Exactly What to Do to Stage a Bathroom That Sells


A 3 step strategy to cover the essential things you need to get absolutely right before listing your home.


Are you getting ready to sell your home and looking for more than just real estate staging tips & tricks?

I love making things easier for my clients so I’m happy to be sharing this one today! It’s long and detailed, but by the end of this article, I hope you have all the information you need to get your bathrooms staged perfectly and you are able to cross it off your list (I know there’s a lot on there right now!)


Wondering why you should listen to my advice?

I’ve been an interior designer for 21 years and in my work with a local reality team in the last few years, have staged over 450 local homes. This means that almost every single week I meet with people getting ready to list their homes for sale, walk through their home room by room with them and give them a detailed to-do list to get their home in it’s most beautiful, styled, photo-ready shape.


Because of this, I’ve seen a LOT of bathrooms over the years and one thing has become pretty clear: I’m always giving out the same 3 main pieces of advice. In this article, I’m going to share with you that exact advice I give my clients for their bathrooms and I’m going to tell you everything you need to know about why these three areas are so important to get right. Now you can know what one pro would tell you to do if she were there with you in your house, too!

Learn exactly how to professionally stage a bathroom that sells. Get the 3-step plan that covers everything you absolutely need to get right before listing your home. Bonus: Immediate, free download of my Ultimate Staging Checlist PDF list room-by r…

I’m so happy you are here with me because not only are you right (staging the bathroom is really, really important!) but because I’ve also put together a concise plan of attack for you. You can stop searching online for random bathroom staging tips & tricks and just follow this plan – I’ve made it clear and simple because I want it to be easy for you.


Why is bathroom staging so critical? Two reasons:


Before we get to the ‘what to do’, let’s lay the foundation for the ‘why’, because understanding why something matters is pure motivation for getting the work done, and you are going to need a little energy and fire beneath you to get these bathrooms staged perfectly!


There are a few places in the home that I think are critical to have staged just right and the bathroom might just be the most important of them all. It’s easy to overlook the power of someone’s comfort in your home when you are selling it, but in my staging experience this is a crucial thing to understand.

One:

People make a purchase decision based on their feeling about your home.

They make a very real, physical decision (one that involves location and money and tons of other ‘hard facts’) from a place of pure emotion. Their feeling about the house is the foundation to the rest of the decision. Without liking your home, feeling welcomed and relaxed there, and being able to imagine themselves and their family comfortably in the house, it is very difficult to go any further in the decision-making process. The house can be crossed off the list based on a feeling.

Two:

People’s comfort (and therefor good feelings) in the very personal space of a stranger is a fragile thing.

These people do not know you. They are standing in your bathroom. Please make it a neutral, clean, bright and comfortable experience for them. Your dirty mirror or wet bath mat is no big deal to you. It’s honestly no big deal in the big scheme of regular life, I get that. But remember: their comfort is fragile.

You want to give people the grace and respect of being able to see your home in as relaxed a way as possible so that they feel good. If the bathroom smells like your damp towel and they are looking at your beard hairs in the sink or your crusty washcloth in the tub, they are going to want to get out of there. Fast.

They are never, ever going to be able to imagine themselves giving their sweet babies a bubble bath in that tub, and those emotional touch-points are what sells houses.

When you understand this flow of events, you understand why staging the bathroom matter so much:

 

Comfortable people —> good feelings about your house —> wanting to live there —> making an amazing offer

 

So, now that we are on the same page about just why this is so critical for home staging, let’s get on to the ‘what to do’ part of things! Read on for the plan!

True Design House - bathroom staging plan

What are the 3 critical things you need to do to stage your bathrooms properly?

1. Deep clean

I don’t mean just regular swish & swipe clean. It needs to be spotless. Wash the walls, wash the garbage can, scrub the toilet really well. Use a de-scaler on the shower head. All the things you mean to do but never have time for, now is the time.

I normally suggest doing this deep clean before pictures and then a light touch up (or whatever is needed to get it back up to this level) before showings.


Honestly, go full ‘Monica’ on this. Toothbrush meets toilet. Replace the seat if it can’t be made white again. Wash the garbage can. Dust. Scrub. Disinfect. Polish. Do it all, and then do a little more.


