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Does the external attractiveness affect the value of the home?

A great looking home front can boost selling prices 7%, according to a university study – and up to 14% in markets with a higher inventory of listings.

Homes with high curb appeal tend to sell for an average of 7% more than similar houses with an uninviting exterior, according to a joint study by the University of Alabama and the University of Texas at Arlington. Further, the premium rises as high as 14% in slower real estate markets with greater housing inventory, finds the study, which was published in the Journal of Real Estate Finance and Economics.


Researchers examined Google Street View photos and sales data from 88,980 properties in the Denver metro area to find how much curb appeal matters to a home’s value.


In addition, the researchers found that the curb appeal of neighboring properties also can impact a home’s value. The appearance of the yard next door accounts for about a third of a home’s overall premium, the study notes.


It’s considered common knowledge that curb appeal affects a home’s value, but quantifying the financial impact is a challenge, said Sriram Villupuram, senior author of the study and an associate professor at UT Arlington, to The Wall Street Journal. “It’s observable, but not quantifiable,” Villupuram said.


The researchers manually scored a set of properties using Google Street View on a scale of one to four (one indicates lowest curb appeal; four indicates highest). Researchers considered it “low curb appeal” if a property had blemishes, like a broken pavement or overgrown grass. Homes were considered to have high curb appeal if they included features like well-kept lawns and professional landscaping.


Many appraisers evaluate a home based on interior features like the number of bedrooms and bathrooms, square footage and home improvements. But Villupuram told the Journal that the study’s ultimate goal is to create an algorithm that could be used to automate assessments of curb appeal. Villupuram says that it could make it easier for large investors, banks, and institutions to include such assessments in their property appraisals.


Source: “Selling Your Home? It’s What’s on the Outside That Counts,” The Wall Street Journal (Jan. 23, 2020)

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