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Fall Home Maintenance Tips: Preparing Your Home for the Season

As the crisp air of fall sets in, it's a great time to focus on essential home maintenance to ensure your property stays in top shape through the colder months. From preparing your home’s exterior to making sure your heating system is ready, here are some fall home maintenance tips that will help you safeguard your home and save money in the long run.

1. Clean and Inspect Gutters 🍂

Falling leaves can easily clog your gutters, which can lead to water damage or even foundation issues if not addressed. Make sure to:

  • Clean gutters thoroughly, removing leaves, twigs, and debris.

  • Check downspouts for blockages to ensure water flows freely.

  • Consider installing gutter guards to prevent future clogs.

2. Check Your Roof 🏠

Your roof is your first line of defense against harsh weather. Fall is the perfect time to inspect it for any damage or wear before winter storms hit:

  • Look for missing or damaged shingles.

  • Check for signs of moss or algae growth, which can cause damage over time.

  • Consider hiring a professional to assess the overall condition of your roof.

3. Seal Windows and Doors 🪟🚪

Drafty windows and doors can lead to higher energy bills and make your home less comfortable during the colder months. To prevent this:

  • Inspect the weatherstripping around windows and doors for any gaps or wear.

  • Apply caulking to seal cracks around windows and door frames.

  • Consider using storm windows or installing energy-efficient windows if drafts are an ongoing issue.

4. Service Your Heating System 🔥❄️

Before the chill really sets in, it’s important to make sure your heating system is functioning properly. Routine maintenance can also extend the life of your system and improve efficiency:

  • Replace or clean your furnace filter.

  • Schedule a professional HVAC inspection to ensure your system is running smoothly.

  • Test your thermostat to ensure it’s working correctly.

5. Chimney and Fireplace Inspection 🪵

If you have a wood-burning fireplace, fall is the time to prepare it for cozy winter nights:

  • Have your chimney cleaned by a professional to remove creosote buildup, which can be a fire hazard.

  • Inspect the damper and ensure it opens and closes properly.

  • Stock up on firewood and keep it in a dry place.

6. Winterize Outdoor Faucets and Sprinklers 💧

To prevent pipes from freezing and bursting during winter, it's crucial to winterize your outdoor water systems:

  • Drain and store hoses.

  • Turn off the water supply to outdoor faucets, then drain the remaining water.

  • Blow out your sprinkler system to remove any water that could freeze and cause damage.

7. Inspect Insulation and Attic Ventilation 🕵️‍♂️

Proper insulation can help keep your home warm in winter and reduce energy costs. Now’s the time to:

  • Check for any gaps or thin spots in your attic insulation.

  • Ensure that attic ventilation is functioning properly to prevent moisture buildup, which can lead to mold or ice dams.

8. Trim Trees and Shrubs 🌿

Overgrown branches can be a hazard during storms, especially if they hang over your roof or power lines:

  • Prune trees and shrubs, trimming back any limbs that are too close to the house.

  • Remove any dead or dying branches to prevent them from falling during a storm.

  • Consider hiring a tree service for larger trees or more extensive pruning.

9. Check Carbon Monoxide and Smoke Detectors 💨

With more time spent indoors and increased use of heating systems, it’s important to ensure that your home’s safety systems are in good working order:

  • Replace the batteries in your smoke detectors and carbon monoxide detectors.

  • Test the devices to ensure they are functioning properly.

  • If your detectors are older than 10 years, consider replacing them.

10. Test Outdoor Lighting and Security 💡

With the days getting shorter, fall is a good time to check and update your outdoor lighting:

  • Ensure that motion-sensor lights and security lighting are working properly.

  • Replace any burnt-out bulbs.

  • Consider adding additional lighting near walkways or entry points for better safety and security during darker months.

Conclusion

Fall home maintenance is essential to prepare for winter’s harsh conditions. By tackling these tasks early, you can prevent costly repairs, improve energy efficiency, and ensure your home remains comfortable and safe. Investing a little time and effort now will pay off with a warm, worry-free home as the temperature drops.

Ready to tackle your fall maintenance checklist? Start early and enjoy the season knowing your home is ready for whatever winter may bring!

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Where to Start: Begin to Prepare your Home for Showings

“You never get a second chance at a first impression.” We’ve all heard this expression before. And now, while you are preparing your house to sell, it should not be far from your mind.

While logical factors such as price and location narrow the pool of houses a potential buyer will look at, the ultimate decision to buy a particular house is fueled by a mixture of logic and emotion. And emotion often wins out. The same might be said for the process of selling a home. For this reason, real estate agents, when they talk to you about buying real estate, will refer to your purchase as a “home.” When discussing the sale of your current home, however, an agent will refer to it as the “house.” This is a conscious choice. The agent knows that buying a house is often an emotional decision, while, when selling a house, emotion should be separated from the process.

Buyers are searching for a “home”—a place in which they will feel comfortable, secure, and happy, a place in which they can imagine settling down and raising their family. As a seller, your goal is to cultivate these feelings through the property you’re selling. Look at your house as a marketable commodity. A buyer’s emotional response is triggered early, so you want to ensure you have done everything you can to encourage a positive response to your house from the outset. Within minutes—even seconds—of pulling into your driveway, buyers have formed an impression that they will carry with them through the rest of the showing, and beyond. Keep in mind, this impression will not only influence whether or not they make an offer, but also what they consider to be the value of the property.