You want potential buyers to walk in and feel immediately at ease. It should look immaculate & smell fresh.

Learn exactly how to professionally stage a bathroom that sells. Get the 3-step plan that covers everything you absolutely need to get right before listing your home. Bonus: Immediate, free download of my Ultimate Staging Checlist PDF list room-by r…


2. No signs of life

No one wants to imagine you using the bathroom. If any of my former staging clients are reading this, they are probably nodding along right now. (Hi friends!) I say this one at every single appointment because it’s just that important.

This is an area that has three components: 1: personal décor, 2: personal hygiene, and 3: using the bathroom for bathroom things.

Personal decor: These are things like candles, small accessories that are personal (beach sand, seas shells, love notes), framed photos. These should all be removed.

Personal hygiene: Yes, you need to tuck away all your stuff. I’m sorry. My usual approach is to pack the less used stuff from under the sink, in the drawers or in the linen closet into boxes first. You are moving anyways, right? This stuff can usually be put into a box or plastic bin in the basement or in a closet, so that you can get to the hot water bottle or spa socks if you need them, but they are out of the ‘prime real estate’ for the most part.

Another way to make some room in the bathroom is to really simplify what you store in the room in terms of linens – maybe just keeping the ‘in use’ towels in here and moving the others to a bedroom or linen closet, would make some room. I know it’s going to be a pain, but it’s temporary, right?

Then, use a plastic basket or little box to keep your daily items in on the counter. When you have a showing, the basket can just be moved into the (now mostly empty) cabinet or closet. Same idea for the shower items: just have an empty plastic basket that you can quickly empty the shower into and then place the basket in the cabinet. Yes, the shower and bath should be empty of all personal products like shampoo and soap.

Evidence of using the bathroom for bathroom things: I can’t be vague here: tuck away the garbage can (this can go into the cabinet or just in the corner beside the toilet and cabinet if possible), toilet scrubber and plunger (if they can fit beside the toilet and aren’t visible from the door, that works, too!). Remove magazines and obvious air fresheners. If you have a squatty-potty, just no. Hide that thing. Same idea for kids training potties: tuck them away out of sight.


Learn exactly how to professionally stage a bathroom that sells. Get the 3-step plan that covers everything you absolutely need to get right before listing your home. Bonus: Immediate, free download of my Ultimate Staging Checlist PDF list room-by r…

3. Simple and clean styling

So now we are down to an immaculate clean slate. The bathroom is deep cleaned and all personal items are removed. Now it’s time to add in just the right touches to make it look beautiful, updated and comfortable. Think of a spa, show home, or nice hotel. This is the clean, subtly impersonal, luxurious look we are going for.

Since the bathroom is such a small room and since styling it well is so important to selling your home, I think it’s one place that is well worth putting the extra effort into some very specific styling accessories.
This might mean buying a few new things, but it also just might mean looking around your house and using some items that you already own. You really don’t need many accessories in a bathroom and so what you choose is very important. There’s not much to draw the eye and create a vibe for the room – each piece needs to contribute to the correct feeling in the room.


The styling goal of a bathroom is simple and clean. Always choose bright and airy over anything else.


It’s okay to have it look a bit empty to you – remember this isn’t for living in and it’s not about your personal style and what looks and feels good to you. This styling is about marketing your home and what tends to feel best to potential buyers is a bathroom that feels almost brand new and definitely one that feels unused.


Buyers are logical people, and yes they know that the bathroom has been used before… but it sure feels good to be standing in one that feels as pristine as a luxury hotel room (which, to my point, has also been used before by strangers but certainly doesn’t feel like it when you walk in, right?)

A few notes on color: if at all possible, have the bathroom be as neutral as possible with as much white / light cream / light gray as you can. One accent color for the room works well if you already have things that coordinate together in that color. Bring in that ONE color in places like the shower curtain, art, some touches in the accessories. Again, if everything you added into the bathroom was white or light neutrals, that would be perfect, but if you already have some things in another single color and you don’t want to replace them with new things unnecessarily, that will work as well.

Now that that bathroom has been cleared out down to an empty slate by your deep clean and ‘no signs of life’ mission, it’s time to bring in some very specific styling.


Here’s my exact client styling directions in most homes:


1.

