Nova Scotia home for sale over the holidays? Decorating tips to not detract from the sale.

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Decorating your home for the holidays while it is for sale in can be complicated. While you don't want to forego having a festive holiday season in your home, you also want to maintain a home that will impress potential buyers when they view the home. Here are some tips we've found to help you strike that balance.

  •   Make your decorations consistent with the style of your home. [Modern = modern, traditional = traditional]

  • Don't go overboard with outdoor lights and decorations (white lights if you can manage it). - However, if you will look like the only Grinch in the neighbourhood with no lights, keep the feel of the area in mind.

  • Keep your space tidy, even around your tree.

  •  Don't leave your gifts out around your tree. It is a temptation for someone to help themselves and adds clutter to the room.

  • ·Be mindful of eating up floorspace, or decorations that tend to detract from the spacious feeling of a room.

  • ·Don't use too many (or any possibly) religious symbols.

  • ·Avoid displaying cards you have received.

  • ·Try to accentuate the positive features of your home.

  • ·Keep the holiday decorations depersonalized if possible.

  • ·Take advantage of holiday scents.

Keeping these things in mind will help your listed home put its best foot forward, and hopefully start the new year with a new owner!!

If you have any questions about this subject, you can call us at (902) 826-3070 or email us at info@highlanderlaw.ca to set up a meeting with one of our lawyers at our Tantallon law firm. You can also schedule a no commitment Issue Review Consult for $250+HST where you have the opportunity to explain your situation to a lawyer and get basic advice before deciding whether or not you'd like to retain us.

 

By: Briana C. O’Grady J.D – Associate Lawyer

 

The information and materials on this blog are provided for general informational purposes only and are not intended to be legal advice. Nothing contained on this blog is legal advice or constitutes a legal opinion. While it is our goal to provide information which is current, legislative changes and court decisions, among other matters, may result in some information no longer being current or accurate. You should consult a lawyer before relying on any information. The views expressed herein by individual contributing lawyers posting entries to the blog are solely those of the authors and should not necessarily be attributed to or considered representative of the firm of Highlander Law Group Lawyers