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Any realtors I have a question


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I have a decently sized back yard and a portion is taken up with a rather large play ground area. I am debating taking the playground area out and making a 1/2 court basketball area. My question is would this make my property value go up or down? The area is already seperated and is its own thing. I know with any change like this some buyers might be thrilled while others are turned off.

 

Thanks in advance.

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it it kind of like a swimming pool. you will have to sell to the right buyer. if a 75 year old couple wants to buy your house, they won't need a basketball court.

 

tom

 

You simply limit your buyer if you sell. I agree.

 

I'm not a realtor. I have completed the classes this year and I am a broker for a mortgage company. Working with property over the past 7 years, here's my experiance. Your appraised value will go up. Not much though; depending on how big the court is and the detail you put into it. Anyway you look at it, an appraisor can't give you more the $5000 value for it, and that would be generious.

 

 

Could I be anymore tired when I wrote this? Sorry for all the edits on mis spelling.

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Something you need to check on is what teh tax man says. I heard that Concrete will raise your taxes, be it a driveway, a pad with a hoop for basketball or whatever, asphault doesn't, or at least not as much. IThe person telling me this said that Concrete is considered a foundation, even if it's a driveway. Where asphault is a paving material, they also said that bricks, even paver bricks for a walkway are subject to higher taxes, because they are also a building material.

 

This may all be bullshit, I can't 100% vouch for this,, but it should be checked on so that you don't end up with a bigger tax bill over shooting hoops.

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You simply limit your buyer if you sell. I agree.

 

I'm not a realtor. I have completed the classes this year and I am a broker for a mortgage company. Working with property over the past 7 years, here's my experiance. Your appraised value will go up. Not much though; depending on how big the court is and the detail you put into it. Anyway you look at it, an appraisor can't give you more the $5000 valur you for it, and that would be a generious.

 

Agreed. I am an appraiser of over 10 years experience. I wouldn't give you much of anything for it, $1,000 maybe $2,000. There's simply no appeal as it's nothing more than a glorified patio with seasonal use. Honestly, the playground sounds as if it would contribute more than the basketball court. More buyers have children than NBA fantasies. ;)

 

If you plan to keep the home, go for it, if it makes you happy. :) If you plan to sell within the next few years I'd reccommend against it.

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Agreed. I am an appraiser of over 10 years experience. I wouldn't give you much of anything for it, $1,000 maybe $2,000. There's simply no appeal as it's nothing more than a glorified patio with seasonal use. Honestly, the playground sounds as if it would contribute more than the basketball court. More buyers have children than NBA fantasies. ;)

 

If you plan to keep the home, go for it, if it makes you happy. :) If you plan to sell within the next few years I'd reccommend against it.

not to but in ...but i we need a appraiser for a place we are getting in cardington,oh ...not sure the going price is to have it done ..
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Well the yard is big enough that it doesnt leave it without additional greenspace. So I am still debating the idea.

 

Hey, it's personal preference. :) As an appraiser I make decisions with my own properties that go against the market but make me happy. Although, when it comes to BIG ticket items I tend to stay with what I know will reap the most benefit.

 

Can you do most of the work yourself? Concrete/blacktop can get really pricey(when contracted out) and I'd hate to see you plop down a huge amount of cash in hopes of a good return on your investment. :)

 

As I said before if you plan to be there for a while, go for it and get your use out of it if it makes you happy. If you know you're only going to be in this home for a few more years (5 or less) it's most likely a poor investment.

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