New fresh towels in white or a very light neutral. Do not use these towels! Set them out for photos and showings, and other than that hide them from your family. I layer a hand towel over a folded bath towel on the towel rod.


2.

One or two pieces of wall art or decor. Normally these would go above the hand towel rod or above the toilet, but you will know where will work best. These should replace any small hanging shelves. Choose something in a light neutral or in your accent color if you have one.


3.

Counter styling: set up one small grouping on the counter. If you have a free standing tub or a tub in an alcove, I would set another grouping up on an edge or in a corner there as well. The groupings should be 3 items (maybe 4 if using a larger items as a base) – a few of my go-to items are: candles, small plant, small floral arrangement, small hardcover books with nice covers (use as a base for the grouping), glass or crystal-look jars filled with cotton balls or q tips, paper wrapped bars of soap, small nice baskets filled with rolled washcloths, really small framed art, ceramic bowl filled with small wrapped soaps or bath salts, a small tray (as a base), a group of apothecary type amber jars.



Keep it very simple – these are the only 3 areas I style and I keep the counter styling very small and easy – don’t over do it!


A few extra details:

This is also the time to wash or replace the shower curtain if needed. New isn’t critical if it looks clean and is in good shape. (Side note: there is an element of having updated and appealing style in staging and it can definitely add a lot to a room with nothing else going on style-wise to have a nice new curtain in a modern, light color BUT an outdated shower curtain isn’t what is important here: clean and neat is the only critical part.)


Don’t have out a bath mat for photos or showings unless it is freshly washed and looks styled with the décor and you can lay it out just as you are leaving. It’s so hard to keep a bath mat looking perfect and if there is hair, wet footprints or toilet paper bits on it when a potential buyer looks at it, it can be a major turnoff. In my experience, it’s better to just avoid it. Besides, small rooms tend to look more spacious when the flooring is not visually broken up into smaller pieces by a mat.


Learn exactly how to professionally stage a bathroom that sells. Get the 3-step plan that covers everything you absolutely need to get right before listing your home. Bonus: Immediate, free download of my Ultimate Staging Checlist PDF list room-by r…

And that is about every single thing I could say about staging a bathroom well. (Phew!) I hope this post was helpful if you are getting ready to move! If you aren’t planning a move soon and you enjoyed the read, I’d love for you to share it with your beloved past realtor - we all have one! Many real estate professionals find these staging articles are perfect to send along to their clients who are getting ready to list!

 

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10 Uncomfortable Things No-One Wants to Tell You About Your House When It’s For Sale


A part of my interior design work locally is being hired by a wonderful team of real estate agents to meet with clients of theirs who are getting ready to sell their homes. I walk through the clients’ houses with them, making design suggestions and taking notes to later send them, giving them as many actionable tips and bits of advice as I can. I want their house to look as perfect as it can for their listing photos. I want them to be able to show off all of its beautiful features so that it looks its very best when potential buyers come for showings.

During this appointment, I’m there to give design advice for a very specific purpose and to explain just what to do and why. Sometimes just having an extra set of eyes to notice what someone has stopped noticing about their own home is immensely helpful. I aim to always leave clients feeling positive about their house and motivated to polish things up.

This consultation is a little glimpse into people’s homes and lives and it’s one of my very favorite things to do. I love being part of their team, helping them best prepare for what is one of life’s biggest and most stressful changes.

I see people who are on the edge of something big and I have seen the entire spectrum of emotion about just why they are there: whether they are excited about their growing family, nervous about moving to a new and unknown place, burdened by financial strain, in the turmoil of divorce, or grieving the loss of a parent, I take it all in my hands and treat it gently while I’m there.

Which is all to explain why I could never and would never say to a client what I’m about to say here, at least not as bluntly as I’m about to lay it out.

It goes without saying that if I can see that something is a big issue and really needs to be dealt with, I very gently broach the subject. But small things? No. I could never compromise my relationship with these people by what might be felt as nitpicking, and I have no interest in hurting someone’s feelings. Nope. Never happening.

But for you, friend, I’m going to lay it all out. Maybe this is easier to do, to be completely honest, as it’s not personal. I’m not standing in your kitchen with you. I’m not looking at your bedroom right now.