If you’ve ever visited model homes, you’re familiar with effective presentation styles. Have you ever walked into one of these homes and immediately begun taking stock, planning how to get your home to look that good? Well, now is the time to take some of these steps. Of course, there are ways to achieve the same effect in your own home without incurring model home costs.

When homes create this immediate type of emotional appeal, they tend to sell quickly—and for more money. Use the following step-by-step guide to get your house into selling shape before you put the property on the market, and you’ll be well on your way to a successful sale!

 

1. Depersonalize

This should be one of your first steps when you begin preparing your house to sell. Over the years, a home inevitably becomes tattooed with the owners’ lives, covered with touches that have made it that special place for you. At this point, however, you want buyers to recognize it as a property they could make into their unique place.

When a homebuyer walks into a room and sees these personalizing touches—such as photos on the walls or trophy collections—their ability to picture their own lives in this room is jarred, impairing a positive emotional response. So, your first step will be to remove all the family photos, the trophies, collectible items, and souvenirs. Pack them all together, so you’ll have everything you need at your disposal when it comes time to personalize your new home. For the time being, rent a storage space and keep these items there. Do not simply transfer these items to another place in your house. Do not hoard them away in a closet, basement, attic, or garage, as the next step in preparing your home is to minimize clutter—and these areas of your house will all be targeted.

 

2. Remove all Clutter

The next step on the list is to purge your house of the excess items that have accumulated over the years. This is the hardest part for many people, as they have an emotional investment in many of these things. When you have lived in a house for several years, a build-up of personal effects occurs that is often so gradual that you don’t notice the space is becoming cluttered. If you need to, bring in an objective friend to help point out areas that could stand to be cleared.

Try to stand back yourself and see your house as a buyer might. Survey shelves, countertops, drawers, closets, the basement—all places where clutter often accumulates—to determine what needs to go. Use a system to help you decide: get rid of all items, for example, you haven’t used in the past five years, and pack up everything that you haven’t used in the past year. Although getting rid of some things might be hard, try to do it without conscience or remorse. You’ll be forced to go through this process anyway when you move, and with each box you eliminate, your storage space—and the room in general—begins to look larger.

We’ve broken down the process into specific areas of your house to help you concentrate your efforts:

Kitchen

The kitchen is an ideal place to begin, as it’s easy to spot and eliminate the type of clutter that tends to accumulate here. Homebuyers will open your drawers and cabinets as they’ll want to check if there will be enough room for their own belongings. If the drawers appear cluttered and crowded, this will give them the impression there is not enough space.

  • First of all, remove everything from the counters, even the toaster (the toaster can be stored in a cabinet, and brought out when needed).

  • Clean out all the cabinets and drawers. Put aside all of the dishes, pots and pans that you rarely use, then box them and put them in the storage unit you have rented (again, not in the basement or a closet).

  • If you, like many people, have a “junk drawer,” clear this out.

  • Get rid of the food items in the pantry that you don’t use. Begin to use up existing food—let what you have on your shelves dictate your menus from now on.

  • Remove all extra cleaning supplies from the shelves beneath the sink. Make sure this area is as empty as possible. You should thoroughly clean this spot as well, and check for any water stains that might indicate leaking pipes. Buyers will look in most cabinets, and will notice any telltale signs of damage.

Closets

  • Go through all clothes and shoes. If you don’t wear something anymore, get rid of it. We all have those clothes, too, that we wear only once in awhile, but can’t bear to give away. Box these items and keep them in the storage unit for a few months.

  • Go through all other personal items in the closet. Be ruthless. Weed out everything you don’t absolutely need.

  • Remove any unsightly boxes from the back of the closet. Put them in storage if need be. Get everything off the floor. Closets should look as though they have enough room to hold additional items.

Furniture

  • You may want to tour a few model homes in order to gauge the type of furniture chosen by design teams to create a spacious, yet comfortable atmosphere. Note how that furniture is arranged to cultivate a certain feeling.

  • After having armed yourself with some ideas, stand back and look at each of your rooms. What will you need to remove? Remember, most homes contain too much furniture for showings. These are items that you’ve grown comfortable with and that have become incorporated into your everyday routine. However, each room should offer a sense of spaciousness, so some furniture will likely need to be placed in storage.

Storage Areas

  • Basements, garages, attics, and sheds: these are the “junkyard” areas of any given home. It is possible to arrange simple clutter into a certain order, but junk is sent packing to these often-hidden rooms. First, determine which of these boxes and items you actually need. Can some of it be sent to the dump once and for all?

  • Hold a garage sale. You’ve heard the saying, “One person’s trash is another’s treasure.” Let these items go to a better home.

  • Transfer some items to the rental storage unit. You’ll want to clear the storage areas in your house as much as possible, in order for them to appear spacious to potential home-buyers. Buyers want the reassurance that their own excess belongings will find places for storage in their new home.

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MLS® property information is provided under copyright© by the Vancouver Island Real Estate Board and Victoria Real Estate Board. The information is from sources deemed reliable, but should not be relied upon without independent verification.