together rather than patched together.
Patchy grass and shrubs that have gotten away from you can drag down a house that's otherwise in solid shape. It doesn't take a landscaper to fix it, but it does take some attention before listing day. Weeding and mulching flower beds, cutting back overgrown shrubs, and edging the lawn are all things buyers notice when they're neglected. In addition, a few seasonal flowers near the front entry can add some life to the photos without making the home look staged.
Mature trees with branches close to the roofline or windows are worth trimming before you list. It reads as good stewardship to buyers, and it removes something that might otherwise prompt questions during a showing.
A pressure washer rented for an afternoon can do more for a home's first impression than many sellers expect. Driveways, walkways, and siding accumulate grime over the years, and you genuinely stop seeing it. Buyers don't arrive with that same blind spot. Gutters are worth checking while you're at it. Sagging or clogged gutters are visible on approach and during a walkthrough, and the impression they leave tends to stick even when everything else looks fine.
Don't overlook the windows either. Dirty glass and torn screens aren't things buyers put into words, but they show up in listing photos and contribute to an overall sense of how carefully the home has been kept.
Cracks in a driveway or front walkway rarely stay cosmetic in a buyer's mind. They raise questions about what else might have been deferred, and even minor damage tends to come up during inspections when the buyer is already looking for reasons to negotiate. Filling cracks before you list is cheap and straightforward, and it closes off one angle buyers might otherwise use. If the walkway is uneven enough that someone could catch a foot on it, fix it before showings start. It's a liability, and a buyer navigating a tricky front path doesn't arrive at your door in the best frame of mind.
Curb appeal isn't one big move. It's the accumulation of things that tells buyers the home has been cared for. That story starts before they ever get out of the car.
Realtor