Best of all, maybe some of this applies to you, and maybe it doesn’t.

It’s worth reading if you are thinking of making a move, though. If you are getting ready to sell your house, keep these things in mind. If you have your house listed and, despite everything seeming fine, you just aren’t having anyone fall in love enough to make an offer, maybe these are some places you could create some change. Maybe there are some things here that your team (your real estate agent, your stager, your friends) are too close to be comfortable mentioning.

Like the little piece of pepper stuck in your teeth… they don’t want to embarrass you or make it awkward for them. No one wants to compromise their relationship with you or hurt your feelings, so they just hope you realize it on your own and quickly fix it.

But here I am to just quietly let you know: you have a bit of pepper in your teeth.


So, here they are:

10 uncomfortable things that no-one wants to tell you about your house when it’s for sale.


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1. Your house smells bad

I’ll start right with a tough one. Everyone’s house has a unique smell. That’s okay, and it’s normal. But the problem is when the smell is overwhelming or bad. This is such a huge turnoff for people and it really makes it hard for them to want to stay in your home, let alone live there.

For the most part, you just need to take a few steps to eliminate the odor before you list your house for sale.

First, get rid of or stop the cause. If you smoke in the house, it’s time to stop. If your litter box is full, time to deal with that daily. If it’s cooking smells (grease, strong spices, fish), you are going to need to not cook those things for a little while.

Second, if the smell has been absorbed by soft things in the house, you are going to need to clean or get rid of those things. Carpets and drapes might need to be cleaned, concrete basement floors might need to be bleached, give garbage cans & cupboards a good soapy wash. The walls might even need to be washed. I will leave it up to you to find out how best to clean something (the internet has answers for everything!) and to decide what might not be able to be properly cleaned and will need to be removed entirely. (Some clients find that there are lots of things that can just be move out to the garage, taken to a storage unit they already have, or be taken to a friend or family’s garage for a little while if needed.)

Third, the house should be aired out. You might need to consider renting an ozone machine if opening windows doesn’t help. Fresh air solves so many problems. It’s not a bad idea to open your windows as much as you can while your house is listed as well. Life can have smells (cooking, garbage, pets, kids) and just keeping the air circulating helps so much.

Fourth, be careful when adding in any scents after this process. Don’t overdo it with any artificial air fresheners, waxes, candles, or diffusers. What smells good to you can be a turn off for someone else. Clean and fresh air is the best.

The bottom line: your house needs to smell clean, so do everything you can to make that happen before you list.

 
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2. Your pets have ruined things

Everyone loves their pets, probably even the people coming to look at your house have beloved pets of their own. But it still seems that people don’t want to see the mess, hair and scratches from *your* pets.

The most common things I see are normally quick fixes: pet hair (just vacuum & lint-roller diligently), dirty backyards (pick up messes daily), dirty litter boxes (get a spare and keep one washed and then just switch it out daily and before showings), and scratched flooring or ripped carpet (this one is a bit of a bigger fix and what you should do about it really depends on the value in fixing the problem – this is one to talk with your realtor about, they will know best whether it’s worth fixing or not)

For showings, it’s also best if you can tuck away pet dishes, toys and beds. Yes, people will know you have pets (especially if there any allergies in the buyer’s family, it’s important to disclose) but you just want to keep it as subtle as possible so that it’s not an immediate turn off for people. You want the buyers to subtly feel that you might have pets, but if you do they are the best pets in the world: they do not shed, eat, go to the bathroom or scratch the floor. The end.

The bottom line: Clean up & repair any pet damage and do your best to keep signs of pets minimal while your house is for sale.

 
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3. Your clutter stresses people out

Everyone knows how it feels to be overwhelmed by clutter. When it’s too much to deal with, most often, you just want to get away from it, right? Close the cabinet, shove everything back in the drawer, walk out of the room. Is that how you want people to feel in your home when they are considering buying it?

The decision to purchase a home is a very emotional one, and those subconscious responses are the very things that guide people in those very important decisions. When they don’t want to be in your home, when their heart is saying ‘get me out of here’, they are not going to immediately want to place an offer on your home. It’s silly, but it’s true. Now, I’m not saying they won’t think things through and come to a decision that is more logic-based, but if their immediate response is a solid ‘no’, it’s going to take some convincing.

Another aspect of clutter in a home that is for sale, is that for the people living in the home, they see art projects they worked on last night, things they are going to return to the store tomorrow, the mail they just put down, the forms that need to be filled out and sent back to school tomorrow. It’s fluid and it’s ever-changing. But for a prospective home buyer, they just see one thing: stuff. Without any connection to the meaning or timing of all that stuff, they just feel overwhelmed. It just looks like a mess.

This can also apply to things you don’t even consider clutter, so go through your house with a discerning eye: collections, gallery walls, china cabinets, bulletin boards. Be ruthless with all that little stuff.

The bottom line: Clean it up. Get rid of it. Box it up. Put it away. Out of sight, out of mind.


 
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4. No-one wants to imagine you using the bathroom

This is a really difficult one for me to look someone in the eye and talk about, so I’m happy to cover this one online instead!

I always tell clients to imagine their home bathrooms like a hotel bathroom. Logically, you know other people have used the bathroom in your hotel room before, but if you walk in and there’s evidence of that staring you in the face (wet footprints on the mat, toothpaste in the sink, a hair on the toilet seat)? Gross.

And that’s just how potential buyers feel about your bathroom. And if you are honest with yourself, you feel the same way when you are looking at new homes yourself.

My best advice here is the strip the bathroom down to ‘no signs of life’. No toilet brushes, no plungers, no personal care items, no magazines, no toothbrushes, no used towels. Put the garbage can into the cupboard (pack what’s in the cupboard right now, you know you don’t use most of it often anyway!) I even suggest no bath mats – the main reason here is that it’s hard to keep them perfect before showings. Any stray hairs or wet footprints are going to be really obvious.

This is great to do before your listing photos and then after that, my advice is to just keep a small basket or box with personal items in and put it back under the sink when you are done getting ready for the day. Just before showings, it’s easy enough to tuck away the things from the shower, the wet towels, etc.

What should be left out in a bathroom? I like to leave out a few fresh hand towels (white always looks best but any clean, nice hand towel in a color that coordinates with the bathroom will work) and 2-3 small décor items. Some suggestions: small plant, small flower arrangement (silk is just fine and sometimes prettier!), a few candles, wrapped bar soap, upscale hand soap pump, a small décor item. Really, just make one little grouping on the vanity, keep it simple.

The bottom line: clear out all signs of life, get it really clean and leave out just a few styled decorations on the counter.

 
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5. Your messy closet makes people feel overwhelmed

This goes back to what I was saying about clutter. When your closet is packed full, disorganized and things are falling off the shelves or covering the floor, people just want to get away.

There is another layer here: inner spaces (closets, pantries, garages, storage rooms) are subconscious clues to people about how the homeowners *really* are. The wheels start turning when they are standing there in your messy closet: ‘ohhhhhhhkay…. They are super messy people…. The rest of the house looks nice but I can see now that I’ve been tricked. They probably aren’t the kind of people that ever change their furnace filter either….’ And this all happens in the blink of an eye, probably without the buyer even realizing it.

The other things specifically about closets is that the items there are very personal, so when they are a mess, it makes people feel extra overwhelmed. They don’t know what to look at! What’s falling out of all those bags? Why does this woman have so many old bras? Wow, are all those socks dirty? You don’t want people thinking 100 miles an hour about what the heck is going on with your life and how they just want to get out of there.

What you want them to see is a closet that can hold *their* clothes beautifully. That’s all you want them to think about.

Now, honestly, these people have just left their own house with their own messy closets that they feel just fine about, so no judgement here about that, but remember what I said abut clutter? People can’t see their own clutter as visual noise. Every item has a purpose and a place and is just coming or going. But in *your* house, they don’t have that connection. They just see stuff and they just want to get away from it.

The bottom line: remove as much as you can (seasonal clothes can be packed away, time to donate things you’ve been meaning to, etc), line up clothes by color, keep shelves neat and clear the floor completely.

 
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6. Being in your personal spaces is uncomfortable for people

It’s awkward to be in the bathrooms and bedrooms of strangers. It just is. You can make people feel more comfortable by doing a few things (and remember, being comfortable is the first step to wanting to buy your house!) These tips apply to the whole house, really, but are critical in personal spaces like the master bedroom and bathroom.

Make personal spaces as clean and generic as possible. I know this will feel odd to you and might even be a bit of a hassle before showings, but please trust me that it is worth the effort.

On nightstands, try to remove all personal items. Kleenex, lotion, heart burn medication, used water glasses. All of it. Alarm clocks are oddly personal (as soon as you look at one, you immediately imagine the person in bed sleeping when it goes off, don’t you?), so just tuck these down behind the nightstand if you have one.

In ensuite bathrooms, clear all personal items. We have talked about bathroom-specific things like toothbrushes, razors, soaps, etc, but also look at things like used towels, housecoats, slippers, and scales.

I know, it sounds a little over the top, but what do you think of when you see a scale in the bathroom? Are you imagining someone, maybe yourself, quickly getting on the scale before hopping in the shower? You don’t want a potential buyer thinking of anything but themselves and their family living in your home and distracting them with fleeting thoughts of you in your most personal moments, or feeling uncomfortable in your personal spaces, is not the direction you want them going.

Put away all your dirty laundry and don’t have things like housecoats and pajamas hanging on the back of the door. A laundry hamper can usually be tucked into a closet and before showings, just tuck a clean towel or pillowcase over the top of the clothes.

The bottom line: Make your most personal spaces as neutral and comfortable for strangers as possible.

 
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7. Your messy yard makes people think you don’t take care of your house

I know, they shouldn’t care, and they should understand that you have kids / you have a dog / winter snow came early / you will clean up the yard before you move / and on and on. But the reality is that they do care and they aren’t really all that understanding.

The most important thing is that it’s really not a great first impression. When buyers come up to your home, they are going to take a look around and get a feel for your home before they even go inside.

A messy yard, regardless of why it’s there or the fact that’s it’s truly unrelated to your house itself, says to potential buyers that you don’t really take care of things. Anything. Including your house. Not a fair assessment but it does happen.

You can easily avoid giving a bad impression by just tidying up. Pick up or line up any kids’ toys, clean up pet messes, take out any garbage, move garbage cans to a place where they aren’t obvious (not right beside the back door), weed flower beds, hang hoses, mow grass or shovel the walk. All that good basic stuff you intend to do but don’t always get time for – now’s the time to take a few hours and make it happen.

The bottom line: tidy the yard fully to make a great first impression and set the tone for how you care for your home, inside and out.

 
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8. The kids toys and little things being all over makes people want to tidy your house up

The everyday, real honest fact about kids is that they have so much stuff and half of it is ugly or brightly colored and all of it is hard to hide. Add on to that, they want and need so much of it out every day. Kids’ stuff is not always things that can be packed away before a move.

So, I get it… but… you know how *you* feel when you want to maybe curl up and watch a great movie and settle in and just relax for a bit, but there is kid garbage and mess and toys all over the damn place? And it mostly just makes you feel annoyed and overwhelmed so you just forget about starting the movie, throw your hands in the air in frustration and start cleaning up instead? Yeah, other people feel that way when they see your kids’ mess, too. And you don’t want that when potential buyers come to see your home.

When it comes to my clients, I often hear things like:

But, my kids need all of this stuff. Yes, every day. Yes, every minute of every day.

But, my kids are unhappy about moving and putting their toys away is going to really upset them.

But, I’m going to have my hands full just cleaning the adult things, I can’t be expected to keep this area clean, too.

But, it’s pointless. They have toys out all day every day, 24-7, no matter what. Why bother?

But, look, this is the way we live. People are going to just have to get over it. My kids live here, too.

But, listen, anyone looking at this house is going to have kids, too, so they will get me and understand.

But, I’m serious, who cares about a few toys in a living room? What kind of monster lets that effect whether they want to buy our house or not

I am with you, and I agree… it seems ridiculous. And at the end of the day, it’s always up to you to do or not do whatever you want when your house is listed for sale. I don’t want your kids to be upset or bored or feel displaced, either. Of course not.

But, friends, I’m here for the hard truth: messes and clutter, even sweet kid messes and sweet baby clutter, do affect how people feel when they are in your home and how they feel when they are in your home affects whether or not they want to live there. Many people are able to set negative feelings aside and look at a house from pure logic (often guided by a smart realtor or a spouse that loves the home) but the fact is that you are creating resistance that doesn’t need to be there.

The simplest thing to do is to reduce the volume of what you are dealing with (either declutter permanently or just pre-pack some things for your move), and then work on an easy storage plan for quickly picking up the stuff (big baskets, totes that slide under the bed, a laundry basket that can slide into the closet, whatever words for you), and then just do your best to keep things picked up through the day. Most times this can work, especially when you remember this is a short term pain for a long term gain.

The bottom line: it’s worth your time to reduce the amount of kids’ toys and clutter you have out and visible when you house is listed.

 
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9. Your dirty shoes and dirty laundry are gross to people

I don’t know why. I mean, I guess I do: someone else’s dirty stuff is kind of overly personal. And it probably smells a bit. In truth, maybe it actually doesn’t smell , but no one wants to find out for sure so just looking at it is kind of a turn off. And what have we learned? A turn-off makes people feel uncomfortable and when they feel uncomfortable they want to get out and when they leave like that, with bad feelings in their heart, they don’t want to put an offer on your house.

I mean, they don’t know you so they don’t want to see or smell the dirty feet or workout clothes or funky towel smell of you and your family.

The bottom line: short and sweet, just put this stuff away in closets or baskets with some kind of cover. That’s it.

 
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10. All people really want is a clean slate

The basic, overarching theme of all these things is that all people want is a nice, clean, fresh slate. Even if it’s not logical, these big decisions are often guided by the heart. If your goal is to have people come to your home, feel great while they are there, fall in love with the idea of living there themselves and, ultimately, make an offer to purchase your home, then this is the game.

I’ve given you the insider secrets (even when I felt uncomfortable doing it!), it’s up to you to if you want to implement them or not. At the end of the day, buying a house is a highly competitive, psychological game and you want to win. There will be other houses (lots of them!) that your potential buyers go to see. Often, several showings in the course of a few hours. Your competition might have these things covered, so sometimes neglecting these seemingly ridiculous details will have buyers scratching your house right off their list. I don’t want that for you.

 

The bottom line: I hope that this list, though uncomfortable for me to write and possibly for you to read, has been helpful for you. I know that these hard truths are absolutely worth taking care of if they are problem areas for your home. I wish you the best of luck with the sale of your home!

 

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The Staging Prep Kit is here & it’s free!

If you are getting ready to sell your home, this is for you.

If you are a realtor and looking for a staging plan to include in your new client kits, this is also for you!

A curated, strategic grouping of my checklists & tips for staging your own home. I created it to teach you exactly what you need to do and how to do it as simply as possible.

Ready for free & immediate download!



 

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Things no one wants to tell you about your house when it's for sale. Get THE ultimate detailed staging checklist, room by room from an interior designer and working stager. This is ALL YOU NEED. Perfect for getting ready to sell your house! Immediat…

Quick and Simple Curb Appeal Basics– A Crash Course from an Interior Designer


 The goal with curb appeal is to make your property appealing and memorable.  This applies whether you are getting ready to sell your home or you just want to have a front facade you are proud to have your family and friends pull up to.   As you work, keep those 2 words in mind:  appealing & memorable.  Let’s get started!

There are 3 main steps I think about when working with clients on their exterior facade and I’m going to walk you through them and explain a bit of theory as we go.  At the end, I have a checklist of tips for you to print and go through as you are getting things done.  For the most part, this is an afternoon project.  If you need to do some repair work or go shopping, it might add on some time, but far and away, most of my clients can get this done quickly with a little bit of physical labour and by using what they have around the house already.

 

1.       Prep:

This is the time to clean & clear as much as you can – give yourself a blank slate to work with. 

This step makes the most difference when you are preparing to sell your home.  You might be able to see past a lot of these things, but potential buyers normally can’t.  Where you see ‘I need to get out and rake those leaves this weekend’ your buyer sees ‘wow, there is way too much yardwork to keep up with here, no thanks’.  It’s so subconscious, and I’m sure they are very nice people but those little things add up very quickly to buyers, often without them even realizing it.  The more you can do to keep that subconscious to-do list short, the better! 

If you are just working on curb appeal for your own happiness, it is also important to start with this step.  Much like decluttering inside your home, it will be easier for you to enjoy your yard and be proud of your home without a bunch of little annoyances in sight.

 

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2.       Create the feeling of an appealing lifestyle:

So much of the power of curb appeal lies in helping people see the lovely parts of the life that you have in your home.  This is the good feeling people have when walking up to your front door.  It’s a feeling that makes your visitors want to sit with you on the porch and put their feet up.  It makes potential buyers want to have coffee in the morning looking out on that yard.  You need to create a vignette, make a case or create a good vibe, whatever you want to call it. 

The appeal almost universally lies in conveying a relaxed, orderly, safe, calm lifestyle.  This is achieved by creating an outdoor seating area (even a small stool suggests this), having flowers or foliage around the front door, having a great door mat and clear house numbers and even things like thoughtful lighting.  You want people to walk up to your front door and exhale ‘ahhhh, this is so nice.’

If you are selling your home, you can also add some staging to the front area.  What is the lifestyle appeal of your home or area and is there anything that gives a subtle nod to it?  If you live near a lake, a fishing rod leaning in the corner is great.  If a park is within walking distance for kids, a nice basket with some outdoor balls in it or a baseball bat & mitts does the trick.   If you have a nice porch that is great for having morning coffee on, leave a book and clean coffee mug on the side table of your porch seating area.  These are all small touches but they can be very powerful subconscious messages to potential buyers about the appealing lifestyle you have in that home.

 

3.       Make your home memorable:

Here is where you add the icing on the cake.  This last step is a powerhouse if you are preparing to sell your home, but it’s also that next level up if you just want to love pulling up to your own home that little extra bit.

Why is this important?  Buyers aren’t just looking at one house, they are scanning online listings, looking at flyers, and generally absorbing a barrage of details about a lot of homes.  They are doing this for weeks or months sometimes.  After awhile those houses can start to melt into one another.  It’s a funny thing, but the smallest detail about your home that sticks in someone’s mind means that your home is at the top of the list in their brain, along with all the relevant details about your home.  Familiarity is comforting and when someone is faced with a huge life change like moving, the more they think about your house, the more comfortable they feel with it and the more comfortable they feel with it, the more they are going to gravitate toward living in it.  This is great news when you want to sell it, right?

If you’re not selling, this same factor is what helps your friends and family feel comfortable in your home.  It also means that because you are putting that extra bit of your own personality into your space, you are going to be extra happy there as well.  There is no downside to this!

What makes a home memorable?  Mainly, it comes down to this:  one or two things that are bigger, bolder and more colorful than their surroundings.  You need a statement.  Something unique.  Something in a bright color or interesting material.   Something that makes people say ‘oh, the house with the _____?!  I know that house!’

Does it need to be a purple cow statue on the front lawn or a toilet bowl planter full of foliage?  Um, no.   Those might be conversation starters, but I’m not sure that’s the vibe you want your home to be giving off (or maybe it is, I don’t judge.)  There are lots of great ideas that will also enhance the style of your home.  Consider a few nice planters overflowing with bright flowers near the door, a unique color painted on the front door, house numbers painted a bold color, a door mat with some style, a really great light fixture at the door, or maybe just one bold colored accessory on the porch.

 

A checklist for my people getting ready to list their house:

I know how overwhelmed and busy you can feel if you are getting ready to sell your home, so I’ve created a checklist for you to print off and work through.  It can really help to calm that mental chaos if you can just work through something step by step.  It's ready and waiting for instant download in my free Design Resource Library -  check out that link below to have it instantly emailed to you.

 

My advice for getting this done? 

1. Print the checklist from my resource library. 

2. Do a 15 minute walk around and see if you need to buy anything (cleaning supplies, paint, whatever) and make a list. 

3. Gather what you need and get it in one spot (hoses, ladder, etc). 

4. Set aside 2 -3 hours to improve your curb appeal.  Do what you can and move along.  

5. If you have more time later, keep working on things you didn’t get to, but any improvement is good and nothing is ever going to be perfect!  You can do this!

Ps - Not all of the tips will apply to every home, so just cross off any that don’t apply to you – doesn’t that feel great? 


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